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Caló (Chicano)

 

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Caló (Chicano)



 
 
Caló (also known as Pachuco) is an argot
Argot

Argot is a secret language used by various groups?including, but not limited to, thieves and other criminals?to prevent outsiders from understanding their conversations....
 or slang of Mexican Spanish
Mexican Spanish

Mexican Spanish is the dialect of the Spanish language, as spoken in Mexico.Spanish was brought to present day Mexico around 500 years ago. As a result of Mexico City's central role in the colonial administration of Viceroyalty of New Spain, the population of the city included relatively large numbers of speakers from Spain....
 which originated during the first half of the 20th century in the Southwestern United States
Southwestern United States

The Southwestern area of the United States could be defined as the states west of the Mississippi River, with the qualification of a certain northern limit, such as the 37th parallel north, 38th parallel north, 39th parallel north, or 40th parallel north line....
. It is a product of zoot suit
Zoot suit

A zoot suit is a Suit with high-waisted, wide-legged, tight-cuffed, Wiktionary:pegged trousers, and a long coat with wide lapels and wide padded shoulders....
 or Pachuco
Pachuco

Pachucos are Mexican American youths who developed their own subculture during the 1930s and 1940s in the Southwestern United States. They wore distinctive clothing and spoke their own dialect of Mexican Spanish, called Cal? or Pachuco....
 culture.

rding to Chicano artist and writer José Antonio Burciaga
José Antonio Burciaga

Jos? Antonio "Tony" Burciaga was a Chicano artist, poet, and writer who explored issues of Chicano identity and United States society....
:
"Caló originally defined the Spanish
Spain

Spain or the Kingdom of Spain , is a country located in Southern Europe on the Iberian Peninsula.The Spanish constitution does not establish any official denomination of the country, even though Espa?a , Estado espa?ol and Naci?n espa?ola are used interchangeably....
 gypsy
Roma people

The Romani are an ethnic group of Europe tracing their Origins of the Romani people to middle kingdoms of India.The Romani are Romani diaspora with their largest concentrated populations in Europe, especially the Roma of Central and Eastern Europe, with more recent diaspora populations in the Americas and, to a lesser extent, in other par...
 dialect. But Chicano Caló is the combination of a few basic influences: Hispanicized English
English language

English is a West Germanic language that originated in Anglo-Saxon England and has lingua franca status in many parts of the world as a result of the military, economic, scientific, political and cultural influence of the British Empire in the 18th, 19th and early 20th centuries and that of the United States from the mid 20th century onwa...
; Anglicized Spanish
Spanish language

Spanish or Castilian is a Romance languages that originated in northern Spain, and gradually spread in the Kingdom of Castile and evolved into the principal language of government and trade....
; and the use of archaic 15th-century Spanish words such as truje for traer (to bring), or haiga, for haya from haber (to have).






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Caló (also known as Pachuco) is an argot
Argot

Argot is a secret language used by various groups?including, but not limited to, thieves and other criminals?to prevent outsiders from understanding their conversations....
 or slang of Mexican Spanish
Mexican Spanish

Mexican Spanish is the dialect of the Spanish language, as spoken in Mexico.Spanish was brought to present day Mexico around 500 years ago. As a result of Mexico City's central role in the colonial administration of Viceroyalty of New Spain, the population of the city included relatively large numbers of speakers from Spain....
 which originated during the first half of the 20th century in the Southwestern United States
Southwestern United States

The Southwestern area of the United States could be defined as the states west of the Mississippi River, with the qualification of a certain northern limit, such as the 37th parallel north, 38th parallel north, 39th parallel north, or 40th parallel north line....
. It is a product of zoot suit
Zoot suit

A zoot suit is a Suit with high-waisted, wide-legged, tight-cuffed, Wiktionary:pegged trousers, and a long coat with wide lapels and wide padded shoulders....
 or Pachuco
Pachuco

Pachucos are Mexican American youths who developed their own subculture during the 1930s and 1940s in the Southwestern United States. They wore distinctive clothing and spoke their own dialect of Mexican Spanish, called Cal? or Pachuco....
 culture.

