Noun
(en noun )
* {{quote-book
, year=1992
, author=Earl G. Hunt, Jr.
, title=Recovering the Sacred: Papers From the Sanctuary and the Academy
, isbn=0963130803
, publisher=Jonathan Creek Press
, page=254
, passage=”Today we have Grumps” (grim, ruthless, upwardly mobile professionals), ”Dinks” (those with dual-income, no kids), ”Sitcoms” (those with single-income, two children, outrageous mortgages); and, just to recognize the graying populace in this country, ”Opals (older people with active lifestyles).”}}
* {{quote-book
, year=1993
, author=Daniel Moreau
, title=Kiplinger’s Facing Forty: How to Deal Successfully with the Changes in Your Life
, isbn=0938721240
, publisher=Kiplinger Books
, page=7
, passage=”There are MINKs (multiple income, no kids) and what may be the acronym of the ’90s, SITCOMs (single income, two children, outrageous mortgage).”}}
* {{quote-book
, year=2003
, author=Judith Sealander
, title=The Failed Century of the Child: Governing America’s Young in the Twentieth Century
, isbn=0521535689
, publisher=Cambridge University Press
, page=12
, passage=”By the end of the 1990s, in some circles, parents had become SITCOMS (single income, two children, oppressive mortgage) and those without children were THINKERS (two healthy incomes, no kids, early retirement).”}}
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