Yuppie and 
yuppify are products of the 1980s, but they owe a debt to predecessors from decades prior. 
Hippie (referring to a long-haired, unconventionally dressed young person who rejects societal mores; from 
hip, meaning "cool") first appeared in print in the 1950s. 
Yippie (naming a politically active hippie; from 
Youth 
International 
Party) followed 
hippie a decade later. 
Gentrification and 
gentrify (both of which have to do with the effects of influxes
 of relatively affluent people into deteriorating neighborhoods; from 
gentry) then evolved. 
Yuppie (pointing out a young well-paid professional who lives and works in or near an urban area; probably from 
young 
urban 
professional, influenced by 
hippie and 
yippie) hit the press in the early 1980s, bringing along 
yuppify and 
yuppification (patterned after 
gentrify and 
gentrification).
 
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