Dude
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Traditionally a dude (pronounced /d(j)uːd/) is a
dandy; a man who dresses flashily. But in recent years, the term
has taken on a colloquial meaning at variance with that: it now
means a male friend, mate, comrade, or associate. It can also be
used as an informal form of address when the speaker does not know
the name of the person that he or she is speaking to. A dudette or
a Dudie is a female friend, comrade, or associate, although
increasingly, "dude" is being used as a gender-neutral address.
Formerly, the word was associated with Western movies. The new
usage entered the mainstream from California surfer slang from at
least 1968, referenced in the movie Easy Rider, and today is
strongly associated with Generation X.
Scott F. Kiesling, a
linguist from the University of Pittsburgh, states in a 2003
scholarly paper published in American Speech that "the term is used
mainly in situations in which a speaker takes a stance of
solidarity or camaraderie, but crucially in a nonchalant,
not-too-enthusiastic manner ... The reason young men use this term
is precisely that dude indexes this stance of cool solidarity. Such
a stance is especially valuable for young men as they navigate
cultural discourses of young masculinity, which simultaneously
demand masculine solidarity, strict heterosexuality, and
non-conformity."
In the 1960s and 1970s, the term "dude" was a
popular part of black slang (not to be confused with Ebonics) that
was used by both males and females in referring to a male or males.
The term was used in some black "ghetto" or "street" novels of that
era. "Dude" was frequently used by black characters in 1970s TV
shows, which included "Good Times" and "Sanford and Son." In many
1970s black films, the term was often used , for example in the
film, "Blacula," the title character was referred to as "the big
dude."
Fake etymology of the word suggests that this slang term
originally came from a term that meant a camel's penis. The origin
of this myth is unknown.
Contents
[hide]
1 Origins 2
Crossing the Sex Barrier 3 A riff on "dude" 4 Dude in pop
culture 5 See also 6 External
links
[edit]
Origins
There is no definitive origin of the
word dude. The Compact Oxford Dictionary suggests it comes from a
German dialect word meaning 'fool'. The Random House Historical
Dictionary of American Slang cites an 1877 reference in an
unpublished private letter of the painter and sculptor known for
Western themes, Frederick Remington: "Don't send me any more women
or any more dudes," he told a correspondent who was sending him
sketches. "Dude" first appeared in print in 1878. The word made the
rounds of New York City slang of ca 1883, referring to a
fastidiously sharp dresser, affecting sophistication. This is what
the late 18th century British would have referred to as a "dandy",
which brings us to the compelling theory that "dude" was actually
derived from the "Doodle" of the song "Yankee Doodle".
Yankee
Doodle went to town, A-riding on a pony.
Stuck a feather in his
cap, and called it "macaroni"
Yankee Doodle keep it up, Yankee
Doodle Dandy
Mind the music and the step, and with the girls be
handy
The song was actually written by the British as an insult
to the colonists during the French and indian war—the British
soldiers have been decked out in their royal uniforms, and the
colonists, or yankees, in rags and coonskin caps. So "Yankee Doodle
Dandy" was a mocking take on colonial lack of sophistication. A
"macaroni" was a British slang term for French or Italian attire,
thus a man who had travelled to Paris or Rome, and adopted their
style, affecting a high level of sophistication, was the definitive
dandy. Yankee Doodle is so unsophisticated that when he sticks the
feather in his cap and calls it "macaroni", he believes he is being
fashionable. The British popularized the song during the
Revolutionary War, but the colonists in their victory eventually
embraced the song as their own, showing pride in their lack of
affected sophistication (See Dr. Audra Himes analysis at
YourDictionary).