Origin

According to Chicano artist and writer José Antonio Burciaga
José Antonio Burciaga

Jos? Antonio "Tony" Burciaga was a Chicano artist, poet, and writer who explored issues of Chicano identity and United States society....
:
"Caló originally defined the Spanish
Spain

Spain or the Kingdom of Spain , is a country located in Southern Europe on the Iberian Peninsula.The Spanish constitution does not establish any official denomination of the country, even though Espa?a , Estado espa?ol and Naci?n espa?ola are used interchangeably....
 gypsy
Roma people

The Romani are an ethnic group of Europe tracing their Origins of the Romani people to middle kingdoms of India.The Romani are Romani diaspora with their largest concentrated populations in Europe, especially the Roma of Central and Eastern Europe, with more recent diaspora populations in the Americas and, to a lesser extent, in other par...
 dialect. But Chicano Caló is the combination of a few basic influences: Hispanicized English
English language

English is a West Germanic language that originated in Anglo-Saxon England and has lingua franca status in many parts of the world as a result of the military, economic, scientific, political and cultural influence of the British Empire in the 18th, 19th and early 20th centuries and that of the United States from the mid 20th century onwa...
; Anglicized Spanish
Spanish language

Spanish or Castilian is a Romance languages that originated in northern Spain, and gradually spread in the Kingdom of Castile and evolved into the principal language of government and trade....
; and the use of archaic 15th-century Spanish words such as truje for traer (to bring), or haiga, for haya from haber (to have). These words were left in isolated pockets of Northern New Mexico and the Southwest, especially New Mexico
New Mexico

New Mexico is a U. S. State located in the Southwestern United States of the United States. Inhabited by Native Americans in the United States populations for many centuries, it has also has been part of the Spanish Empire viceroyalty of New Spain, part of Mexico, and a U.S....
, by conquistadores españoles."


He goes on to describe the speech of his father, a native El Pasoan
El Paso, Texas

El Paso is a city in and the county seat of El Paso County, Texas, Texas, United States, and part of the . According to the United States Census Bureau 2006 population estimates, the city had a population of 606,913....
:
"My father had a vocabulary of Spanish words that to this day are not found in popular Spanish language dictionaries. He was born into a poor, migrant farm working family in a community of people that still used ancient words that some found improper and backwards but are to be found in Miguel Cervantez
Miguel de Cervantes

Miguel de Cervantes Saavedra was a Spanish novelist, poet, and playwright. His magnum opus, Don Quixote, considered the first modern novel by many, is a classic of Western literature and is regularly regarded among the best novels ever written....
's [sic] classic Don Quixote
Don Quixote

, fully titled is an early novel written by Spain author Miguel de Cervantes. Cervantes created a fictional origin for the story based upon a manuscript by the invented Moors historian, Cide Hamete Benengeli....
. My father commonly used words such as minjurne for mixture, or cachibaches (also used in Cuban Spanish) for junk. I would hear them without knowing their definition but I knew exactly what he meant when talking within a specific context. Some words were archaic, others were a combination of English and Spanish. And though he knew "standard" Spanish of "educated" people, he also worked, lived, laughed and cried with words that were more expressive and indigenous to the border than standard Spanish."


The Caló of El Paso was probably influenced by the wordplay common to the speech of residents of the Tepito
Tepito

Tepito is a barrio located at Cuauht?moc, D.F., in Mexico City.It is a popular flea market , infamously known throughout the country. Many prominent Mexican boxers and wrestlers have been born there....
 barrio
Barrio

Barrio is a Spanish language word meaning district or neighborhood. The word has come into use in English language mostly through the large Hispanic populations on both coasts of the United States....
 of Mexico City
Mexico City

Mexico City is the capital city of Mexico. It is the most important economic, industrial, and cultural center in the country; the most populous city with over 8,836,045 inhabitants in 2008....
. One such resident was the comic film actor Germán Valdés
Germán Valdés

Germ?n Genaro Cipriano Gomez Vald?s Castillo , better known as Tin-Tan, was a Mexican actor, singer and comedian who was born in Mexico City, but grew up in Ciudad Ju?rez, Chihuahua....
, a native of Mexico City who grew up in Ciudad Juárez
Ciudad Juárez

Ciudad Ju?rez, also known as just Ju?rez and formerly known as El Paso del Norte, is a city and seat of the Ju?rez in the Mexican state of Chihuahua ....
 (just across the US-Mexico border from El Paso), whose films did much to popularize the language in Mexico and the United States.

