Retro Foods Making A Come Back
Food & Drink1 min ago
No best answer has yet been selected by Weaza_cfc. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.As Indie says, mere myth. Chav is probably a Romany/Gypsy word. Certainly, as �chavvy', these people used it to mean �bloke' or �mate' and as 'chavo' for 'boy'. There is even a suggestion that it is related to the ancient Sanskrit word 'sava', meaning 'son'.
It implied a fellow traveller, so - if a non-traveller used it - it gave the impression he was looking down on the person so addressed. Nowadays, it seems to refer to anyone, especially a young person, who is considered less intelligent or more obnoxious than the speaker and who tends to exist in a group of people who dress and behave similarly. It's rather like the �Essex girl' and �medallion man' concepts of a few years ago. Basically, it seems to have transformed from �friend' to �non-friend'!
Quiz monster is right,
I used to work on a farm in Kent in the 70's and there were a lot of pikies working there and they used to call me Chav and Chavlo. I live in Australia now and when I came back to England for a holiday in June it was funny to hear the kids using the words............when did that all start?
Quizmaster is right,
I worked on a farm in kent in the 70's and there were lots of pikies that worked there (pikies are travellers, not romany gypsies) They used to call me Chav or Chavlo like as if I was their mate. I've lived in Australia now for eight years and it was funny to hear these names used by the kids as terms for each other.