1661 n. The technical term for this—where you look pullable from behind, with your slashed mini, straggly Joss Stone hair and macrame ankle bracelet, but when swivelled around, look more like someone eligible to collect a pension—is 1661. (Get it? Sixteen from the back, 61 from the front.) Oh, dear. Perhaps that’s what I am: the ultimate 1661. Yet isn’t a certain amount of self-delusion necessary in order to cope with the horrible, galloping inevitability of old age? [EnglishApparel, Appearance, & FashionSlang] [full cite] (Jul. 20, 2007)
1661 n. I’ve always detested the expression “mutton dressed as lamb.” It’s misogynist, mean and women are not meat; even Sam Kekovich would concur with that. But there’s a new version of it that describes women who retain hairstyles or wardrobes suited to a different life stage—women such as Melanie Griffith and Faye Dunaway. The term is “1661”—a woman who looks 16 from behind, 61 from the front. [EnglishApparel, Appearance, & FashionBodySlang] [full cite] (Jul. 20, 2007)
1661 syndrome n. The 1661 syndrome—whereby a woman (and it almost always is a woman) looks like a bouncy-tressed, pert-bottomed teenager from behind and a grandmother from the front—has become a cultural joke. [EnglishApparel, Appearance, & FashionSlang] [full cite] (Jul. 18, 2007)
1661 syndrome n. Carole Malone mentioned the 1661 syndrome—where men think you’re attractive from the back (16)…and then back off when they see your face (61). This issue is supposed to affect all women over the age of probably 35. [EnglishApparel, Appearance, & FashionSlang] [full cite] (Jul. 20, 2007)
187 n. The number 187 is frequently used in gang graffiti around the United States, and represents the number of the California Penal Code for homicide. Graffiti which includes 187 is literally making a death threat. [CaliforniaEnglishCrime & PrisonsPoliceSlang] [full cite] (Apr. 29, 2004)
187 n. While the literal translation of the shirt is the police code for homicide (“187”) followed by gang slang for police (“hudda”), many Valley police, school officials and gang experts see it another way: “Murder a Cop.” [CaliforniaEnglishCrime & PrisonsPoliceSlang] [full cite] (Apr. 29, 2004)
187 n. They use graffiti to mark territory but also to send messages. In some cases, threats are made as when the number “187,” a gang’s name and an individual’s name appear. “That is a call to kill the person,” McDaniel said. [EnglishCrime & PrisonsPolice] [full cite] (Jan. 6, 2005)