English Deutsch Français Italiano Español Português 繁體中文 Bahasa Indonesia Tiếng Việt ภาษาไทย
All categories

First of all, excuse my English I am not a native speaker. I used to think that the word GAY with the meaning of homosexual was first used in the fifties, but a friend of mine, who is American told me that that word was used in the 1700´s with that sense. Is he right? I will be very grateful for your help.

2007-03-26 12:22:37 · 3 answers · asked by geraCR 3 in Society & Culture Languages

3 answers

well gay originaly meant happy and so did queer... but i dont know much about the orgin of the word... i would check wikipedia.org

2007-03-26 12:26:30 · answer #1 · answered by Jamie 2 · 0 0

The use of the term gay, as it relates to homosexuality, arises from an extension of the sexualised connotation of "carefree and uninhibited", implying a willingness to disregard conventional or respectable sexual mores. Such usage is documented as early as the 1920s. It was initially more commonly used to imply heterosexually unconstrained lifestyles, as for example in the once-common phrase "gay Lothario",[3] or in the title of the book and film The Gay Falcon (1941), which concerns a womanizing detective whose first name is "Gay". Well into the mid 20th century a middle-aged bachelor could be described as "gay" without prejudice.

A passage from Gertrude Stein's Miss Furr & Miss Skeene (1922) is possibly the first traceable published use of the word to refer to a homosexual relationship, though it is not altogether clear whether she uses the word to mean lesbianism or happiness:

They were ...gay, they learned little things that are things in being gay, ... they were quite regularly gay.
The 1929 musical Bitter Sweet by Noel Coward contains another use of the word in a context that strongly implies homosexuality. In the song "Green Carnation", four overdressed, 1890s dandies sing:

Pretty boys, witty boys, You may sneer
At our disintegration.
Haughty boys, naughty boys,
Dear, dear, dear!
Swooning with affectation...
And as we are the reason
For the "Nineties" being gay,
We all wear a green carnation.
The song title alludes to Oscar Wilde, who famously wore a green carnation, and whose homosexuality was well known. However, the phrase "gay nineties" was already well-established as an epithet for the decade (a film entitled The Gay Nineties; or, The Unfaithful Husband was released in the same year). The song also drew on familiar satires on Wilde and Aestheticism dating back to Gilbert and Sullivan's Patience (1881). Because of its continuation of these public usages and conventions – in a mainstream musical – the precise connotations of the word in this context remain ambiguous.

For more info go here: http://www.answers.com/topic/gay

2007-03-26 13:18:26 · answer #2 · answered by Martha P 7 · 2 0

It is a bastardization of the French word "Gai" which does mean "Merry".

It came to use in the 13th century to describe homosexual musing.

2007-03-27 19:43:24 · answer #3 · answered by minuteblue 6 · 0 0

fedest.com, questions and answers