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Ganzie

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treacle07 | 12:55 Tue 06th Feb 2007 | Phrases & Sayings
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I have a friend who comes from the Potteries (Stoke-On-Trent) who uses the word Ganzie to mean cardigan. Does anyone else use this and where are they from?
thank you!
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I've often heard it used in the North East of Scotland ( Doric), meaning a jumper.
Ganzie - perhaps more easily recognisable with its alternative spelling of 'gansey' - is just a dialect variation of 'Guernsey', the Channel Island's name. It generally refers to a 'jersey' - note the name of the neighbouring island. Presumably, therefore, both these garments originated in that area.
A gansey ( also known as a guernsey, knit-frock or frock shirt) is a traditional working sweater for fishermen all along the various coastlines of the U.K. that are peculiar to their specific area i.e. a Scottish, Cornish, Yorkshire gansey are all different.
Apparently these "ganzies" were also made in patterns particular to individual families, so as to aid in identification of the recovered bodies of fishermen lost at sea.
Yes Ganzy was a popular word when i was young, I was born in 1948 and it referred to my jumper.
Ganzy was a popular word when I was a kid and it was referred to as a Jumper or Pullover.I was born in 1948. I can hear my mother shouting "Get your ganzy on"
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My husband uses this word when he is looking for a jumper/ cardigan and he comes from Newcastle under Lyme. Staffs.
The Gaelic Irish word for jumper or sweater is geansaí, with the pronunciation being identical to ganzie in English, so I would judge this spelling derives from writing Irish in English phonetics. But the trail doesn't stop there: "The word used in Irish is geansaí, a Gaelicisation of guernsey which has been re-Anglicised to gansey in Hiberno-English." - https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aran_jumper
So the earlier answer from Quizmonster is clearly correct in tying its origins to the Channel Islands.
But it would be 're-exported' to English anywhere that Gaelic speakers were present - or had been been, earlier - in any numbers. That would cover many parts of Britain.

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