Yahoo Web Search

Search results

  1. There was an actual Jones family who built a 7,690-square-foot mansion in Rhinebeck, New York, a summer vacation spot for well-heeled, wealthy families from New York City. Elizabeth Schermerhorn Jones commissioned the formidable brick-and-slate structure in 1853 after purchasing 80 acres of land overlooking the Hudson River.

  2. The strip ran until 1940 in The New York World and various other newspapers. The strip depicts the social climbing McGinis family, who struggle to "keep up" with their neighbors, the Joneses of the title.

    • It’s just an old English saying: Enough said.
    • Jones Street in Savannah, GA: Not the most common origin story, but it’s worth mentioning. Apparently it’s the prettiest street in Savannah.
    • The Mansion owned by Elizabeth Jones: One source says the phrase was inspired by a mansion that was built in the 1850s in New York as a “summer getaway for New York City socialite Elizabeth Schermerhorn Jones.”
    • Comic strip by Arthur “Pop” Momand: This story says the popular phrase was coined by American cartoonist Arthur “Pop” Momand in his comic strip called (you guessed it) “Keeping up with the Joneses.”
  3. Jun 23, 2016 · from Keeping Up With The Joneses (Cupples & Leon Company – New York, 1920) by ‘Pop’ Momand MEANING If you say that someone is keeping up with the Joneses, you mean that they are doing som…

  4. What is 'keeping up with the Joneses?' Learn the meaning and history of the phrase that describes the habit of trying to compete with your peers' social status.

  5. It originated with Arthur (Pop) Momand’s Keeping Up With The Joneses comic strip in the New York Globe. The strip was first published in 1913 and became popular quite quickly. By September 1915, a cartoon film of the same name was touring US cinemas.

  6. People also ask

  7. 1 day ago · Quick Reference. Try to maintain the same social and material standards as one's friends and neighbours; the expression derives from a comic-strip title, ‘Keeping up with the Joneses—by Pop’ in the New York Globe, 1913.

  1. People also search for