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Difference between revisions of "cooties"
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− | + | '''Cooties''' is an [[American English language|American]] and [[Canadian English language|Canadian]] [[English language|English]] [[slang]] term used especially by children to denote that someone has an unspecified infectious [[disease]] or condition —which is intended to promote serious or playful repulsion toward the designee. (i.e. "Ugh, she has ''cooties!''") | |
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Originally, the term specifically implied body [[lice]], but over the generations this became generalised first to any sort of lice, including [[head lice]], then later still to purely imaginary stand-ins for just about anything that is considered repulsive. Cootie can also be used as a verb, as in "Don't touch that book! It was cootied by a boy!" | Originally, the term specifically implied body [[lice]], but over the generations this became generalised first to any sort of lice, including [[head lice]], then later still to purely imaginary stand-ins for just about anything that is considered repulsive. Cootie can also be used as a verb, as in "Don't touch that book! It was cootied by a boy!" | ||
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The term is thought to have originated in the trenches of [[World War I]], but its origin is uncertain, especially in light of the fact that the term is unknown in the [[United Kingdom|UK]] and [[Europe]]. It may derive from the [[Malay language|Malay]] word ''kutu'', meaning biting insect, but the word ''kutu'' describes headlice in several Pacific Island languages and may have been introduced to the USA via [[Polynesia]]. | The term is thought to have originated in the trenches of [[World War I]], but its origin is uncertain, especially in light of the fact that the term is unknown in the [[United Kingdom|UK]] and [[Europe]]. It may derive from the [[Malay language|Malay]] word ''kutu'', meaning biting insect, but the word ''kutu'' describes headlice in several Pacific Island languages and may have been introduced to the USA via [[Polynesia]]. | ||
− | A well-known toy is the ''Cootie Catcher'', a folded paper arrangement that can reveal one or other internal surfaces when manipulated by hand. One surface is blank, the other drawn with dots representing the cooties. The joke is to show the blank side, then run the toy through a person's hair, revealing the dotted surface. The toy is so designed that the appearance of either surface is outwardly the same apart from the "cooties". A variation of the same toy is known to | + | A well-known toy is the ''Cootie Catcher'', a folded paper arrangement that can reveal one or other internal surfaces when manipulated by hand. One surface is blank, the other drawn with dots representing the cooties. The joke is to show the blank side, then run the toy through a person's hair, revealing the dotted surface. The toy is so designed that the appearance of either surface is outwardly the same apart from the "cooties". A variation of the same toy is known to [[United Kingdom|British]] schoolchildren (and in some locations in the US) as the ''Fortune teller''. |
== Cooties in the media == | == Cooties in the media == |
Latest revision as of 21:30, 1 December 2011
Cooties is an American and Canadian English slang term used especially by children to denote that someone has an unspecified infectious disease or condition —which is intended to promote serious or playful repulsion toward the designee. (i.e. "Ugh, she has cooties!")
Originally, the term specifically implied body lice, but over the generations this became generalised first to any sort of lice, including head lice, then later still to purely imaginary stand-ins for just about anything that is considered repulsive. Cootie can also be used as a verb, as in "Don't touch that book! It was cootied by a boy!"
The term is thought to have originated in the trenches of World War I, but its origin is uncertain, especially in light of the fact that the term is unknown in the UK and Europe. It may derive from the Malay word kutu, meaning biting insect, but the word kutu describes headlice in several Pacific Island languages and may have been introduced to the USA via Polynesia.
A well-known toy is the Cootie Catcher, a folded paper arrangement that can reveal one or other internal surfaces when manipulated by hand. One surface is blank, the other drawn with dots representing the cooties. The joke is to show the blank side, then run the toy through a person's hair, revealing the dotted surface. The toy is so designed that the appearance of either surface is outwardly the same apart from the "cooties". A variation of the same toy is known to British schoolchildren (and in some locations in the US) as the Fortune teller.
Cooties in the media[edit]
Cooties have been referred to in a number of episodes of The Simpsons, possibly baffling non-North American viewers.
One of the standard cures for the imaginary infection of cooties is performed by circling your index finger over the arm twice, followed by two pokes while repeating the following saying: "Circle circle, dot dot, now you have a Cootie shot." A corroborating reference to this procedure can be found in the lyrics of the song Cooties from the musical Hairspray.
Another standard cure is to transmit the cooties to someone else. This etiology has found its way into games of tag, which are occasionally described in terms of spreading cooties.