Development

Caló has evolved in every decade since the 1940-1950s. It underwent much change during the Chicano Movement
Chicano Movement

The Chicano Movement of the 1960s, also called the Chicano Civil Rights Movement, also known as El Movimiento, it is an extension of the Mexican American Civil Rights Movement which began in the 1940s with the stated goal of achieving "social liberation" and Mexican American empowerment....
 of the 1960s as Chicanos began to enter U.S. universities and become exposed to counterculture and psychedelia. Caló words and expressions became cultural symbols of the Chicano Movement
Chicano Movement

The Chicano Movement of the 1960s, also called the Chicano Civil Rights Movement, also known as El Movimiento, it is an extension of the Mexican American Civil Rights Movement which began in the 1940s with the stated goal of achieving "social liberation" and Mexican American empowerment....
 during the 1960s and 1970s, when they were used frequently in literature and poetry. Such language was sometimes known as floricanto. Caló enjoyed mainstream exposure when the character "Cheech", played by Cheech Marin
Cheech Marin

Richard Anthony "Cheech" Marin is an United States comedian and actor who gained recognition as part of the comedy act Cheech & Chong during the 1970s and early 1980s, and as Don Johnson's quick-and-scheme partner, Insp....
 used Caló in the Cheech and Chong
Cheech and Chong

Cheech & Chong are a comedy duo, consisting of Cheech Marin and Tommy Chong, who found a wide audience in the 1970s and 1980s for their stand-up comedy routines, which were based upon the era's hippie, free love, and especially drug culture movements....
 movies of the 1970s.

By the 1970s, the term Pachuco was frequently shortened to "'Chuco". The Pachuco originated from El Paso
El Paso

El Paso is a common Spanish placename meaning "the pass". It may also refer to:...
, Texas
Texas

Texas is a U.S. state located in the South Central United States, nicknamed the Lone Star State. Texas is the second largest U.S. state in both area and population, spanning , and with a growing population of 24.3 million residents....
, which in turn the town is nicknamed Chuco town. Pachucos usually dressed in zoot suits with wallet chains, round hats with feathers and were Chicanos.

Caló is not to be confused with Spanglish
Spanglish

Spanglish refers to the code-switching of "English language" and "Spanish language", in the speech of the Hispanic population of the United States, Gibraltar and most of the spanish holiday resorts, who are exposed to both Spanish language and English language....
, which is not limited to Mexican Spanish. It is similar to lunfardo
Lunfardo

Lunfardo is an argot of the Spanish language which developed at the end of the 19th century and beginning of the 20th century in the lower classes in and around Buenos Aires and Montevideo....
 in that it has an eclectic and multilingual vocabulary.

Features

Caló, like Spanglish, makes heavy use of Code-switching
Code-switching

Code-switching is a term in linguistics referring to using more than one language or Variety in conversation. Multilingualism, who can speak at least two languages, have the ability to use elements of both languages when conversing with another bilingual....
. Unlike Spanglish, Caló uses rhyming and in some cases, a type of rhyming slang similar in Spanish to Cockney rhyming slang
Cockney rhyming slang

Rhyming slang is a form of slang in which a word is replaced by a rhyme, typically the second word of a two-word phrase . The second word is then often dropped entirely , meaning that the association of the original word to the rhyming phrase is not obvious to the uninitiated....
 or African American
African American Vernacular English

African American Vernacular English ?also called African American English; less precisely Black English, Black Vernacular, Black English Vernacular , or Black Vernacular English ?is an African American Variety of American English....
 Jive.

Examples

Since Caló is primarily spoken by individuals with varying formal knowledge of Spanish or English, variations occur in words, especially of phoneme
Phoneme

In human language, a phoneme is the smallest posited linguistically distinctive unit of sound. Phonemes carry no semantic content themselves. In theoretical terms, phonemes are not the physical segment s themselves, but cognitive abstractions or categorizations of them....
s pronounced similarly in Spanish: c/s, w/hu/gu, r/d, and b/v. It is common to see the word "Barrio" (Neighborhood) spelled as "Varrio", "Vato" (Dude) spelled as "Bato" or "Güero" (White/Blond person) spelled as "Hüero" or even "Weddo".

