earth folk n.

= earth people n.

  • 1880 Daily Review (Edinburgh) 27 Dec. 3/6

    It was a cow, then, my lords and gentlemen, and not one of the Earth folk, that appeared that day so suddenly in our sky. Our scientists were hasty in their inferences. They should not have based a theory so broad upon a single fact.

  • 1897 F. T. Jane To Venus in Five Seconds iv. 66 page image Fred T. Jane bibliography

    It has been mooted once or twice that we should select husbands from the Earth-folk, but no one cares to be the first to do so, and thus we drift on. [Ibid. x. 99] A few of them, like Ef, hold that it is morally indefensible to torture one creature for another’s benefit; these may save some Earth-folk in the future years, but I fear they will do little for us.

  • 1931 C. W. Diffin Brood of the Dark Moon in Astounding Stories Nov. 260/1 page image Charles Willard Diffin bibliography

    Chet mentally listened and tried to picture what manner of thing this was that held two Earth-folk helpless, that called them ‘creatures of an inferior race’.

  • 1936 F. B. Long Cones in Astounding Stories Feb. 124/1 page image Frank Belknap Long bibliography

    Intrepid Earthfolk, suicide battalion people, walking slowly in their flexible suits of difrolchrome, weighted down with high-frequency coils and oxygen tanks and thigh-weights, and living, from instant to instant, dangerously.

  • 1956 ‘H. P. Stratford’ Hidden Power in Authentic Science Fiction June 69/1 page image Kenneth Bulmer bibliography

    I thought that if I tried to play ball with you on this planet of New Eden, tried to keep the Earth folk in their quarter and under your law, we'd get along. But it seems I was mistaken.

  • 1976 L. Brackett Lake of Gone Forever in Space Odysseys 46 Leigh Brackett

    Ciel rose obediently but her eyes watched him slyly as she followed the Earthfolk out and down the hall.

  • 1999–2000 R. Berman Gnome Holidays in Weird Tales Winter 50 page image Ruth Berman bibliography

    Coals of fire are always attractive—Earthflame for earthfolk.

  • 2012 R. Silverberg Song of Last Things in When the Blue Shift Comes (2014) 44 page image Robert Silverberg bibliography

    The people who lived on Earth, though, didn’t have to die at all, unless they chose to, and that sort of thing wasn’t exactly common. Why the Earthfolk were exempt from death was something widely discussed, and widely misunderstood, on the other inhabited worlds of the universe.


Research requirements

antedating 1880

Research History
Fred Galvin submitted a 1950 cite from Eric Frank Russell's "Dear Devil".
Fred Galvin submitted a 1956 cite from Robert Silverberg's "The Lonely Ones".
Fred Galvin submitted a 1941 cite from Manly Wade Wellman's "The Devil's Asteroid".
Mike Christie submitted a 1936 cite from Frank Belknap Long's "Cones".
Fred Galvin submitted a cite from a 1976 reprint of Leigh Brackett's 1949 "The Lake of the Gone Forever".
Fred Galvin submitted a cite from the Project Gutenberg etext of Charles Willard Diffin's "Brood of The Dark Moon": the first publication was as a serial in Astounding Stories, August-November, 1931. Checking the original page images used to prepare the etext confirmed this cite was in part 4 in the November issue.
Ben Ostrowsky submitted a 2012 cite from Robert Silverberg.
Simon Koppel submitted an 1880 cite from a humorous story.
Fred Galvin submitted a 1897 cite from Fred Jane's "To Venus in Five Seconds".

Last modified 2023-06-09 04:12:17
In the compilation of some entries, HDSF has drawn extensively on corresponding entries in OED.