Carny

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Carny is the singular slang for a carnival employee,[1] as well as the language they employ.[citation needed] Carnies is the plural.[1] Carny is short for "carnival language" in pro-wrestling jargon.[2] A Carny is anyone who runs a "joint" (booth), "grab joint" (food stand), game, or ride at a carnival. (Alt. spelling - Carnie)[1]

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The word carny is thought to have become popularized around 1931 in North America, when it was first colloquially used to describe "one who works at a carnival." The word carnival, originally meaning a "time of merrymaking before Lent," came into use circa 1549, and is derived from the Italian carnevale for "Shrove Tuesday". The older Milanese Italian forms include carnevale and the Old Pisan carnelevare which interpreted means "to remove meat," is literally translated "raising flesh," from the Latin caro, meaning "flesh" and levare, meaning to "lighten, raise". Folk etymology from the Middle Latin is carne vale, interpreted as "flesh farewell."[citation needed]

Note: Though these terms are traditionally part of Carnival jargon, it is an ever changing form of communication and in large part designed to be impossible to understand by an outsider. Thus, as words are assimilated into the culture at large, they lose their function and are replaced by other more obscure or insular terms.[citation needed]

  • Bally - A free performance intended to attract both tips and visitors to the nearby sideshow.
  • Call - The act of yelling out slogans and interacting with passers-by to attract business.
  • Slough - Tear down your "joint". Get it ready for the road.
  • Spring - Open the carnival.
  • Scratch - the revenue from a concession.
  • Oats - stolen money from a concession.
  • -'iz' or 'erza'- - inserted between the syllables of words to serve as a cipher or cryptolect.
  • Mark - A target for swindling, especially one whose gullibility has been demonstrated. Derived from the covert use of chalk to mark the backs of especially ripe targets. The term has entered the popular lexicon, usually as "easy mark."
  • Sharpie - The opposite of a mark: an experienced player who is wise to traditional carny scams and is skilled at the games themselves.
  • The Nut - The sum total (in cash) of a performance, or group of performances
  • The Kitty - Budgeted amount of finance, regulated by the management of a carnival for purchasing food and supplies for its workers. ("We wanted a new tent, but there's no more scratch in the kitty")
  • Rousty or Roustabout - A temporary or full-time laborer who helps pitch concessions and assemble rides. In the 1930s, American Rousty's would work for a meal and perhaps a tent to share with other workers.
  • Sugar Shack - a concession or food-stand that doubles as a front for drug commerce & trafficking.
  • Donniker - Bathroom
  • Larry - Defective
  • Hammer-Squash - Used to describe an individual as dumb or stupid (used interchangeably with Larry when used to describe a person).
  • New - An insult used by carnies, against carnies. Used in instances where a carnival worker should know better, with the insulter asking "What are you, new?"
  • Straight - A game that is played by the rules
  • Alibi - A technique used where the player has apparently won the game, but is denied a prize when the jointee invents a further, unforeseeable, condition of the game. For example, a player may be disqualified on the grounds of having leaned over a previously undisclosed "foul line."
  • Flat - A game that is rigged so that you cannot win. Illegal in most states.

Many carnies "qualify" outsiders by using the jargon.

  • Gaff - To rig a game so as to make it unwinnable
  • Hey Rube - An exclamation used to summon help by a carny in trouble, either from police or disgruntled players. The term was used as the title of a sports column written by Hunter Thompson for ESPN.com in his later years.
  • Two-Way Joint - A game that can be quickly converted from a fixed, unwinnable game into a temporarily honest one when police officers come by.
  • Ikey Heyman - A wheel of fortune that can be secretly braked by the carny
  • Burn the lot - To cheat players with little or no attempt to conceal the subterfuge, in the carny's expectation that the same town will not be visited again.
  • Patch money - Money used to induce police officers to turn a blind eye. Also known as "juice" or "ice."
  • Spinning / flying Jenny or Jinny - Carnie slang for merry-go-round.[3]
  • Mooch - An individual who asks for a free game or prize. It is also used to describe someone who watches others play, but does not play themselves or asks a lot of questions with no intention of playing the game. Sometimes used as an insult between carnies to connote cheapness.
  • Key To The Midway - An object a carnival worker will ask a younger customer for when asked for a free game or prize. The idea is that the 'mooch' will go onto the next game and ask for a Key To The Midway, only to find out that this new carny has one, but can only give it up for some other far fetched item. Examples of such items include: A cordless extension cord, a solar-powered flash light, an underwater lighter, tack glue, a left handed screwdriver, lightbulb grease, purple fuzzy tape, glass hammer etc. The idea is to have fun at the customer's naivety. It's said that the Ferris Wheel has been known to be called the key to the midway, as no proper midway should be without one.
  • Stick Joint - Homemade wooden or metal booth.
  • Blow Off - Rush of customers out of an exhibition.
  • Green Help - Employees hired at a new location that are only temporary.
  • Bone yard - Place at which employees stay when not working. (called the bone yard because employees work hard all day long until they're nothing but bones)

  1. ^ a b c Definition of carny. Merriam-Webster Online. Retrieved on 2007-11-06.
  2. ^ Torch Glossary of Insider Terms. PWTorch.com (2000). Retrieved on 2007-11-06.
  3. ^ Do You Speak American. Track that Word!. Public Broadcasting Service. “1945 Sat. Eve. Post 9 June 17/3, Today, the carrousel, or " flying jinny " as she is known in the trade”

carneys on sunset

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