Andrae Crouch - Jesus Is The Answer (Videos & Lyrics)

  • Subscribe to our RSS feed.
  • Twitter
  • StumbleUpon
  • Reddit
  • Facebook
  • Digg

Tuesday, 30 September 2014

What "smh" REALLY Means (information & examples) Part I

Posted on 21:28 by mukhiya
Edited by Azizi Powell

This is Part I of a two part series on the acronym "smh". Part I provides information and comments about a few examples of "smh".
Click http://pancocojams.blogspot.com/2014/10/what-smh-really-means-information_1.html for Part II of this series. Part II provides a portion of the information in that post as well as additional examples of the use of "smh".

The content of this post is presented for cultural and etymological purposes.

All copyrights remain with their owners.

Thanks to all those who are quoted in this post. Thanks also to Whoissugar, the vlogger who is featured in one video that is showcased below.

UPDATE: October 7, 2014
Here are links to two other pancocojams post that mention "shakin my head" (smh):
http://pancocojams.blogspot.com/2014/10/what-tv-show-glees-shakin-my-head-song.html

http://pancocojams.blogspot.com/2014/10/hip-hop-doo-wop-and-country-music-songs.html

****
PART I
WHAT IS "SMH" AND WHAT DOES IT MEAN?
"Smh" is an acronym for "shaking my head". At least to date, "smh" appears to be limited to written communication on the internet (such as blogging, posting on social media sites, and tweeting) and telephone text messaging.

People usually write about something and then add the acronym "smh" at the end of that sentence. For instance, a person might write "Did you see that movie? The reviews said it told the true story about relationships between men and women. smh. Or, less often, "smh" is found at the beginning of a sentence or at the beginning of a short-hand internet/text message statement. For instance, "smh @"XYZ" movie.

Most of the time when people write "smh", they're communicating that they are figuratively shaking their head in reaction to the words and/or actions of another person. When "smh" is written, it expresses that the person feels or felt one or more of the following: disbelief about or negative judgment of what a person has said or done, for example the belief that the person is ignorant, or foolish, or a liar, or racist. "Smh" is also used to express exasperation, disdain, disgust, and/or anger because of those previously listed reasons or for other reasons.

In that regard, it appears to me that "smh" has the same or similar meanings as "kiss teeth" ("suck teeth") does among Black people in the Caribbean and in Africa. I think that "kiss teeth", "suck teeth" have and "smh" (usually) has an element of heightened impatience with the person whose comments or actions caused that person to make that gesture or caused the writer to add "smh" at the end of her or his comments (or at the beginning of those comments). But I think that there may also be an element of impudence in "kiss teeth"/"suck teeth" that I don't think is present in "smh".

I also believe that the reasons for writing "smh" are quite similar to the reasons someone would do a "side eye" or "eye roll". In addition, writing "smh" might also sometimes be motivated by the same reasons that people lightly smack their forehead with their hand (do a "face palm"), although it seems to me that a face palm is usually done because the person is exasperated with his or her foolish, stupid non-serious and non-offensive actions or those types of actions or words that someone else has done or said. Furthermore, I think that the face palm gesture is one that is most often done by non-Black Americans, and I think mostly Black females- write "eyeroll" or write "side eye" at the end of a sentence the same way and for the same reasons that people- I think at least early on, mostly African American people- wrote "smh". [I'll write more shortly about the racial aspects of "smh" and to a lesser degree about the racial aspect of "face palm"].

But in contrast to those other gestures, I think that probably few people who write "smh" take the time and use their energy to actually shake their head. Instead, it's my sense that writing "smh" is a way of conveying the action of shaking one's head (and saying "un un un" along with that gesture).

I listed above what I believe are main reasons why people write "smh" online or in text messages. [I confess I've not used that acronym myself.] However, a person might also write "smh" as a form of wry, self-deprecating sense of humor to note something that she or he realizes about herself or himself or about people (and animals or things) who or that they associate with. Most of the examples from whoissugar's two featured videos in this pancocojams series demonstrate that type of usage of "smh".

****
THE AFRICAN AMERICAN ROOTS OF "SMH" & ESTABLISHING A MARKER FOR THE EARLY USE OF "SMH"
I believe that "smh" is used (or at least "early on" was used) more often by African Americans than by non-African Americans, including other Black people. Unlike "side eye", "eye roll", "kiss teeth", and "suck teeth", "smh" isn't an old-school (traditional) African Diaspora or African cultural term. Nor does it appear to be an old school, traditional non-Black term.

