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Snappy Posted 5 years ago
Grammar

Meaning of blue denim in his veins

Working hard to make a living
Bringing shelter from the rain
A father's son left to carry on
Blue denim in his veins

This is a part of Jimmy Barnes' Working Class Man

Please tell me if the following understanding of mine is correct:

A working-class man is working hard to make a living in a humble house. His son gave up and left to find a better job.

But I don't understand the meaning of "blue denim in his veins."

Can anybody paraphrase it?


Or I may be totally misunderstanding.
A father's son left to carry on blue denim in his veins might mean the son quit working with his father in the mine?

  

Top answer

On May 20, 1873, the term "Blue Jeans" came into being , as an American company received a US patent for blue-dyed denim, which is a sturdy and very durable cotton warp-faced fabric having white filling in reverse direction. Blue jeans became very popular as the uniform of the laborer; those men doing hard, back-breaking work on farms. When the garment became too old, stained, and torn from use, their wives cut it up and made quilts from it.

  • On May 20, 1873, the term "Blue Jeans" came into being , as an American company received a US patent for blue-dyed denim, which is a sturdy and very durable cotton warp-faced fabric having white filling in reverse direction.
  • Blue jeans became very popular as the uniform of the laborer; those men doing hard, back-breaking work on farms.
  • When the garment became too old, stained, and torn from use, their wives cut it up and made quilts from it.
  • Blue denim is the metaphor for very hard work and thriftiness.
  • "Blue denim in his veins" means that this man is a hard-working, humble, laconic American of the working class.
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3 Answers
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On May 20, 1873, the term "Blue Jeans" came into being , as an American company received a US patent for blue-dyed denim, which is a sturdy and very durable cotton warp-faced fabric having white filling in reverse direction. Blue jeans became very popular as the uniform of the laborer; those men doing hard, back-breaking work on farms. When the garment became too old, stained, and torn from

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Hi

Blue denim is the clothing traditionally worn by people who have to do manual work, day-on-day, in order to earn a living

To have something in your veins means that you inherit it from your family and you will pass it on to your children

The song, I'd say, is asking the question whether the poor and manual work life has to be handed down, from parent to child, every genera

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Snappyblue denim in his veins

blue denim is a metaphor for the life style and worldview of a worker.

in one's veins is a metaphor for being an inherent characteristic of an individual.

Of a great musician: She has music in her veins.
Of a great athlete: He has football in his veins.
Of an ambitious dictator:

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