Quizzes & Puzzles23 mins ago
Racoons and the like
I thought that '****' was a shortened form of racoon, and it meant a ratbag. Am I wrong?
I've seen other postings with deleted words as well and thought it must have been a swear word. Maybe **** is a swear word in England?
Ta very much. Appreciate your answers.
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I did once hear (please correct me if I'm wrong, graemer) that it's also used in Australia, but purely as a perfectly acceptable abbreviation with no racist overtones.
As for the word that rhymes with 'spoon' - it was considered perfectly acceptable in British society about 100 years ago, but this was at a time when black people were hardly ever seen in Britain and usually only appeared as clownish characters in music halls and the like (most of them were actually white performers in black-face). As white society gradually and reluctantly got used to the idea of black people being perfectly valid members of the human race, so 'c**n' became an increasingly derogatory term, eventually ending up as offensive as 'n****r'. I believe the last TV character to use it with any regularity was Alf Garnett back in the 60s (even the dreaded Love Thy Neighbour only usually went as far as the word that rhymes with Rambo, itself hardly a term of endearment).
lil ol you thought you might be interested in this.
As you may know, the "c " came to mean a whole different thing unrelated to expression "in a ****'* age." **** was first a term for a white person from the country, then it became an insulting term for a black person. "A ****'* age" was recorded in 1843 (but I am sure it was in use decades earlier) but the word "****" didn't become a racial slur until 20 years later. Here's an entry on that:
"**** was orignally a short form for raccoon in 1741.then by 1832 meant a frontier rustic, and by 1840 a Whig. The 1834 song 'Zip ****' (better know today as 'Turkey in the Straw') didn't refer specifically to either a White or a Black and the '**** songs' of the 1840s and 50s were Whig political songs. By 1862, however, **** had come to mean a Black and this use was made very common by the popular 1896 song 'All ***** Look Alike to Me,' written by Ernest Hogan, a Black who didn't consider the word derogatory at the time." From "I Hear America Talking" by Stuart Berg Flexner (Von Nostrand Reinhold Co., New York, 1976), Page 54.
I got this off a site. Can someone tell me who Berkely Hunt was and what the statement means please?
http://www.businessballs.com/cockney.htm
As an addition, as well as the well-known Black and White Minstrels, there was a famous UK music hall artist (again a white performer in black-face) called G.H. Elliott, who styled himself as The Chocolate Coloured C**n. He was at the height of his fame in the 1920s and 30s but actually portrayed the character right up until the mid-late 1950s, by which time Elliott was over 80 years old, so I guess times didn't change very quickly back then. Depending on which source you read, he died in either 1962 or 1964.
It is, in fact, sometimes used as a racist slur, but it is also still used as an abbreviation for raccoon. In fact, I was sort of surprised, a few years ago, to see a sign in a butcher shop that said "We sell **ons." The sign was actually innocent enough, it was a racially mixed neighborhood, and some Southern folks enjoy eating raccoon.