I don't know when or where "smh" was first used. However, 2009 is the earliest online mention of this acronym that I've found: https://answers.yahoo.com/question/index?qid=20090503231937AA75mhg [hereafter given as Yahoo answers:smh]

That Yahoo query was posted anonymously. Here's that question

"is smh a black internet slang?

i have no idea what it means, but i often see it in message boards and comment areas. the posters are always black people. can someone clue me in?”
-snip-
Notice the use of the term "message boards". The use of the term "message boards" instead of "blogs" provides some clue about when this "asker" saw "smh" used. Other blog posts that i've read in which commenters associated the acronym "smh" with Black people*, such as the 2010 blog thread on http://forum.bodybuilding.com/showthread.php?t=128512063 . Here's the initial post on that bodybuilding thread:
"10-22-2010, 12:22 PM#1
mikeyBarracuda
Location: Boca Raton, Florida, United States…
Why do lots of black people say "SMH"?
Yes I know what it means - "shake my head"
But it seems as if a large majority of black people say "SMH" on facebook, through text, etc.
(no racist)"
-snip-
I interprete "no racist" to mean that the blogger wants to assure people that he didn't intend his question or comments to be racist.)

Although Facebook began in 2004, I wonder what the research indicates about when a significant number of Facebook users -whatever that percentage would be- were African American. Beecause of the "digital divide", I wouldn't be surprised if that didn't happen until 2009.

Returning to that Yahoo answers:smh query page, there are six responses to that question "Is smh a Black internet acronym?" Each of those answers was published in 2009. Three of the commenters either self-idenfied as Black or their accompanying photograph was of a person who people would usually identify as Black. One of those three commenters indicated that she or he knew about the acronym "smh", but denied that it was or should be associated with Black people.* Here's that comment:
"msknowitall answered 5 years ago [2009]
"I'm black.. and I have no idea what it means..
Get over it..
Its just an internet slang..
That hasn't caught on yet.."
-snip-
Notice that this commenter writes in 2009 that this internet slang "hadn't caught on yet".

The comment that the person who posted the query ranked as the "Best Answer" was from Christy:
"It means
"shakin my head"
there you're clued in
Example:
Girl: What are you doin?
Boy: Smokin Crack..
Girl: Smh you're a loser
-snip-
Other blog threads also associate the acronym "smh" with Black people and it by the number of racist comments on most of those blogs that many if not all of their commenters are non-Black. Most of those blogs [including the bodybuilding:smh but not the Yahoo answers:smh blog also include profanity and sexually explicit responses.

Speaking of that 2010 bodybuilder:smh thread, one commenter on that thread Bannister11
…Location: New Jersey, United States wrote that
"I thought it was a message board thing but I noticed my black friends who don't frequent forums use it too."
-snip-
I wonder if that blogger meant telephone texting when he said that his black friends who don't blog use the acronym "smh". Perhaps I'm wrong. Maybe Black people (and other peeople?) use "smh" elsewhere besides the internet and telephone texting. I'd love to know more about this.
-snip-
*Note: The referent "Black" wasn't defined in that website or in other blog threads in which commenteers noted that "smh" was associated with Black people or commenters asked whether "smh" was mostly or entirely associated with Black people. In spite of the fact that a lot of Black people aren't African Americans, given the prepondance of Americans on the English speaking internet, and the fact that at least on some website (but not the Yahoo:smh site) a number of commenters indicated that they were from the USA, it's reasonable to assume that people meant "African American" when they wrote "Black".)

****
THIS USE OF "SMH" AS DEFINED ON INTERNET ACRONYMS WEBSITES
"smh" may mean other things that aren't related to a person's comments about or reaction to something that was said or done, such as the "Sydney Morning Herald" (newspaper). Here are two entries from the internet acronym website: http://pc.net/slang/meaning/smh

"SMH
Meaning: shaking my head

Type: Acronym

Rank: ★ ★ ★ Common

Usage: Online Only (chat, messaging, e-mail)

Comments
Expresses disapproval, disagreement, or speechlessness; used when something is so bad that you just shake your head; can also mean, "I disagree," "I can't believe it," or "Not again..."

