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    Customs and culture

    Ist "randy" British English, "horny" American English?

    Topic

    Ist "randy" British English, "horny" American English?

    Comment
    Wenn man "geil" im Sinne von "sexuell erregt" sagen will, sagt man da "randy" nur - oder vorwiegend - im BE, "horny" vorwiegend im AE?

    Oder werden beide Wörter, sowohl "randy" als auch "horny", überall gleichermaßen gebraucht und verstanden?

    Danke im Voraus.
    Authorovert (776039) 05 Dec 14, 02:36
    Comment
    randy is known in AE, too.
    #1Author dude (253248) 05 Dec 14, 03:42
    Comment
    https://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Horn%C3%BD_Zemp...

    Horny Zemplin - eine für Touristen attraktive Region am Rande der Slowakei ...
    #2Author mbshu (874725) 05 Dec 14, 05:13
    Comment
    I would consider "randy" somewhat along the lines of "boot" and "bonnet" some AE speakers have heard of the BE terms, but they don't typically use them. If "randy" were common in the sense mentioned by overt ("sexuell erregt"), then I doubt Randy would be so commonly used as a first name or nickname for Randall in the US.

    The Oxford Learner's Dictionary lists it as BE,
    http://www.oxfordlearnersdictionaries.com/us/...

    and I consider this source more reliable than Merriam Webster, which doesn't mark it as BE: http://www.oxfordlearnersdictionaries.com/us/...
    #3Author Amy-MiMi (236989) 05 Dec 14, 05:29
    Comment
    Why would Randy not be common because of a double meaning? Is Dick any less common because it also means penis? Or what about Willie or Fanny? I used to have a girlfriend from NYC; she sometimes called herself "randy Randy." Of course, that was a long time ago, and her real name wasn't Randall. It was Miranda.
    #4Author dude (253248) 05 Dec 14, 05:51
    Comment
    Prince Andrew wurde ja mal wegen seines regen Liebeslebens "Randy Andy" (BE) genannt. Und andrerseits lässt sich mein Freund Randall aus NY (AE) ohne Hintergedanke "Randy" rufen ...
    #5Author MiMo (236780) 05 Dec 14, 06:05
    Comment
    I apologize for the poor punctuation in my previous entry: I edited and didn't fix things properly. What I meant to write is: along the lines of "boot" and "bonnet." Some AE speakers have heard of the terms, but most don't typically use them.

    Why would Randy not be common because of a double meaning? Is Dick any less common because it also means penis?

    I suspect that Dick is less common because of the other meaning, though I don't have data handy. People named Richard can choose to go by Rich or Rick or Ricky, and I would guess that some choose one of those over Dick because they don't want the association made. That's not to say that everyone avoids the name: I've known a few people who went by Dick. I also knew a female Randi.

    For what it's worth, wikipedia includes randy in its list of BE words not commonly used in the US, though it comments that it has become more common.

    I don't mean to claim that no one in the US knows or uses randy to mean sexually excited. However, it still strikes me as chiefly BE. Things change, though. Spot on, go missing and ginger have all become more common in the US and may soon not seem BE to Americans. Randy still strikes me as very BE; AE speakers in other parts of the US or who travel in other circles may react differently to it. I'd be curious to hear what other AE speakers say.


    en.wikipedia.org/wik/List_of_British_words_not_widely_used_in_the_United_States


    #6Author Amy-MiMi (236989) 05 Dec 14, 06:25
    Comment
    In my experience, Amy-Mimi is right: Some AE speakers may know "randy" in the sense of "horny", but many don't, and the word is not generally used in this sense in AE.
    #7Author Martin--cal (272273) 05 Dec 14, 06:29
    Comment
    Hi, Martin--cal. Thanks for spoiling my edit of the link. ;-)

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wik/List_of_Brit...
    #8Author Amy-MiMi (236989) 05 Dec 14, 06:32
    Comment
    So much for my valuable support :-)
    #9Author Martin--cal (272273) 05 Dec 14, 06:33
    Comment
    Why would Randy not be common because of a double meaning? Is Dick any less common because it also means penis?

    Nö. https://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/King_Size_Dick
    #10Author Cuauhtlehuanitzin (1009442) 05 Dec 14, 09:47
    Comment
    und hier nun der korrekte Link zu #6 /#8

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_British_...
    #11Author drkimble (463961) 05 Dec 14, 09:49
    Comment
    And from this side of the pond:
    Yes, "horny" is understood in the UK but in my view would still generally be seen as more AE (though, like, many other terms, I suspect it is becoming more common). People of a certain age (i.e. me!) probably wouln't use it.
    #12Author Spike BE (535528) 05 Dec 14, 10:20
    Comment
    Randy ist auf alle Fälle mehr BE. Ich habe jahrelang mit amerikanischen Soldaten gearbeitet, da war die Umgangssprache schon "sehr salopp", aber randy habe ich da nie in diesem Zusammenhang gehört.
    #13Author whynotme (913760) 05 Dec 14, 13:18
    Comment
    Just because some people don't know it (and yes, working with American soldiers is, of course, the best qualifier of all), the word still exists in AE. It's listed in M-W, the infamous Urban Dictionary, and several others, including the Oxford version below. I'm not arguing that it's better known or more widely used in BE, I'm just saying (and have done so since #1) that it's known in AE. I, for one, have known it since the late '70s.

