Meaning and usage of "Adjacent to refuse, is refuse" [closed]
In an episode of Seinfeld, Jerry says: "Adjacent to refuse, is refuse." Can anyone explain to me what that means? I found the script and give the context in what is was said.
JERRY: Was it in the trash?
GEORGE: Yes.
JERRY: Then it was trash.
GEORGE: It wasn't down in, it was sort of on top.
JERRY: But it was in the cylinder!
GEORGE: Above the rim.
JERRY: Adjacent to refuse, is refuse.
What does it mean, and how can it be used?
Refuse here means rubbish. He is saying that anything near rubbish is considered rubbish too, in a humorous way.
Merriam-Webster defines refuse in the noun form as "the worthless or useless part of something." It just means Trash, essentially.
Adjacent means in close proximity, usually enough to share an edge or border. USA is adjacent to Canada.
So "Refuse adjacent to refuse, is refuse." If it's touching the rest of the trash, it's included in the trash.
You can really only use it yourself if when you want to point out a collective.
A: When are you going to clean this mess up? B: It's not all messy. There are some piles, it's an organized mess. A: Mess adjecent to mess...is still mess.
It's a weak and and schmaltzy example, but hopefully that'll give you an idea of the pattern for usage.
Did you happen to notice the pronunciation when you first heard the show? Jerry said:
ref-yoos
which is either garbage, or something rejected as worthless (per Dictionary.com) — such as the inhabitants of the Pit of Refuse in World of Warcraft.
The pronunciation and meaning you're familiar with is
ri-fyooz
as in
Lucy: Why don't you be a good little brother and go make me a jelly bread sandwitch? If you don't I'm going to leap on you and pound you right through the floor! So why don't you make me that jelly-bread sandwich, huh? Please, dear brother?
Linus: (heading off for the kitchen) When someone asks you that nicely, how can you refuse?