Updated: December 19, 2012
-snip-
"SMH
Meaning: Smash my head

Type: Acronym

Rank: ★ ★ ☆ Average

Usage: Online Only (chat, messaging, e-mail)

Comments:
SMH can also be used to say you are smashing your forehead on your hand. It is similar to saying, "D'oh!" after doing something dumb.*
-snip-
I think that "smashing your forehead" is the same thing as "face palm", but I'm not sure about that. (One commenter on the bodybuilding:smh website wrote that "smh" is black people's way of saying "face palm").

Neeither that Internet acronym website nor any other such website that I visited on September 30, 2014] made any mention about "smh" being mostly or entirely associated early on or presently with any specific racial population.

****
SHOWCASE VIDEO AND SELECTED COMMENTS FROM THAT VIDEO

56-whoissugar's side-eye Saturday Volume 2...3 days early



Uploaded by whoissugar on Mar 8, 2011
-snip-
Her's a comment that includes "smh" from the video itself:
"SIDE EYE EVENTS...
A male co worker called me "afrocentric," "neo soul," and "black panther" all BECAUSE I AM NATURAL!! SMH He gets the side eye every time I see him..
-snip-
Here are two comments from that video along with whoissugar's responses to those comments:

Tissa Chelle, march 8, 2011
"you crack me up...I can 't stand it when I dont have a video to watch from you...but twitter helps...lol

**
whoissugar, Mar 8, 2011 in reply to Tissa Chelle
"@PureRHOty AWE! Honey, I'm still trying to get the hang of twitter. Apart of me still doesn't get it. smh.
-snip-
“Apart” = a part
Note that whoissugar used smh in her self –deprecating remark about not "getting" (knowing how to use) twitter.
This comment written in 2011 lends further credence to the view that ‘‘smh” is a relatively newly coined acronym.

****
Myeka324Mar 8, 2011•LINKED COMMENT
"You are so funny Sug! That's funny what your cat did with the rumba....lawd have mercy! And the iron on the "hell" setting? Lol to that as well...appreciate you too girl and hugs right back at ya! :o) this vid is too much"

**
whoissugar, Mar 8, 2011 in reply to Myeka324
"@Myeka324 Chile, I'm mad how he didn't smell my shirt burning. SMH!"
-snip-
Notice how this example of "smh" is also written in good humor, and not in anger, disbelief, disdain, or disgust, as a number of other examples of smh are written.

Many of the comments that will be featured in Part II of this series demonstrate those types of emotions. That post will be published ASAP.

****
RELATED LINK
http://pancocojams.blogspot.com/2012/03/puttin-on-black-side-eye-videos.html "Putting On The Black: Side Eye"

**
http://pancocojams.blogspot.com/2011/09/what-kiss-teeth-suck-teeth-means.html "What Kiss Teeth (Suck Teeth) Mean"

****
Thanks for visiting pancocojams.

Visitor comments are welcome.
Email ThisBlogThis!Share to XShare to Facebook
Posted in African American Vernacular English, Internet lingo, kiss teeth, side eye, suck teeth, Word origins and meanings | No comments
Newer Post Older Post Home

0 comments:

Post a Comment

Subscribe to: Post Comments (Atom)

Popular Posts

  • Forms Of The Name "Billie Jean" In "Down By The Banks Of The Hanky Panky" Rhymes
    Edited by Azizi Powell This post presents comments about and text examples of versions of the rhyme "Down By The Banks Of The Hanky Pan...
  • Early Examples Of The Children's Rhyme "What's Your Name Puddin Tane"
    Edited by Azizi Powell This post presents examples of the rhyme "Puddin Tane" (or similarly sounding words). These examples are d...
  • The "A Biscuit" Refrain In "Down Down Baby" & Certain Other Playground Rhymes
    Edited by Azizi Powell Here's an excerpt of a cocojams2 blog post http://cocojams2.blogspot.com/2014/11/a-biscuit-phrase-in-playground-r...
  • A Cultural Critique Of The Song "Shut De Door" (Keep Out De Debil)
    Edited by Azizi Powell Let me start by saying that I think that "Shut De Door" (also given as "Shut De Do") is a song th...
  • The Origins And Meanings Of "Shante You Stay" & "Sashay Away"
    Edited by Azizi Powell This post provides information about & examples of the use of the statements "Shante, you stay" and ...
  • Stand Battles & The Changing Meaning Of "Majorettes" In African American Culture
    Edited by Azizi Powell This post provides definitions for "stand battles" and provides video examples of stand routines (battle st...
  • "Chesty Puller Was A Good Marine" (United States Marine Corps Cadence)
    Edited by Azizi Powell This post features examples of the Marine Corp cadence "Chesty Puller Was A Good Marine". Information about...
  • Versions Of "Shortnin' Bread" (1900-1950)
    Edited by Azizi Powell This post showcases seven examples of the song "Shortnin' Bread" from 1900 to 1950. Information about t...
  • Florocka (Nathan Akiremi) - "Twale" (Nigerian Gospel)
    Edited by Azizi Powell This post showcases a sound file of the Nigerian Gospel song "Twale" by Florocka (Nathan Akiremi). Also inc...
  • Examples Of "Jesus Loves Me" In American Sign Language (ASL)
    Edited by Azizi Powell This post provides information about, and lyrics for the Christian Hymn "Jesus Loves Me". Five videos of th...

