Why did “GAY” stop meang “happy” and start referrg “same sex relatnships?
Contents:
THE ORIGS OF THE WORD ‘GAY’
It’s Pri Month and one of the most lourful words the English language – wh more makeovers than Madonna and more dramatic life stori than Liza Mnelli – is the word ‘gay’! Like every hero, ‘gay’ has an orig story, but even today, scholars are disagreement over the precise journey took to reach the level of fame (or famy) mands nowadays. ‘Gay’ was Germanic before cid to go all French and fancy.
HISTORY OF THE WORD “GAY”
The prevailg theory is that ‘gay’ me om Old Germanic, origally soundg like ‘gahi’, which meant ‘fast’ or ‘quick. Sometime between the 11th and late 15th centuri, ‘gai’ crossed the English Channel and end up as ‘gay’, but kept s French meangs – ‘cheerful’, ‘happy’, ‘merry’, and ‘lively’. In The Canterbury Tal, Geofey Chcer wrote, “Why is my neighebor wyf so gay?
Gay would stubbornly clg to s ‘cheerful/merry/happy’ meang for over five hundred years until well to the mid-20th century. Unknown to many, ‘gay’ was velopg a nghty si.
HISTORY OF THE WORD "GAY"
When a ‘gay woman’ was a sex worker! How long have you been gay? Fanny, the lady fe cloth, has been ‘gay’ (i.
Sometime the late 17th century, ‘gay’ began to velop a sendary meang. Hence, a ‘gay man’ was a man addicted to sex who equented brothels (‘gay ho’) and nsorted wh ‘gay women’ (sex workers).
‘Gay’ was slowly beg a negative word.