The vogue word of 1883, was quickly applied to
dressed-up city slickers, especially Easterners vacationing in the
West, who affected elaborate 'Wild West' get-ups as paying visitors
at a "dude ranch." The dude in "dude ranch" was a figure of
mockery; an urban Easterner affecting the look and lifestyle of the
Western cowboy, but only on a temporary basis (i.e.: during his
vacation). This dude is a tourist, lacking authenticity, and not
deserving of respect. How this term of mockery eventually came into
use by 'surfer dudes' is unclear. Did the surfers adopt this term
of mockery, just as the colonial dandies had, turning it into a
sincere term of respect for each other? Or was it transformed by
actual cowboys, and then later adopted by the
surfers?
Interestingly, as dude has once again entered the pop
lexicon over the last three decades it has taken the form of
mockery, irony, and finally, nearly complete acceptance. In its
current usage, dude has crossed the gender barrier (and is now used
as a term of affection among certain couples who have adopted it as
an acknowledgement of equality), and indeed it is easier to
describe whom the term does not apply to, than who it does.
The
Oxford Dictionary's Definition
[edit]
Crossing the Sex
Barrier
Though dude had been applied to women as early as the
mid-70's, its use came to a tipping point somewhere in the
mid-80's. Attempts to establish dudette as the feminine form failed
(the original term for a fine-looking woman among Hawaiian surfers,
wahine, never established itself either) and it is now a fact that
dude, at least in the prescriptive sense, can refer to both men and
women. Perhaps the first mainstream display of this usage appeared
in the movie Less Than Zero, in which there is a scene where a
young woman defiantly tells her mother, "No way, dude!". Indeed,
even American Heritage Dictionary recognizes this in its dude
definition 3.b., that "dudes" are "Persons of either sex".
According to Jesse Sheidlower, the North American editor of the
Oxford English Dictionary, it is a topic of interest amongst
linguists and lexicographers whether dude in the descriptive ("that
dude"), rather than the prescriptive ("hey dude") sense can be
applied to both men and women (See The Sexual Transmigration of
Dude). The latter is generally a non-specific exclamation which can
be directed at, but not precisely applied to any certain person.
The former is rarely applied to a woman; in fact doing so is
sometimes a derogatory expression of a woman's over-masculinity
("she's quite a dude").
[edit]
A riff on "dude"
Depending on
one's tone and body language, dude can mean:
Hey! Look over
here! or Wow! (with great emphasis; "DUDE") Shame on you!
(Elongated and soft, often while shaking head; "Duuuuude") Are
you ok? or Are you there? (Short, interrogative "Dude?") That
is very cool! (Long, exclaimatory, with particular emphasis on the
long O sound; "Doood" [printed here phonetically]) Oh my
God.(Slightly elongated, with moderate emphasis)
This use of the
term with body language was probably best demonstrated in the 1998
movie BASEketball where the two lead characters have an entire
argument consisting entirely of the word "dude" with various
inflections.
Coop: Dude, I'm not gonna cave in! End of story,
dude!
Remer: Duuude??
Coop: Dude!
Remer: Dude!!
Coop:
Dude.
Remer: Dude!
Coop: DUDE!
Remer: Duude!! [Coop opens
his mouth but says nothing. Remer continues firmly]
Remer:
Dude.
Coop: [speechless, mouths around for something to
say]
I guess you got a point there. All right all right, look.
Maybe I was wrong. From now on... we're full partners.
Remer:
Really?
[edit]
Dude in pop culture
The term dude became
prominent in surfer culture in the early '60s, but it wasn't until
the mid-'70s that it started creeping into the mainstream. The
following is an attempt to list the major pop culture events that
have contributed to the spread of this remarkable word, in
chronological order.
1933 - The Dude Bandit, a western in
which Tod 'Ace' Carter Hoot Gibson defeats the evil moneylender Al
Burton Hooper Atchley. 1962 - The Man Who Shot Liberty Valance,
western in which Lee Marvin uses the term repeatedly, especially
toward Jimmy Stewart. 1966 - Endless Summer, a documentary
featuring the bohemian lifestyle of the surfer, including a
soundtrack featuring the Beach Boys. 1969 - Easy Rider, Peter
Fonda's character defines 'dude' as "nice guy" and "regular sort of
person". 1972 - "All the Young Dudes", a hit single performed
by Mott the Hoople, written by David Bowie. 1973 - Dude, a
musical play by Galt MacDermot. 1975 - In British rock band Led
Zeppelin's "Dancing Days" ("Is that the way it should start?