Usage

¿Qué Pasiones? : (literally "What Passions") ¿Qué Pasa? meaning "How Are You?" ¿Si ya sábanas, paquetes hilo? or Si ya Sabanas, pa' que cobijas : (literally "If already sheets, packages thread?") ¿Si ya sabes, pa(ra) qué te digo? meaning "If you already know, then why am I telling you?"

Occasionally English is spoken with Spanish syntax. When speaking to a sibling or family member about parents, for example, a Caló speaker will refer to them as "My Mother" (Mi Mamá) instead of "Mom" or "Our mother". This is a similar phenomenon to the Yinglish
Yinglish

Yinglish words are neologisms created by speakers of Yiddish in English language-speaking countries, sometimes to describe things that were uncommon in the old country....
 phrase "I want you should...".

Rhyming is sometimes used by itself and for emphasis. Common phrases include: ¿Me entiendes Méndez? : "Do you understand?" Qué chida nave : "What a fuckin' car" ¿Tu pinche leva pues? : "you wuss" ¿Me explico Federico? : "Am I explaining myself?" Nel pastel : literally "No, Cake", meaning "No way" Al rato vato : "See you later, dude" Pinche perro : "big dog" Me esperas, a comer peras : literally "will you wait for me to eat pears?- "Will you wait for me?" Pinche piwi chavala : "Fuckin' little punk" ¿Qué te pasa, calabaza? : literally "Whats going on, squash?"

Caló in popular culture

  • American Me
    American Me

    American Me is a film directed by Edward James Olmos, his first film as director, and written by Floyd Mutrux and Desmond Nakano. Olmos also stars as the movie's main character....
  • Aztlan Underground
    Aztlan Underground

    Aztlan Underground is a fusion band from Los Angeles. Since early 1989, Aztlan Underground has played Rapcore. Indigenous drums, flutes, and rattles are commonplace in its musical compositions....
  • Akwid
    Akwid

    Akwid is an United States hip hop group combining Hip hop music-style vocals with regional Mexican music. An earlier incarnation of the group was known as Juvenile Style ....
  • Cheech and Chong
    Cheech and Chong

    Cheech & Chong are a comedy duo, consisting of Cheech Marin and Tommy Chong, who found a wide audience in the 1970s and 1980s for their stand-up comedy routines, which were based upon the era's hippie, free love, and especially drug culture movements....
  • Culture Clash
    Culture Clash

    Culture Clash is the name of:* The United States performance troupe Culture Clash * The British band Culture Clash which plays Harare Jit music...
  • Don Tosti
    Don Tosti

    DonTosti was an United States musician and composer.Born in El Paso, Texas, Texas, Tosti forged a career spanning several decades and styles, from European classical music to jazz and rhythm and blues....
  • Edward James Olmos
    Edward James Olmos

    Edward James "Eddie" Olmos is an Emmy Award-winning and Academy Award-nominated United States actor and director. Some of his most memorable roles are Characters in Blade Runner#Gaff in Blade Runner, Lieutenant Martin Castillo in Miami Vice, Jaime Escalante in Stand and Deliver, William Adama in the Battlestar Galactica re-i...
  • George Lopez
    George Lopez

    George Lopez is a Mexican American comedian and actor. He is one of the most prominent Mexican-Americans from within the Latino community to be recognized in mainstream North American popular culture....
     Show
  • Harsh Times
    Harsh Times

    Harsh Times is a 2006 in film Cinema of the United States crime film set in South Los Angeles. The film stars Christian Bale, Freddy Rodriguez, and Eva Longoria, and was written and directed by David Ayer, who wrote the script for the Academy Award-winning film Training Day....
  • Homies
    Homies

    Homies are a series of 2-inch figurines loosely based upon Chicano characters in the life of artist David Gonzales. First created in 1998, these plastic figurines were initially sold via vending machines typically positioned in supermarkets....
  • Frost - Chicano rap artist, song "La Raza" uses Caló
  • Lalo Guerrero
    Lalo Guerrero

    Eduardo "Lalo" Guerrero , was a Mexican-American guitarist, singer and farm labor activist best known for his strong influence on today's Latin musical artists....
     - pachuco swing musician
  • Lowrider Magazine
    Lowrider Magazine

