Swardspeak

Swardspeak (also known as Bekimon or Bekinese and "gay lingo") is an argot or cant slang derived from Englog (Tagalog-English code-switching) and used by a number of homosexuals in the Philippines.[1]

Description

Swardspeak uses elements from Tagalog, English, Spanish, and some from Japanese, as well as celebrities' names and trademark brands, giving them new meanings in different contexts.[2] It is largely localized within gay communities, making use of words derived from the local languages or dialects, including Cebuano, Hiligaynon, Waray, and Bicolano.

Usage

A defining trait of swardspeak slang is that it more often than not immediately identifies the speaker as homosexual, making it easy for people of that orientation to recognize each other. This creates an exclusive group among its speakers and helps them resist cultural assimilation. More recently, though, even non-members of the gay community use this way of speaking, particularly heterosexual members of industries dominated by gays, such as the fashion and film industries.

By using swardspeak, Filipino gays are able to resist the dominant culture of their area and create a space of their own.[3] The language is constantly changing, with old phrases becoming obsolete and new phrases frequently entering everyday usage, reflecting changes in their culture and also maintaining exclusivity. The dynamic nature of the language refuses to cement itself in a single culture and allows for more freedom of expression among its speakers. Words and phrases can be created to react to popular trends and create alternatives to a strictly defined lifestyle. By these characteristics, swardspeak creates a dissident group without any ties to geographical, linguistic, or cultural restrictions, thus allowing its speakers to shape the language as appropriate to the times. In this way, the language is not only "mobile" and part of a larger community, but also open to more specific or local meanings.[4]

Gay people who speak the language almost exclusively are humorously called Bekimons (a contraction of Baklang Jejemon, 'Gay Jejemons').[5] Swardspeak is also spoken by babaeng bakla, women who associate exclusively or mostly with gay men (literally 'gay women', though they are actually heterosexual).[6]

Origin

The word "Swardspeak", according to José Javier Reyes, was coined by columnist and film critic Nestor Torre in the 1970s. Reyes himself wrote a book on the subject entitled "Swardspeak: A Preliminary Study".[7] "Sward" is slang for 'gay male' in the Philippines.[8] The origin of the individual words and phrases, however, has existed longer and come from a variety of sources.[9]

Conventions

Swardspeak is a form of slang (and therefore highly dynamic, as opposed to colloquialisms) that is built upon preexisting languages. It deliberately transforms or creates words that resemble words from other languages, particularly English, Japanese, Chinese, Spanish, French, and German. It is colorful, witty, and humorous, with vocabularies derived from popular culture and regional variations.[10] It is unintelligible to people not familiar with the Filipino gay culture or do not know the rules of usage.[11] There is no standardized set of rules, but some of the more common conventions are shown below:[12]