Categories

  • "Comiing Down With A Bunch Of Roses"
  • 19th century African American songs
  • 19th century African American dance songs
  • 19th century African American dances
  • 19th century African American folk songs
  • 19th century African American songs
  • a capella
  • a cappella
  • A Tisket A Tasket
  • acapella
  • accapella songs
  • Acholi culture
  • Acholi music and dance
  • acting White
  • Acute Ebola Panic
  • Adinkra symbols
  • Africa unite
  • African American line dances
  • African Amercan Vernacular English
  • African American bird dances
  • African American blogs
  • African American Blues
  • African American call the doctor songs and rhymes
  • African American children's rhymes and cheers
  • African American children's rhymes about hair
  • African American children's singing games
  • African American children's songs and rhymes
  • African American Christmas songs
  • African American church services
  • African American civil rights songs
  • African American culture
  • African American dance
  • African American dance songs
  • African American dancers
  • African American dances
  • African American folk music
  • African American folk song
  • African American folk songs
  • African American Gospel
  • African American Gospel music
  • African American Gospel Songs
  • African American group referents
  • African American hair
  • African American hair/hair care
  • African American Hip Hop
  • African American Hip Hop. ah suki suki
  • African American history
  • African American history and culture
  • African American Jazz
  • African American line dances
  • African American models
  • African American movies
  • African American music
  • African American music and dance
  • African American names
  • African American parades
  • African American plantation dance songs
  • African American poetry
  • African American prison songs
  • African American prison work songs
  • African American protest chants
  • African American Rhythm and Blues
  • African American rhythm and blues dances
  • African American singing game Mardi Grad Indian song
  • African American singing games
  • African American slang
  • African American songs about calling the doctor
  • African American songs and rhymes
  • African American spiritual
  • African American spirituals
  • African American spoken word
  • African American stereotypes
  • African American traditions
  • African American verancular English
  • African American Vernacular English
  • African American wedding receptions
  • African American work songs
  • African Americans and fried chicken
  • African Amrerican music and dance
  • African Christmas song
  • African culture
  • African dances
  • African dancing
  • African dancing and drumming
  • African drumming
  • African empires
  • African epic poem
  • African fabric
  • African geography
  • African gods and goddesses
  • African Hip-Hop
  • African history
  • African Jazz group
  • African kings
  • African kings and queens
  • African languages
  • African music and dance
  • African musical instruments
  • African names and naming traditions
  • African proverbs
  • African Reggae
  • African Rhumba
  • African traditional languages
  • African words for father and mother
  • afro hair
  • Afro-Colombians
  • Afro-Cuban music
  • Afro-Ecuadorians
  • Afro-Peruvian music and dance
  • Afro-Pop
  • afrocentric culture
  • Afrrican American dances
  • Afrrican American Gospel
  • Afrrican American Spiritual
  • Akan culture
  • Akan day names
  • American Blues
  • American cartoons
  • American Folk music
  • American folk songs
  • American Gospel
  • American history and culture
  • American holidays
  • American Indians
  • American inspirational song
  • American Jazz
  • American movies