    Lowrider Magazine is a monthly magazine about cars, focusing almost exclusively on the style known as a lowrider. It was founded in 1977 with the first issue coming out of San Jose, California, California....
  • Magu
  • Robert Rodriguez
    Robert Rodriguez

    Robert Anthony Rodriguez is an United States filmmaker, screenwriter, film producer, cinematographer, Film editing#Film_editor and musician. He is perhaps best known for making profitable, crowd-pleasing independent film and major film studio films with fairly low budgets and fast schedules by Hollywood standards....
  • Sublime
    Sublime (band)

    Sublime is an American ska-punk band that originated in Long Beach, California. Founded in 1988, Sublime consisted of Bradley Nowell , Bud Gaugh and Eric Wilson ....
  • Tin Tan actor from the Golden Age of Mexican Cinema, popularized pachuco dress and talk.
  • Zoot Suit (movie)
  • Café Tacuba
    Café Tacuba

    Caf? Tacuba is a Grammy Award and Latin Grammy Award-winning musical group from Naucalpan, Mexico . They were founded in 1989, and since then have had the same musical lineup:...
     "La Chilanga Banda" (song)


See also

  • Dogtown
  • East Los
  • Homie
    Homie

    Homie , is a contraction of the United States slang word ":wikt:homeboy" which became prevalent among some of the youth in Latino and African American communities starting in the late 1960s and continuing up to the present, particularly in the hip hop subculture....
  • List of Chicano Caló words and expressions
    List of Chicano Caló words and expressions

    The following is a list of Chicano slang words and expressions, known as Cal? , also spelled "Calo" and "Kalo" by modern Chicano youth. It does not list words and expressions of the language of the Gitanos people, which is also called Cal? , except where these have been incorporated into Chicano Cal?....
    .
  • Órale
    Órale

    ?rale is a common interjection in Mexican slang with varying connotations, including an affirmation that something is impressive, an agreement with a statement , or a simple greeting....
  • Pachuco
    Pachuco

    Pachucos are Mexican American youths who developed their own subculture during the 1930s and 1940s in the Southwestern United States. They wore distinctive clothing and spoke their own dialect of Mexican Spanish, called Cal? or Pachuco....


Sources

  • Aguilar Melantzón, Ricardo. Glosario del caló de Cd. Juárez. (translated by Federico Ferro Gay ; edited by María Telles-McGeagh, Patricia A. Sullivan. Las Cruces, N.M.: Joint Border Research Institute, New Mexico State University, c1989.
  • Burciaga, José Antonio. Drink Cultura: Chicanismo. Santa Barbara: Joshua Odell Editions, Capra Press, 1993. ISBN 1877741078
  • Fuentes, Dagoberto. Barrio language dictionary: first dictionary of Caló [by] Dagoberto Fuentes [and] José A. López. La Puente, California: El Barrio Publications, 1974.
  • Galindo, D. Letticia. "Dispelling the Male-Only Myth: Chicanas and Calo." Bilingual Review 16: 1. 1992.
  • Galindo, D. Letticia and María Dolores Gonzales, editors. Speaking Chicana : voice, power, and identity. Tucson: University of Arizona Press, c1999. ISBN 0816518149 and ISBN 0816518157 (paperback)
  • Hallcom, Francine, Ph.D.
  • JL Orenstein-Galicia. "Totacho a Todo Dar: communicative functions of Chicano Caló along the US-Mexico border." La Linguistique (Paris. 1965)
  • Ortega, Adolfo. Caló Orbis: semiotic aspects of a Chicano language variety New York: P. Lang, c1991. ISBN 0820415421
  • Ortega, Adolfo. Caló tapestry. Berkeley: Editorial Justa Publications, 1977. ISBN 0915808218
  • Polkinhorn, Harry, Alfredo Velasco, and Malcom Lambert. El Libro De Caló: The Dictionary of Chicano Slang. Mountain View, California: Floricanto Press, 1988. ISBN 0915745194
  • Webb, John Terrance. A lexical study of Caló and non-standard Spanish in the Southwest. (dissertation), 1976.
  • Manuel Cantú - Pachuco Dictionary ISBN 978-0-615-15944-7

External links