Swardspeak Original word Language of origin
Jowa (variant diminutive: Jowabelle) Asawa (husband, boyfriend) Tagalog
Junta Puntá (to go [to a place]) Tagalog
Shupatíd (further corrupted to Jupiter) Kapatíd (sibling) Tagalog
Shunga Tangá (idiot) Tagalog
Julalay Alalay (assistant) Tagalog
Swardspeak Original word Language of origin
Kyota Batà (child) Tagalog
Nyorts Shorts English
Nyormville FarmVille English
Kyoho Mabahò (stinking) Tagalog
Swardspeak Original word Language of origin
Jotis (a very small amount) Dyotay (a small amount) Cebuano
Jubis (very fat) obese English
Taroosh (very bitchy) Taray (bitchy) Tagalog
Itech (this) Itó (this) Tagalog
Anech? (what, usually exclamatory) Anó? (what) Tagalog
Swardspeak Original word Language of origin
Haller/Heller Hello English
Churchill Sosyál (high society) Tagalog (from Spanish social)
Kalurkey Kaloka (insanely [entertaining], maddening, crazy) Tagalog (from Spanish loca)
Gander Gandá (beautiful) Tagalog
Walley Walâ (nothing) Tagalog
Swardspeak Original word Language of origin
Ilij (no, not) Dili (no, not) Cebuano
Bayu (lover, boyfriend) Uyab (lover) Cebuano
Nial (bad, unpleasant) Lain (bad, unpleasant) Cebuano
Swardspeak Original word(s) Language of origin
Crayola (to cry, to be sad) Cry English
Antibiotic (obnoxious, unpleasant) Antipátika (obnoxious, unpleasant) Tagalog (from Spanish antipática)
Liberty (free) Libre (free) Tagalog (from Spanish libre)
Career/Karír ('to take seriously', used as a verb, e.g. karirin, "to career") Career English
Fillet O'Fish (to be attracted to someone) Feel (to sympathize) English
Kapé / Capuccino / Coffeemate (to be realistic) 'Wake up and smell the coffee.' (a humorous corruption of 'Wake up and smell the roses') Philippine English
Thundercats (old, or the elderly, particularly old gay men) Matandà (old) Tagalog
Chiminey Cricket (housemaid) Deliberate corruption of Jiminy Cricket, Chimáy (Tagalog slang for housemaid) Tagalog
Nota (penis) Description as musical note Tagalog
Pocahontas (prostitute) Pokpok (slang for 'prostitute') Tagalog
Pagoda Cold Wave Lotion (tired, exhausted) A locally available brand of cold wave lotion for setting permanent waves, and pagód (tired, exhausted) Tagalog
Mudra (mother, also used to refer to female friends with children) Madre (mother) Spanish
Hammer (prostitute) Pokpok (slang for 'prostitute), Pokpok (onomatopoeic Tagalog word 'to pound', 'to hammer') Tagalog, English
Biyuti/Beyooti (beautiful, pretty) Beauty, word play of Cebuano bayot ('gay') English, Cebuano
Silahis (bisexual male) Silahis ([sun]beam, ray) Tagalog
Boyband (fat kid) A pun on Tagalog baboy ('pig') Tagalog, English
G.I. Joe (A foreign lover, particularly American) Acronym for 'Gentleman Idiot' English
Opposition Party (a social occasion with a lot of expected problems) Pun on political opposition English
Swardspeak Original word or concept Derived from
Julie Andrew (to be caught [cheating]) Hulì (Tagalog, 'to be caught') 'Julie' rhymes with 'Huli', and references the British actress Julie Andrews
Gelli de Belén (jealous) Jealous Gelli de Belen
Tommy Lee Jones / Tom Jones (hungry) Tom-guts (Tagalog syllable switching slang for gutóm, hungry) Tommy Lee Jones, Tom Jones
X-Men (formerly appearing to be heterosexual, coming out, especially from being hypermasculine to effeminate) 'Ex-man' X-Men
Fayatollah Kumenis (thin) Payát (Tagalog, 'thin') Ayatollah Khomeini
Barbra Streisand (to be rejected bluntly, blocked) Bará (Tagalog, 'to block', including verbally) Barbra Streisand
Murriah Carrey (cheap) Mura (Tagalog, 'cheap') Mariah Carey
Lupita Kashiwahara (cruel) Lupít (Tagalog, 'cruel') Lupita Aquino-Kashiwahara (A Filipina film and television director, and sister of assassinated Senator Benigno Aquino, Jr.)
Carmi Martin (karma) Karma Carmi Martin
Rita Gómez (irritating, annoying) Nakaka-iritá (Tagalog, 'irritating') Rita Gómez
Mahalia Jackson (expensive) Mahál (Tagalog 'expensive', 'precious', 'dear') Mahalia Jackson
Anaconda (traitor, to betray) Ahas (Tagalog slang, 'to betray', literally 'snake') Anaconda (film)
Badinger Z (homosexual) Badíng (Tagalog derogatory slang 'homosexual') Mazinger Z
Taxina Hong Kingston ([to wait for a] taxicab) Taxi Maxine Hong Kingston
Noël Coward (No) No Noël Coward
Oprah Winfrey (promise) Promise Oprah Winfrey
Sharon Cuneta (yes, sure) Sure Sharon Cuneta
Jesus Christ Superstar/Optimus Prime (Fashion makeover, to change into [more fashionable] clothing) Resurrection, Transformation Jesus Christ Superstar, Optimus Prime
Swardspeak Definition Origin
Drama (also means the adjective 'dramatic') Melodrama, exaggeration, drama [queen] English
Carry/Keri To carry [oneself well], manageable English
Siete Pecados Nosy, gossipmonger Spanish, 'seven sins'
Puñeta (also spelt punyeta) General profanity, roughly equivalent to 'fuck' Spanish slang, with varying degrees of perceived obscenity. Literally 'in a fist'.
Chiquito Small Spanish, 'small'
Coño (also spelt 'konyo') High society, especially [affluent] socialites who speak Taglish exclusively Spanish slang, 'vagina'
Otoko fangirl octopus Japanese, 男 (otoko)
Berru Beer Japanese, ビール (bīru)
Watashi Me, I Japanese, 私 (watashi)

Examples

Original version Translation into Swardspeak Approximate English translation
Ako ay may lobo

Lumipád sa langit
Di ko na nakità
Pumutók na palá
Sayang lang ang pera,
Pinambilí ng lobo
Sa pagkain sana,
Nabusóg pa ako.

