The word "HOOD"
HarveyCanal
"a distraction from my main thesis." 13,234 Posts
What does the word "hood" mean to you?Is it more to identify a neighborhood as majority black? Or is it more to identify a neighborhood as majority shady? I know my own answer, but I'd like to hear other sound off. Thanks.
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but a white kid can be a hood.
there are various degrees of hoods
favelas being the top and ''ethnic neighborhoods'' being the bottom
what's your take harvz
WHAT'S REALLY HOOD?
Growing up in Brooklyn it was places like Flatbush, Flatlands, Canarsie, Coney Island, etc., etc.
All with a wide variety of ethnicity, race and wealth.
If it can be recognized as a specific area by just using it's name, it's your "hood".
See, exactly what I'm talking about. The word as I've known it didn't come from "hoodlum". It came from an abbreviation of "neighborhood".
But today, it might as well have come from "hoodlum".
And that's fucked up to me.
So people were using the term back in the 60's? That would be news to me.
Short form of hoodlum, or to genrally describe a person - Meh, I don't use it that way.
it has always been more economic than racial to me
but unfortunately both have been associated and more often than not ''minorities'' are at the bottom of the inequalities ladder
I haven't actually read the novel, but it's the inspiration for one of my favorite films, Sergio Leone's "Once Upon A Time In America". I'm guessing that in this instance the word is used to refer to the gangsters not the milieu. And this book was written in the early 50's. I'm not sure if the word comes from neighborhood or hoodlum.
Where I grew up it was all about "What neighborhood are you from".....and when I hear "hood" I take it simply as an abbreviation of that.
Your identity was very much defined by what neighborhood you lived in.
When I was in college I had a friend that got jumped at a subway stop and had the crap beat out of him. When I asked him what had happened he said "Some of YOUR folks did this to me" based on the fact that it happened in my neighborhood.
I'm comfortable with my definition, even if it may not be the popular/biased one you're familar with.
a hoodlum.
Origin:
1925?30; by shortening
'hood
?noun
Slang. neighborhood.
Origin:
1985?90; by shortening
hood
"gangster," 1930, Amer.Eng., shortened form of hoodlum. As a shortened form of neighborhood it began 1980s in Los Angeles black slang.
hoodlum
1871, Amer.Eng. (first in ref. to San Francisco) "young street rowdy, loafer," later (1877) "young criminal, gangster," of unknown origin, though newspapers have printed myriad stories concocted to account for it. A guess perhaps better than average is that it is from Ger. dial. (Bavarian) Huddellump "ragamuffin."
To me personally, hood only refers to anyone's neighborhood.
Not sure I take any truth in the hoodlum origins.
Probably comes from the word hooligan.
-Kelvin Mercer
Agreed
"in my hood" = "somewhere I take pride in"
when it's used that way it usually means cheap, poor, dirty, but all too often it's used also to refer anything Black-related.
fucked up.
as a noun though, it's also all too often used to mean any urban area that's perceived as dangerous or poor--and so it seems like a lot of the time it's used by (rich?) white folks who think that any place without a majority white residents is dangerous.
Hoodrich?
How naive am I that I have never felt "unsafe" in any neighborhood at any time??
becky: ''thats such a ghetto lawnchair''
arent they calling each other Nigger since '04?
Thank you.
hood
A Jamaican slang used to describe a man's penis.
A conotation for a usually large penis.
What a man hood big!
That man's penis is very big!
The penalty for this should be one year of Slavery.