  • American movies and television shows
  • American music
  • American names
  • American Pop music
  • American Pop music from 1940s
  • American sign language
  • American Soul muisc
  • American television shows
  • American televison
  • American vernacular
  • Americn music
  • Anansi
  • Andrae Crouch
  • Andrae Crouch
  • Annet Nandujja & The Planets
  • anthem
  • Aphi Phi Alpha Fraternity
  • Apple On A Stick
  • Arabic names
  • Aretha Franklin
  • Asimbonanga
  • Atakas
  • Aunt Sally
  • autotune
  • Azusa
  • ballet
  • Bang Bang Lulu
  • bangarang
  • Banjo and fiddle music
  • Bantu languages
  • Baptism
  • Barbados music
  • battle stands
  • Belguim
  • Beninese music and dance
  • big band music
  • Billy Kersands
  • Black athletes
  • Black Bristish music
  • Black church processionals
  • Black Church processionals
  • Black Church Processions
  • Black church services
  • Black cultural nationalism
  • Black culture
  • black faced minstrelsy
  • Black fathers
  • Black fraternity and sorority steppin
  • Black gestures
  • Black Gospel Quartet singing
  • Black Greek letter fraternities and sororities
  • Black Greek lettered fraternities and sororities
  • Black hair care
  • Black hair styles
  • Black hashtags
  • Black majorettes
  • Black medicine show song
  • Black medicine show songs
  • Black models
  • Black nationalist movement
  • Black Peter
  • Black power
  • Black self-esteem
  • Black stereotypes
  • Black talk
  • blackfaced minstrelsy
  • Blind Blake (Blues and Rag performer)
  • Blind Lemon Jefferson
  • Blind Willie Johnson
  • Bluefield Nicaragua
  • Bluefields
  • Bluegrass Gospel
  • Blues
  • Blues songs about food
  • Bo Diddley
  • Bo Diddley Beat
  • Bob Marley
  • Bobby Womack
  • body patting
  • Bomba
  • book reviews
  • Booker White
  • bougarabou
  • Brass Bands
  • Brazilian history
  • Brazilian music and dance
  • break dancing
  • Brenda Fassie
  • Bring It On movies
  • British Music Hall songs
  • British Rock And Roll
  • British slang
  • British television shows
  • Broadway shows
  • buck and wing dances
  • Buckeye Jim
  • bucking
  • Burkini Faso
  • butter and margarine
  • Cab Calloway
  • call & response chants
  • call and response chants
  • Calypso
  • Cameroon Gospel music
  • Cameroon music and dance
  • Cameroonian music
  • camp songs
  • Candomble
  • Cape Verde
  • Capo Verdes
  • Capoeira
  • Caribbean culture
  • Caribbean folk songs
  • Caribbean music & dance
  • Caribbean music and dance
  • Caribbean cheerleading
  • Caribbean children's singing games
  • Caribbean Christmas
  • Caribbean Christmas songs
  • Caribbean church services
  • Caribbean creole and patois
  • Caribbean culture
  • Caribbean folk songs
  • Caribbean Gospel
  • Caribbean hairstyles
  • Caribbean history
  • Caribbean music
  • Caribbean music & dance
  • Caribbean music and dance
  • Caribbean patois
  • Caribbean shanties
  • Carriacou Big Drum
  • Carriacou Big Drum Songs and Dances
  • Carribbean Patois
  • Carricaou
  • Celicia Marfo
  • Cesaria Evora
  • Chaka Demus
  • chanteys
  • chanties
  • Chi Chi Bud Riddim
  • children rhymes and games
  • children's rhymes and cheers
  • children's rhymes and singing games
  • children's camp songs
  • children's chants and cheers
  • children's cheerleader cheers
  • children's game songs and movement rhymes
  • children's rhyme
  • children's rhymes
  • children's rhymes & cheers. cumulative songs and rhymes. Miss Lucy Had A Baby
  • Children's rhymes and cheers
  • children's rhymes and cheers; sources of rhymes and cheers
  • children's rhymes and cheers. rhymes about police officers
  • children's singing games
  • children's singing games. chanteys
  • children's songs
  • children's songs about police
  • children's vocal groups