Dude!") 1978 - Big Wednesday, a film drama depicting the surfer
life in the '60s and '70s. 1982 - Fast Times at Ridgemont High,
a wildly successful teen comedy/drama featuring Sean Penn as Jeff
Spicoli, the quintessential surfer dude. A sarcastic, but warm
treatment, this film is largely responsible for the first wave of
the mainstreaming of 'dude'. 1980s - Dude enters the mainstream
via multiple surfer dude spoofs in film. It spreads rapidly with
skateboard culture which is a direct descendant of surf culture,
but is not restricted by geography. Sometime mid-decade dude
crosses the gender barrier. Dude also appears frequently in the
popular animated television series Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles. 1985 - Less Than Zero (written by Brett Easton Ellis) is first to
use the overused phrase, "No way, dude!", and the first mainstream
display of dude having crossed the gender barrier. In a noteworthy
scene a young woman tells her mother, "No way, dude." 1987 -
"Dude Looks Like a Lady" by Aerosmith tops the charts. The punk
western film Dudes is released. 1989 - On February 17, 1989
Bill & Ted's Excellent Adventure, introduced Keanu Reeves and
Alex Winter as Ted Logan and Bill S. Preston, Esq., two righteous
band dudes, bringing dude to an even wider audience. Ted uses the
word "dude" 10 times in the first 15 minutes, and doesn't ever let
up. The next day on February 18 the first segment of the "Wayne's
World" skit aired on Saturday Night Live. 1989 - "Hey, Dude"
airs on Nickelodeon and runs for 3 years. The cast of this teenage
sitcom set on a dude ranch included Christine Taylor. 1990 -
"Don't Call Me Dude", a song by the thrash metal band Scatterbrain
is released. 1993 - Adam Sandler's comedy album "They're All
Gonna Laugh at You" features the track "Buddy", where several
characters have a conversation comprised almost entirely of the
words, "Buddy", "Homie", and "Dude." 1997 - Good Burger
features a Less Than Jake song entitled, "We're All Dudes." The
chorus declares, "I'm a dude, he's a dude, she's a dude, we're all
dudes, hey!" The animated series South Park also debuted on Comedy
Central in August of that year featuring grade school kids who
incorporate a mixture of foul language and the word "Dude" in their
everyday conversation. 1998 - The Big Lebowski, featuring Jeff
Bridges as "The Dude". An aging hippie/beach bum turns Dude into a
philosophy. 2000 - Dude, Where's My Car?, features Ashton
Kutcher and Seann William Scott, as two young men or "dudes" who
lose their car. 2001 - American sociologist Laura Schuft is
nicknamed the DuDe. 2002 - In the popular teen drama, Degrassi:
The Next Generation, the character Gavin "Spinner" Mason uses the
term constantly which is often pointed out by his peers in many
episodes. 2004 - "Lost (TV series)", a television series where
one of the main characters, Hugo "Hurley" Reyes uses the word
"dude" in conversation with everyone. 2004 - Harold & Kumar
Go to White Castle. The 2 main characters frequently use this word
throughout the movie. 2005 - Supernatural (TV series), a
television series, where Dean Winchester, one of the two main
characters, consistently uses the word "dude" in everyday
conversation.
[edit]
See also
bro man guy
Homie buddy dawg chief boss
[edit]
External
links
Dude - A paper submitted to American Speech. Dude,
Where’s My Dude? - Dudelicious Dissection, From Sontag to Spicoli Dude Movie Quotes - Famous Dude Quotes Words@random: "dude" "Dude," an essay by M Massino.