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Wog

Wog is a word with several meanings, one commonly derogatory, the others not.

Contents

Wog as a racial epithet in British English

British racial term originating in the colonial period of the British Empire. It was generally used as a label for the natives of India, North Africa and the Middle East. By the 1950s it had become a pejorative term used in order to offend.

The origins of the term are unclear. Most dictionaries say that it either possibly or probably derives from the term golliwog (or golliwogg), a blackface minstrel doll with wild, woolly hair introduced by Florence Upton in her book The Adventures of Two Dutch Dolls and a Golliwogg, in which a black doll named "Golliwogg" is featured. Various facetious explanations include the claim that it originated from acronyms for "Worthy/Wily Oriental Gentleman" or variants thereof, or for "Workers of Government", used to describe early immigrants into the United Kingdom. Those explanations, like similar attempts to find the origin of words such as "cop" or "tip", are rarely serious and have no evidential grounds.

The use of the word is very much discouraged in Britain these days, and most dictionaries refer to the word with the justified caution that it is slang, derogatory, and offensive. James Robertson & Sons, a British manufacturer of jams and preserves, discontinued uses of the Golliwog as its trademark in the early 1990s for similar reasons. It is unwise to use it in modern Britain without expecting an extreme reaction.

The phrase "The wogs start at Calais" is commonly used to characterise a stodgy Europhobic viewpoint, and more generally the view that Britain (more commonly England) is inherently separate from (and superior to) the Continent. In this case, "wog" describes any person of foreign, un-English character.

Wog as a racial reference in Australian English

Wog is also a slang term in Australian English, refering to people of Southern European, Mediterranean and Middle Eastern ancestry, specifically Italians and Greeks, but also those of Spanish, Croatian (or Bosnian or Serbian), Portuguese, Maltese, Arab, Turkish and Irani descent. It also often includes Latin Americans grouped together with those of Spanish ancestry. It occasionally extends to people from other parts of Europe or the Levant. Migrants from the Netherlands sometimes refer to themselves as clog wogs.

This meaning came into popular use in the 1950s when Australia accepted large numbers of immigrants from Southern Europe. Although originally used as a pejorative, the term is increasingly used more affectionally, especially by the individuals the term is used to describe.

Wog meaning an illness in Australian English

Wog is also used in Australia (less so these days) to mean a minor illness, so slang for a cold or the flu. Once the racial meaning became prevalent this lead the way open for bad jokes along the lines of Yesterday I was in bed with a wog punning on the previous meaning.

The derogatory nature of the term when used as a racial taunt succeeded in driving out use of the term wog to describe illness. Users of the term risked being labeled a racist by people not realising the context in which it was being used.

Wog as a Scientology term

Scientologists also use the term "wog" to describe an individual who is a non-Scientologist. Scientology's founder L. Ron Hubbard employed the term in his lectures and writings.

Wog in maritime use

Wog is a shortened version of the word polliwog, used for sailors during the crossing the line ceremony, on the first time they cross the equator. This use is entirely non-derogatory and is not limited to British English.


See also

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Last updated: 05-18-2005 18:16:43