  • Chimurenga songs
  • choir directing styles
  • Christian hymn
  • Christian Hymns
  • Christian religion
  • Christmas songs
  • church hymns
  • Chutney music
  • Chutney Soca
  • Chutney Soca music
  • civil rights
  • Civil Rights leaders
  • civil rights movement
  • Civil War Songs
  • claves
  • Clifton Chenier
  • Club music
  • cocojams
  • cocojams2
  • code switching
  • COGIC
  • Colombian music and dance
  • Columbian music and dance
  • comedic Blues
  • command compliance cheers
  • commercials
  • Congolese dance music
  • Congolese Gospel music
  • Congolese language
  • Congolese music
  • Congolese Rumba music
  • contemporary children's songs
  • contemporary protest songs
  • coon
  • coon songs
  • corn songs
  • Cote D'Ivoire music and dance
  • Cotton Club
  • counting out rhymes
  • Country music
  • cross cutting songs
  • Cuban music
  • Cuban music and dancing
  • cultural appropriation
  • cut the rug
  • cutting the rug
  • dance instruction songs
  • dance moves
  • dance stands
  • Dancehall
  • Dancehall reggae
  • Dancehall reggae dances
  • Dancing Dolls Bring It show
  • dancing with objects on head
  • Darktown
  • dashikis
  • Delta Sigma Theta
  • Democratic Republic of the Congo
  • Democratic Republic of the Congo culture
  • Dennis Brown
  • Destined Kids
  • diddley bow musical instrument
  • dig a hole to put the devil in
  • Dimension Costena
  • Dinizulu archives
  • disabilites and physical conditions
  • Disco music
  • Dominica
  • doo wop music
  • Doo Wop music
  • down by the banks of the hanky panky
  • down down baby
  • drag culture
  • drill teams
  • drum and bugle corps
  • drum majors
  • Dub music
  • dub poetry
  • Dub Reggae
  • early African American recordings
  • early Rock and Roll
  • early twentieth century African American dances
  • Ebola
  • Ecuadorian music and dance
  • Ella Fitzgerald
  • Emmy Kosgei
  • Esperanza Spalding
  • Ethiopia
  • Ethiopian culture
  • Etta James
  • etymology
  • Fathers Day Songs
  • Fats Waller
  • Fela Kuti
  • Fela Sowande
  • female circumcision
  • Festejos
  • FIFA World Cup
  • Five Blind Boys Of Alabama African American Spirituals
  • Flag colors
  • Folk beliefs and superstitions
  • Folk song
  • Folk songs
  • follow the leader song
  • foot stomping cheers
  • fraternities and sororities
  • fraternity and sorority stepping
  • French carol
  • Fulani
  • Fulani hairstyles
  • Fulani poems
  • Funk music
  • Gabriel Prosser
  • Gambia music and dance
  • Gay Culture
  • Gay Culture. African American Vernacular English
  • Georgia Rag
  • Ghana culture
  • Ghana Wedding
  • Ghanaian culture
  • Ghanaian Gospel
  • Ghanaian music and dance
  • Gombey costume traditions
  • Gospel Brass Bands
  • Gospel music
  • Gospel Quartet
  • gospelized hymns
  • gospelized Spirituals
  • Greek gods and goddesses
  • Grenada proverbs
  • Griots
  • Guadeloupe music and culture
  • Guinea-Bissau carnival
  • Guinea-Bissau music
  • Guinea-Bissau music and dance
  • Gullah culture
  • Gumbe music
  • gumboot dances
  • Gwo Ka
  • Haitian carnival
  • Haitian Creole
  • Haitian dance
  • Haitian music
  • Hambone
  • hand clap rhymes
  • Harlem Renaissance
  • HBCU dance lines
  • Highlife music
  • Hip Hop
  • Hip Hop music
  • Hip Hop music and dance
  • Hip-Hop
  • Hip-Hop music
  • Hiplife
  • Historically Black colleges and universities' marching bands
  • hold my mule
  • Holiday songs
  • Holidays
  • House music
  • Howlin Wolf
  • I have been walking for Jesus a long time.
  • I'm Bound For Mt.Zion
  • Igbo ethnic group
  • Indonesian songs
  • inspirational songs
  • inspirational tunes
  • Internet lingo
  • Internet memes
  • Irish children's rhymes and songs
  • it's tight like that
  • Ivory Coast culture
  • Jack of Diamond
