The Word Snigger

Recommended Videos

Steve the Pocket

New member
Mar 30, 2009
1,649
0
0
You know what's ironic? The same people probably wouldn't bat an eye at somebody saying they got "gypped", even though that IS a reference to exactly what you think it is.
 

Mossberg Shotty

New member
Jan 12, 2013
649
0
0
Unfortunately we have reached that point. The point where almost anything you say can be misconstrued as vaguely racist. Personally, I don't get it. I'm of the opinion that it's only racist if there is hate behind the word being used, but it seems I'm in the minority here.
 

Idsertian

Member
Legacy
Apr 8, 2011
513
0
1
Wait, really OP? That's just... sad. I feel sad now. Sad that people will jump on a word like "snigger" without first thinking to themselves "Oh hang on, perhaps I should check a dictionary first to see what this guy's on about". Especially people in a position of "responsibility" like livestream moderators.

Le sigh.

Dead Century said:
Hey, OP. Maybe you should eat one of these. I think you must get a little British when you're hungry. XD

In all seriousness, I have heard snigger before, but most people here in Canada just use snicker.
And it'll have the added bonus of this!


Not that I'd know, personally, because I hate Snickers, but I had to add this. I just had to. I couldn't not. :D
 

MeChaNiZ3D

New member
Aug 30, 2011
3,104
0
0
Before now I hadn't even conceived that someone might mistake snigger for ******. Snicker is also a word similar in meaning, but just for the record, I've always known snigger to be a word. But yeah, this is stupid and one of the side effects of censorship. Reminds me of the seemingly random things PSN bans from chat, including tens of thousands of rarely used few-letter-long words that I suppose mean tits.
 

Jamash

Top Todger
Jun 25, 2008
3,638
0
0
The word niggle is another victim of the US's inability to rationalise the shame of it's history.

On a sports forum I saw someone make a thread with niggle in the title, as in referring to a niggling muscle injury, and I was surprised at how many Americans had never even heard of the word before and thought it was an offensive term for a black baby... which didn't even make sense in the context the word was used, but that didn't stop the knee-jerk reactions and accusations of racism that words with the letters "nig" seem to cause in some people.

People should just accept that while slavery was bad, and racism is bad, and calling a black person a ****** in an insulting and derogatory manner isn't acceptable, other words with the letters "nig" are perfectly fine in the correct context... or they should just ban all N words by removing the letter N from the US alphabet and trying to make do with 25 letters (but that would ivolve gettig Cogress to approve the rewritig of the Costitutio of the Uited States, so it would ever happe).
 

Jamash

Top Todger
Jun 25, 2008
3,638
0
0
shootthebandit said:
Eamar said:
I've been called an SJW in the past
Whats an SJW? (PM me if you dont want to say it) im just curious

This is what happens when people use phrases like the N-word. Without actually referring to it its not clear you could mean "nipple" or "nincompoop".

You are either in the 90% of people that know what it means so whats the difference between saying "******" or "the N-word" when it means the same thing. Then theres the 10% who dont have a clue what the "the N-word" implies so they read an article saying "the N-word" and dont have a clue which word beginning with N it could be
For the longest time I got confused when news articles on this site referred to Nintendo as "The Big N".

I'd never heard "Big N" as a name for Nintendo, but had heard people say "the N word" (like it was the only word beginning with N) and in my head I also crossed confused it with the Notorious B.I.G., so for quite a while I always read "Big N" in news articles as "Big Nigga", like Nintendo was some new gangster rapper.
 

TheYellowCellPhone

New member
Sep 26, 2009
8,617
0
0
I've always associated it as a mischevious reaction, obviously because it looks so similar to the verb snicker. That was before I knew swear words existed, surprisingly.
people say it all the time,
I disagree, not where I'm from or the places on the Internet I've seen.
 

Thaluikhain

Elite Member
Legacy
Jan 16, 2010
19,538
4,128
118
Eh, I can understand that.

It's not a very common word, people might simply not have heard it before. Alternatively, you could very easily misread or mishear it. Either way, you could mistake it for racism easily.

(Assuming it wasn't being used in a racist way. I'd imagine people would go round saying "snigger" and "niggardly" and so on on purpose for this, claiming not to be being offensive)
 

Something Amyss

Aswyng and Amyss
Dec 3, 2008
24,759
0
0
shootthebandit said:
This is really stupid. Snigger is a genuine word. Its like avoiding referring to a cigarette as a "fag" because americans use the word as a homophobic slur
At least that's the same word with a different meaning. "Snigger" is a different word that has nothing to do with black people.

Mossberg Shotty said:
Unfortunately we have reached that point. The point where almost anything you say can be misconstrued as vaguely racist. Personally, I don't get it.
Me either. I manage to make it through every day without going out of my way to not sound racist but without being accused of racism or any evidence I've offended anyone by racial insensitivity. And considering I'm accused of being part of the SJW crowd, you'd think I'd be tripping all over accusations of racism. It's amazing. Maybe I should submit myself for study.

TheYellowCellPhone said:
I disagree, not where I'm from or the places on the Internet I've seen.
I've primarily seen it in books I had to read in school. It was my impression it was an archaic word, but I guess I was wrong. It seems to be more prevalent than I thought.
 

Ihateregistering1

New member
Mar 30, 2011
2,034
0
0
I can understand if you haven't heard a word before that you might jump to conclusions when you hear it sounding similar to something else.

However, that does not excuse you from being an adult and looking in a dictionary before you scream and cry about how offended you are regarding a word that you don't even understand the meaning of, for no other reason than "it sounds kinda like this other word that offends me".
 