    http://www.oxforddictionaries.com/us/definiti...
    HOME US ENGLISH
    RANDY
    randy
    Syllabification: rand·y
    Pronunciation: /ˈrandē /
    Definition of randy in English:
    ADJECTIVE (randier, randiest)
    1 informal Sexually aroused or excited.
    2Scottish archaic (Of a person) having a rude, aggressive manner.
    Origin
    mid 17th century: perhaps from obsolete rand 'rant, rave', from obsolete Dutch randen 'to rant'
    Derivatives
    randily
    randiness


    Edit: btw, Amy-MiMi, my question regarding Dick was rhetorical. Of course Dick is still a very popular name and has been for a long time. In fact, you might even remember ol' Tricky Dick, he of the Watergate scandal. There's also Dick Butkus, Dick van Dyke, Dick Cheney, Dick Allen, Dick Clark, Dick Cavett, just to name a few more. The list is literally endless.
    #14Author dude (253248) 05 Dec 14, 14:14
    Comment
    Just because some people don't know it [•••] the word still exists in AE.

    Nobody has said anything to the contrary, unless I've missed something.
    #15Author Gibson (418762) 05 Dec 14, 14:32
    Comment
    Just stumbled across this little tidbit of information:
    http://www.seattleweekly.com/2000-12-06/news/...
    Santa Can Be a Randy Bastard
    Video stocking stuffers for a horny New Year

    Merry x-mas! :-)

    Edit: whynotme seems to think so, Gibson.
    #16Author dude (253248) 05 Dec 14, 14:35
    Comment
    Nein. Ich meinte nur, dass es da wohl nicht so verbreitet ist, dude ;-)
    #17Author whynotme (913760) 05 Dec 14, 14:56
    Comment
    OT
    Of course Dick is still a very popular name and has been for a long time. 

    Interesting. As I thought about the use of "Dick" for "Richard," I thought, "I haven't heard many younger people called Dick in ages." Then I looked at the US Census Bureau's figures on the popularity of the names "Richard" and "Dick."

    "Dick" and "Richard" peaked in popularity in the 40s/50s. The popularity of both has dropped off rapidly and drastically since then -- which is why I know few younger people with either name, I'd say.

    http://www.ourbabynamer.com/Richard-name-popu...

    According to Collins, the "vulgar" meaning of "dick" has been around since the 19th century, so I'd guess that that hasn't influenced the popularity of eithe Richard or Dick all that much.
    /OT
    #18Author hbberlin (420040) 05 Dec 14, 15:50
    Comment
    from Dude's link in #16; "...brazenly for a mainstream thriller, and his bum is everywhere—just deliciously lewd-icrous.", and the title of the piece makes one wonder whether BE is popular in Seattle. :-)
    #19Authormikefm (760309) 05 Dec 14, 16:16
    Comment
    Danke an alle. Thanks to everybody.

    Danke insbesondere an Amy-MiMi für den Link zu dem Wikipedia-Artikel "List of British words not widely used in the United States".

    Hier noch ein kleines "Schmankerl" (wie sagt man im Englischen? "Tidbit"?), auf das ich in Youtube gestoßen bin:

    Austin Powers: "Do I make you horny baby? Do I make you randy?"

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ec_n2YTdA24

    ;-)
    #20Authorovert (776039) 05 Dec 14, 16:35
    Comment
    I agree with Amy-MiMi.
    #21Author Jurist (US) (804041) 05 Dec 14, 17:05
    Comment
    And from this side of the pond:
    Yes, "horny" is understood in the UK but in my view would still generally be seen as more AE (though, like, many other terms, I suspect it is becoming more common). People of a certain age (i.e. me!) probably wouln't use it.


    It's not just understood; it was around in BE the 19th century, which leads me to believe it also originated there (Americanisms weren't really a phenomenon back then).

    From "to have the horn":

    http://www.oxforddictionaries.com/definition/...
    http://www.etymonline.com/index.php?term=horny

    My baby-boomer, BE-speaking mother was definitely able to tell me why one graffiti-artist wag kept erasing the S from the "Hornsey Lane" sign in North London circa early 1990s, anyway.
    #22Author Pipper (917363) 08 Dec 14, 15:47
    Comment
    That reminds me; some time ago the lower bowl of the "B" in "Bornheim Mitte" (Ffm) on a sign over the entrance to the U-Bahn was scratched off (at night presumably). :-)

    I remember "to have the horn" in the UK many decades ago; I suspect "horny" has become more common (as an import?) since then.
    #23Authormikefm (760309) 08 Dec 14, 15:57
    Comment
    Some people are just really dedicated to the sexual-innuendo-in-public-signage cause!
    #24Author Pipper (917363) 08 Dec 14, 16:21
     
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