  • Jamaica music and dance
  • Jamaican culture
  • Jamaican culture. children's songs
  • Jamaican diggins song
  • Jamaican folk music
  • Jamaican Gospel
  • Jamaican Maroon history
  • Jamaican music
  • Jamaican music and culture
  • Jamaican music and culture Reggae
  • Jamaican music and dance
  • Jamaican Patois
  • Jamaican patroitic song
  • James Brown
  • Jamoo music
  • Jazz
  • Jazz dancing
  • jerk
  • Jessye Norman
  • Jesus Savior Pilot Me
  • Jim Along Josie
  • Jimmy Castor
  • Jimmy Cliff
  • jive
  • Jive talk
  • jodies
  • Joe Simons
  • John Canoe
  • John Crow
  • John Crow Skank dance
  • Johnny Booker
  • johnny cake
  • Jola
  • Jonkanoo
  • Josh White
  • Joyous Celebration
  • juke
  • juke music and dance
  • jukin
  • jumbies
  • Jump Blues
  • Jump Jim Crow
  • kabiosi
  • Kalenjin language
  • Kathleen Battle
  • kente cloth
  • Kenyan Gospel music
  • Kenyan music and dance
  • kiss teeth
  • Kromanti language
  • Kumina
  • kunering
  • Kurtis Blow
  • Kush
  • kwaito
  • Kwaito music
  • Kwanzaa
  • kwassa kwassa
  • Langston Hughes
  • Latin dancing
  • Latin Jazz
  • Lead Belly
  • Leon Thomas
  • Lesotho music
  • Liberia
  • Liberian Folk Song
  • Liberian proverb
  • Limber Jim
  • line dancing
  • Little Sally Walker
  • Liza Jane
  • Lord Invader
  • Lord Kitchener
  • Lucumi
  • Luo
  • Luyha music and dance
  • majorettes
  • Malawi Gospel
  • Malawian music and dance
  • Mali music and dance
  • Malian music and dance
  • Mama Djambo spirit
  • Mama Mama Can't You See
  • Mardi Grad Indian costume traditions
  • Mardi Gras Indian song
  • Marimba music
  • Maroons
  • marriage equality
  • masquerades
  • Mauritius
  • Mauritius music and dance
  • May Pole festivals
  • Maya Angelou
  • mayaya lasinki
  • Maypole festival
  • Mbalax music
  • Melanesia
  • Mento
  • Mento music
  • Michael Jackson
  • military cadences
  • military cadences with the word layo
  • military devil dogs
  • minstrel songs
  • Minstrelsy
  • Miss Susie Had A Steamboat
  • Miss Suzy Had A Steamboat
  • monologues
  • Morna music
  • Mozambique music and dance
  • Muhammad Ali
  • My favorite pancocojams blog posts
  • My favorite pancocojams posts
  • Names and name meanings
  • names and nicknames
  • Namibian music and dance
  • nce
  • ndombolo
  • Negro dialect
  • Negro Folk Rhymes
  • Nelson Mandela
  • New Orleans culture
  • New Orleans Jazz
  • New Orleans Mardi Gras Indians
  • Nicaraguan music and dance
  • Niger
  • Nigeria culture
  • Nigerian clothing
  • Nigerian Creole
  • Nigerian culture
  • Nigerian Gospel music
  • Nigerian music
  • Nigerian music and dance
  • Nigerian pidgin English
  • Nigerian religious music
  • Nina Simone
  • North Carolina Moral Monday
  • noteworthy Pancocojams text posts
  • novelty song
  • Nyabinghi Drumming
  • Nyahbinghi
  • Odetta
  • Olatunji
  • old school dances
  • old time music
  • old time music song
  • Old Time Music songs
  • old time song
  • Olodum
  • Omega Psi Phi Fraternity
  • One more river to cross
  • one stringed fiddle
  • Oral Literature In Africa
  • Osun
  • Owu-Aru-Sun Festival
  • Pacific Island music and dance
  • Palmares
  • Palo de Mayo
  • Pan African Orchestra
  • Pan-African Flags
  • pancocojams blog meta
  • pancocojams traffic searches
  • pantsula dance
  • pantsula dancing
  • Parang music
  • parenting customs
  • parodies
  • Paul Robeson
  • Paul Robinson
  • Pentecostal
  • Peter Tosh
  • Pharoah Sanders
  • pick up lines
  • pigeon wing
  • play party song
  • play party songs
  • poetry
  • political song
  • politics
  • Pop
  • pop and locking
  • Pop-Rap music
  • popular culture
  • Portugal
  • praise brea
  • praise breaks
  • praise poetry
  • praise singers
  • protest chants
  • protest song
  • protest songs