CrazyCapnMorgan

Is not insane, just crazy >:)
Jan 5, 2011
2,742
0
0
You know, I'm American and I know both words. I am, of course, familiar with snicker, but it was Dragon Quest 8 and Angelo that taught me of the use of the word snigger, in the form of Angelo's skill "Sarcastic Snigger".

Dunno what causes everyone to be so defensive about the "N word". Maybe...

 

FPLOON

Your #1 Source for the Dino Porn
Jul 10, 2013
12,531
0
0
Dead Century said:
Hey, OP. Maybe you should eat one of these. I think you must get a little British when you're hungry. XD
Dammit! Now, I'm hungry for a Snickers! *takes out a Snickers bar out of his Snickers drawer*

OT: When I first heard the word "snigger", it sounded like a slang term for a snickering [N-word]... Now, I realize that it was actually another word for "snicker"...

Well, it looks I got to apologize to someone for the month-long misunderstanding tomorrow...

Other than that... who knew words that mean one thing can lead to mean something else either by mistake or through "word evolution"? (I still having trouble adapting to that frame of logic, in terms of words in general...)
 

mjharper

Can
Apr 28, 2013
172
0
0
Dead Century said:
Hey, OP. Maybe you should eat one of these. I think you must get a little British when you're hungry. XD

In all seriousness, I have heard snigger before, but most people here in Canada just use snicker.
These were called Marathon in the UK until 1990. God, I'm getting old.

OT: 'Snigger' is clearly a different word from 'snicker', and strictly speaking it has nothing to do with racism. I'd be more likely to use it as well. BUT... if you look at Urban Dictionary, the PC-ness is cited as part of the word, and the are several submissions which basically redefine 'snigger' as portmanteau of, say, 'sand+word' or 'sneaky+word'.

Urban Dictionary is hardly the final arbitrator of correct meaning, but the point is that (at least some) people are using 'snigger' to be offensive and racist. So the problem doesn't really lie with the stream mods.

Back where I come from, 'fag' means 'cigarettes', '******' means 'lump of wood', and of course 'gay' used to mean 'happy'. But personally, I wouldn't use any of those words because of the negative associations and the way that some people use them. I wouldn't want to be associated with such people, and just arguing 'that's not what the word means!' isn't enough.

With 'snigger' we might be seeing an example of language change going on. Maybe it will stick, maybe it won't. But for now I'd err on the side of caution.
 

shootthebandit

New member
May 20, 2009
3,867
0
0
Dexterity said:
shootthebandit said:
This is really stupid. Snigger is a genuine word. Its like avoiding referring to a cigarette as a "fag" because americans use the word as a homophobic slur
It's pretty funny really, because depending on whether you're American or British, the phrase "Smoke a fag" can either come across as "Go outside and smoke a cigarette" or "Shoot a gay guy".

Personally I use the phrase a lot, because it's just general slang where I live, but I imagine with no context or anything, it could sound... Well, really weird to someone who doesn't understand foreign slang.
Where I come from "tapping/bumming a fag" from someone is a slang for asking to borrow a cigarette. Imagine going to america and completely forgetting their use of the word and asking to "tap/bum a fag"
 

Alarien

New member
Feb 9, 2010
441
0
0
So here's my take on the subject:

Snigger is a perfectly normal, non-racist word.

Niggardly is a perfectly normal, non-racist word.

Under no circumstances SHOULD you be banned or called out for their use.

That said, you should also recognize that people are dumb and will automatically associate them both with that other word, which is fundamentally racist. So you should roll your eyes at how dumb people are, sigh, and use another word. That's just a mixture of common sense and tact.

Languages evolve, so the best thing to do is wait for new words to arise to mean those things and use those.

That said, I will probably never stop using the words "retarded" and "handicapped." I should follow my own advice, but neither of those words are inherently bad. They mean what they mean. I believe my rationale for those is that any word that rises to take their place will eventually become assumed to be a negative and/or epithet. Hell, you can't even call people "special needs" these days.

So, yeah... a bit hypocritical I guess, but at least snigger and niggardly are personality aspect whose replacement or alternate words will not automatically reference an accepted racial epithet.
 

TheRiddler

New member
Sep 21, 2013
1,009
0
0
This problem is referred to as the Scunthorpe Problem, after the English town with an unfortunate expletive hidden in its name.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Scunthorpe_problem
 

Rellik San

New member
Feb 3, 2011
609
0
0
TheRiddler said:
This problem is referred to as the Scunthorpe Problem, after the English town with an unfortunate expletive hidden in its name.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Scunthorpe_problem
You know I was just thinking exactly of that when I wrote the OP.


OT: There seems to be a few people saying I should err on the side of caution here and a few saying I should be cavalier about it and honestly, I hope to remain cavalier about it, simply put, it's the culturally prevalent term where I'm from and we have enough trouble with losing languages like Welsh and Gaelic as it is.

The Americanisation of the language is an unfortunate aspect of net culture, even I occasionally catch myself saying "ass" instead of "arse". Dialect is important for diversity, not just culturally but learning varying dialects can just help to improve ones vocabulary (or as I occasionally call it in moments of stupidity: Word, county, knowledgebasey thingy).

So I guess in conclusion: Read the word in context if someone makes a comment and this btw is the comment I made: "Fisting *sniggers*" Taking words out of context can sometimes be hilarious... as with the aforementioned fisting... other times it can lead to MAHOOSIVE cultural confusion.
 

Bluestorm83

New member
Jun 20, 2011
199
0
0
People really are overly defensive about anything that could be perceived as even remotely racist. It's getting out of hand. I mean, we should all strive to know more words, to be more verbose. Instead, those of us who want to speak are forced to be niggardly with our vocabularies. It tears me up.