Aketch ai may lobing

Flylalou sa heaven
Witchels ko na nasightness
Jumutók lang pala
Sayang lang ang anda
Pinang buysung ng lobing
Kung lafangertz sana
Nabusóg pa aketch

I had a balloon

It flew up to the sky
I can't see it anymore
[Didn't know] it had popped
Money was just a waste
Buying the balloon
Had I bought food instead
At least I would have been full

Original version Translation into Swardspeak Approximate English translation[16]
Bahay kubò, kahit muntî

Ang halaman doón,
Ay sari-sarì
Singkamás, at talóng,
Sigarilyas at manî
Sitaw, bataw, patani
Kundól, patola, upo’t kalabasa
At saka meron pa
Labanós, mustasa
Sibuyas, kamatis, bawang at luya
Sa paligid-ligid
Ay puno ng lingá

Valer kuberch, kahit jutey

Ang julamantrax denchi,
Ay anek-anek.
Nyongkamas at nutring,
Nyogarilyas at kipay.
Nyipay, nyotaw, jutani.
Kundol, fyotola, kyupot jolabastrax
At mega join-join pa
Jobanos, nyustasa,
Nyubuyak, nyomatis, nyowang at luyax
And around the keme
Ay fulnes ng linga.

Nipa hut, though it be small

The plants it houses
Are sundry and all
Jicama and eggplant,
Winged bean and peanut
String bean, hyacinth bean, lima bean.
Wax gourd, luffa,
long gourd and squash,
And then there is also white radish, mustard greens,
Onion, tomato,
Garlic, and ginger
And all around
Are sesame seeds.

See also

References

  1. Empress Maruja (27 July 2007). "Deciphering Filipino Gay Lingo". United SEA. Retrieved 23 December 2010.
  2. Jessica Salao (30 April 2010). "Gayspeak: Not for gays only". http://www.thepoc.net. Retrieved 23 December 2010. External link in |publisher= (help)
  3. "swardspeak". http://www.doubletongued.org. Retrieved 23 December 2010. External link in |publisher= (help)
  4. Cynthia Grace B. Suguitan. "A SEMANTIC LOOK AT FEMININE SEX AND GENDER TERMS IN PHILIPPINE GAY LINGO" (PDF). University of the Philippines. Retrieved 25 December 2010.
  5. Sharlyne Ang (July 7, 2010). "Ang Bekimon (Baklang Jejemon)". http://pinoylgbt.com. Retrieved 23 December 2010. External link in |publisher= (help)
  6. Jessica Salao (30 April 2010). "Gayspeak: Not for gays only". http://www.thepoc.net. Retrieved 23 December 2010. External link in |publisher= (help)
  7. Reinerio A. Alba (June 5, 2006). "The Filipino Gayspeak (Filipino Gay Lingo)". http://www.ncca.gov.ph/. Retrieved 24 December 2010. External link in |publisher= (help)
  8. "GAY SPEAKS on "SWARDSPEAK"". http://badinggerzie.blogspot.com. May 13, 2005. Retrieved 24 December 2010. External link in |publisher= (help)
  9. Norberto V. Casabal (August 2008). "GAY LANGUAGE: DEFYING THE STRUCTURAL LIMITS OF ENGLISH LANGUAGE IN THE PHILIPPINES". Kritika Kultura, Issue 11. Kritika Kultura. Retrieved 25 December 2010.
  10. Danton Remoto (2008-05-05). "On Philippine gay lingo". http://www.abs-cbnnews.com. Retrieved 25 December 2010. External link in |publisher= (help)
  11. "Gay Lingo (Made in the Philippines)". http://www.doubletongued.org. November 16, 2008. Retrieved 23 December 2010. External link in |publisher= (help)
  12. Empress Maruja (27 July 2007). "Deciphering Filipino Gay Lingo". United SEA. Retrieved 23 December 2010.
  13. Reinerio A. Alba (June 5, 2006). "The Filipino Gayspeak (Filipino Gay Lingo)". http://www.ncca.gov.ph/. Retrieved 24 December 2010. External link in |publisher= (help)
  14. "Gay Lingo Collections". July 5, 2009. Retrieved 23 December 2010.
  15. Norberto V. Casabal (August 2008). "GAY LANGUAGE: DEFYING THE STRUCTURAL LIMITS OF ENGLISH LANGUAGE IN THE PHILIPPINES". Kritika Kultura, Issue 11. Kritika Kultura. Retrieved 25 December 2010.
  16. Lisa Yannucci. "Philippines Children's Songs and Nursery Rhymes". http://www.mamalisa.com/. Retrieved 25 December 2010. External link in |publisher= (help)

Bibliography

External links

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