Baileyhoss
Well-Known Member
Right. I have only just seen all the goings on here & wish to add my 2pworth!.
I have only scanned the previous zillion posts so apologies if this has aready been mentioned, but
JH - I understand your issue is that Pikey is a racist term, which refers to irish travellers and therefore you find it offensive.
However,by your own admission:
[ QUOTE ]
... but it doesn't mean that anymore. Word meanings change.
[/ QUOTE ]
This quote is from Wikepedia - "pikey it was applied to Irish Travellers (also known as tinkers and knackers) and non-Roma Gypsies.[9][10] In the late 20th century, it came to be used to describe "a lower-class person, regarded as coarse or disreputable."[3][11]"
......and I think that the majority here will agree that their usage of the term refers to the more recent definition and has nothing to do with irish travellers.
Also interesting to note is the reference comparing the use of pikey to that of chav, ned, etc.
"In the late 20th and early 21st centuries, the definition became even looser and is sometimes used to refer to a wide section of the (generally urban) underclass of the country, or merely a person of any social class who "lives on the cheap". This seems to be the meaning intended by Stephen Fry in an episode of QI, grouping together "hoodies, pikeys and chavs", and intimating that these people are of a sort who "go out on the town, beating people up and drinking Bacardi Breezers".
I have only scanned the previous zillion posts so apologies if this has aready been mentioned, but
JH - I understand your issue is that Pikey is a racist term, which refers to irish travellers and therefore you find it offensive.
However,by your own admission:
[ QUOTE ]
... but it doesn't mean that anymore. Word meanings change.
[/ QUOTE ]
This quote is from Wikepedia - "pikey it was applied to Irish Travellers (also known as tinkers and knackers) and non-Roma Gypsies.[9][10] In the late 20th century, it came to be used to describe "a lower-class person, regarded as coarse or disreputable."[3][11]"
......and I think that the majority here will agree that their usage of the term refers to the more recent definition and has nothing to do with irish travellers.
Also interesting to note is the reference comparing the use of pikey to that of chav, ned, etc.
"In the late 20th and early 21st centuries, the definition became even looser and is sometimes used to refer to a wide section of the (generally urban) underclass of the country, or merely a person of any social class who "lives on the cheap". This seems to be the meaning intended by Stephen Fry in an episode of QI, grouping together "hoodies, pikeys and chavs", and intimating that these people are of a sort who "go out on the town, beating people up and drinking Bacardi Breezers".