Cant (language)

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Cant is an example of an argot or cryptolect, a characteristic or secret language used only by members of a group, often used to conceal the meaning from those outside the group.

The original meaning of "cant" was a secret language supposedly used by rogues and vagabonds in Elizabethan England. This Thieves' Cant was a feature of popular pamphlets and plays particularly between 1590 and 1615, but continued to feature in literature through the 18th century. There are questions about how genuinely the literature reflected vernacular use in the criminal underworld. A thief in 1839 claimed that the cant he had seen in print was nothing like the cant then used by gypsies, thieves and beggars. He also said that each of these used distinct vocabularies, which overlapped; the gypsies having a cant word for everything, and the beggars using a lower style than the thieves[1].

In modern times "Cant" is used sometimes to refer to Shelta (alternatively known as Sheldru, Gammon, or The Cant), the cryptolectic language of Irish Travellers based on Irish Gaelic and English. Indeed the word Cant is wrongly believed to be derived from the Irish word "Caint", to speak. In Scotland, it refers to the mix of Romani, Scottish Gaelic and Scots used by Scottish Gypsies and Travellers. Scottish Highland Travellers also used a form of Gaelic backslang known as Beurla-reagaird.

An example of a cant language which has been introduced widely into the mainstream is the Polari language which was used extensively in the BBC radio series Round the Horne during the 1960s.

[edit] Examples of cants

[edit] In popular culture

The computer game Planescape: Torment makes extensive use of words from old English thieves' cant, which it refers to explicitly as "the cant." Players must pick up the meanings of obscure words from context. The vast majority of the game is in ordinary English, however. Use of "the cant" originated in the Dungeons and Dragons setting on which the game is based.

Another example of cant is used in the play Our Country's Good by Timberlake Wertenbaker. The convicts speak in Cant.

[edit] See also