Keeping up with the Joneses
Meaning: Trying to match the lifestyle and possessions of your neighbors or peers to maintain social status.
This expression captures the competitive consumerism deeply embedded in American suburban culture. It describes the pressure to buy a bigger car, a nicer house, or better gadgets just because your neighbors have them. Often used critically to describe materialism and status anxiety.
Examples
- They bought a new SUV just to keep up with the Joneses. 他们买了辆新SUV,纯粹是为了和邻居攀比。Se compraron un SUV nuevo solo para no ser menos que los vecinos.近所に張り合ってジョーンズ家についていくために新しいSUVを買った。이웃에게 뒤지지 않으려고 새 SUV를 샀어.
- Stop trying to keep up with the Joneses — we can't afford a pool. 别跟人攀比了——我们根本装不起游泳池。Deja de intentar competir con los vecinos — no nos podemos permitir una piscina.ジョーンズ家についていこうとするのはやめて――プールなんて余裕ないよ。남들 따라잡으려 하지 마 — 수영장 만들 여유 없잖아.
- Social media has turned keeping up with the Joneses into keeping up with the entire internet. 社交媒体把和邻居攀比变成了和整个互联网攀比。Las redes sociales han convertido el competir con los vecinos en competir con todo internet.SNSのせいで、ジョーンズ家についていくことが、インターネット全体についていくことに変わった。SNS 때문에 이웃 따라잡기가 인터넷 전체 따라잡기로 변했어.
Pronunciation
Usage Guide
Context: conversation, financial advice, social commentary
Tone: critical, cautionary
✓ Do Say
- We need to stop keeping up with the Joneses.我们得停止跟别人攀比了。Tenemos que dejar de competir con los vecinos.ジョーンズ家についていくのはもうやめよう。남들 따라잡으려 하는 것 좀 그만두자.
- That's just keeping up with the Joneses.那不过是在跟人攀比罢了。Eso es solo querer aparentar.それはジョーンズ家についていこうとしてるだけだよ。그건 그냥 남들 따라잡기잖아.
✗ Don't Say
- Using it to shame someone for wanting nice things feels judgmental — it's about competitive spending, not reasonable purchases用它来羞辱别人想要好东西的愿望有些武断——它说的是攀比性消费,不是合理购买Usarlo para avergonzar a alguien por querer cosas bonitas resulta sentencioso — va sobre el gasto competitivo, no sobre compras razonables良いものを欲しがる人を恥じらせるために使うのは批判的すぎる――これは競争的な出費のことであって、合理的な買い物のことではない좋은 물건을 원하는 사람을 비난하는 데 사용하면 판단하는 것처럼 느껴진다 — 이 표현은 합리적인 구매가 아니라 경쟁적 소비에 관한 것이다
Origin & History
From a 1913 comic strip by Arthur 'Pop' Momand called 'Keeping Up with the Joneses,' which ran until 1940. The Joneses represented the idealized neighbors everyone tried to match.
Cultural Context
Era: 1913-present
Generation: All ages
Social background: Middle class
More From This Topic
More from Classic Americana
Flashcards, quizzes, audio pronunciation & spaced repetition — all free