Does This Happen in Your Part of the World?
Does This Happen in Your Part of the World?
Being 22 and living in Southern Texas for all 22 of those years has made me ignorant of the outside world. Lately, I have been hearing mama and papa be used to refer to young friends or small children. Is this happening anywhere else in the world that you know of?
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Re: Does This Happen in Your Part of the World?
Not really, that would be very strange where I'm from.
Re: Does This Happen in Your Part of the World?
21, Northern Texas here. Never heard calling it to small children before, but some of the teenagers (usually girls) here have this bizarre "friend family" where they refer to each other as if they were part of a real family.
Re: Does This Happen in Your Part of the World?
That happens a lot down here too. I wouldn't recognize it as bizarre though because I've been roped into several friend families myself.Abi wrote:21, Northern Texas here. Never heard calling it to small children before, but some of the teenagers (usually girls) here have this bizarre "friend family" where they refer to each other as if they were part of a real family.
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Re: Does This Happen in Your Part of the World?
I've heard it in my part of Southern California
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Re: Does This Happen in Your Part of the World?
Yep, and it seems to me to be stereotyped of blacks and hispanics. I.e., in Black Dynamite, I remember that the eponymous hero refers to his female counterpart as 'mama' at one point. And I've heard Pitbull refer to girls as mamí before.
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Re: Does This Happen in Your Part of the World?
Referring to young friends and small children as mama, mami, papa, papi is common enough in San Salvador, El Salvador, yes.Cael wrote:Being 22 and living in Southern Texas for all 22 of those years has made me ignorant of the outside world. Lately, I have been hearing mama and papa be used to refer to young friends or small children. Is this happening anywhere else in the world that you know of?
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Re: Does This Happen in Your Part of the World?
I use "mama" as a general term of endearment for females, especially animals (for example I call my gma's dog "scruffy mama"), and I hear a lot of people around here use it similarly though it does sound a little dated to me (like a 1960's or 70's thing). I never hear papa used like that, some chicks around here call their boyfriends "daddy", though it's not really common.
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Re: Does This Happen in Your Part of the World?
In Bulgarian reciprocal kinship terms are used. I.e. a grandchild calling his grandpa "dyado" and having himself called the same by his grandfather.
Slava, čĭstŭ, hrabrostĭ!
Re: Does This Happen in Your Part of the World?
Likewise in (Levantine) Arabic: a father can call his children baaba, for example, whilst a mother can call her children maama. Grandma can call her grandchildren teeta, and so on.
كان يا ما كان / يا صمت العشية / قمري هاجر في الصبح بعيدا / في العيون العسلية
tà yi póbo tsùtsùr ciivà dè!
short texts in Cuhbi
Risha Cuhbi grammar
tà yi póbo tsùtsùr ciivà dè!
short texts in Cuhbi
Risha Cuhbi grammar
Re: Does This Happen in Your Part of the World?
Never heard it here, in northern Europe / UK.
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Re: Does This Happen in Your Part of the World?
immediately grandchild! an yogurtR.Rusanov wrote:In Bulgarian reciprocal kinship terms are used. I.e. a grandchild calling his grandpa "dyado" and having himself called the same by his grandfather.