  • Putting On The Black
  • quadrille
  • quadrille music and dance
  • Quelbe music
  • race and racism
  • racial stereotypes
  • racialized versions of children's rhymes
  • Rags
  • Ragtime music
  • rake and scrap music
  • Ras Shorty I
  • Rastafarian culture
  • Rastafarian culture/words
  • Ray Charles
  • Reggae
  • Reggae music
  • religious music
  • Rev James Cleveland
  • Rev. Charles H. Nicks
  • rhyme sources
  • rhymes about violence
  • Rhythm and Blues
  • Rhythm and Blues and Hip Hop dances
  • ring shout
  • Road march song
  • Roaring Lion
  • Roberta Martin
  • Rock 'n' Roll
  • Roots Reggae
  • Rosa Parks
  • roustabouts
  • rumba
  • RuPaul's Drag Race
  • Rythmn and Blues
  • Salsa
  • Samba
  • sambo
  • Santeria
  • saxophone instrument with traditional African music
  • Scat singing
  • scatting
  • sea shanties
  • Sega music
  • Senegal
  • Senegal history
  • Senegal music and dance
  • Senegal music and dance.
  • Senegalese history and religion
  • Senegalese music and dance
  • Senegalese myths and history
  • Senegalese myths and religion
  • Senegalese names
  • shake sugaree
  • shakin my head gesture
  • shanties
  • shave and a hair cut
  • Shelton Brooks
  • Shim Sham Shimmy
  • Shirley Caesar
  • shortnin bread
  • shout
  • Shouting John
  • show me your motion games
  • side eye
  • Sisiva
  • Ska
  • Ska music
  • skanking
  • slang origins
  • smh
  • Soca
  • Soca music
  • soccer chants
  • Soloman Islands
  • Solomon Island
  • Somalian songs
  • son (music)
  • songs about chicken
  • songs about hunger
  • songs about infectious diseases
  • songs about justice
  • songs about mother-in- laws
  • songs about Noah
  • songs from American movies
  • songs from movies
  • sookie jumps
  • soukous
  • Soukous music
  • soul food
  • soul music
  • Soul train
  • soundies
  • South Africa
  • South Africa music and dance
  • South African culture
  • South African Gospel
  • South African Gospel music
  • South African history and culture
  • South African music
  • South African music and dance
  • South African spoken word
  • South American music and culture
  • South American music and dance
  • South Sudan
  • South Sudan music and dance
  • South Sudanese culture
  • South Sudanese music and dance
  • Southern African music and dance
  • Southern Soul Blues
  • spankngs
  • Spirituals
  • Spirituals about Gabriel's Trumpet
  • spoken word
  • spoken word poetry
  • sports events
  • sports songs
  • spraying money
  • step shows
  • Steppin
  • Stomp and shake cheerleading
  • stomp cheers
  • stomping the devil in his head
  • stratch music
  • street dances
  • street vendor calls
  • struggle songs
  • Strut
  • such is life songs
  • suck teeth
  • Sudanese Gospel song
  • Sudanese music and dance
  • sukey jumps
  • Surely I Will
  • Sweet Honey In The Rock
  • Tabu Ley
  • take a peach take a plum
  • tap dancing
  • Tassa drums
  • taunting rhymes
  • that's life songs
  • The Bahamas Jonkanoo
  • The Bahamas Jonkanoo parades
  • The Caravans
  • the dozens
  • The Gambia
  • the Lindy Hop
  • The Love Circle.
  • the Virginia Reel
  • the Wailers
  • Thomas Mapfumo
  • Thomas W Talley Negro Folk Rhymes
  • Thomas W. Talley
  • Thomas W. Talley Negro Folk Rhymes
  • throwing shade
  • Timne ethnic group
  • Tonga
  • topical song about current events
  • toyi toyi
  • traditional music instruments
  • traditonal music instruments
  • Trinidad & Tobago Music
  • Trinidad & Tobago proverbs
  • Trinidad and Tobago
  • Trinidad and Tobago music
  • Trinidad carnival
  • Truckin
  • Tulululu
  • twitter
  • Uganda
  • Uganda history
  • Uganda music and dance
  • Ugandan music and dance
  • Uncle Tom and Aunt Jemima
  • United States history
  • United States Virgin Islands
  • university fight songs
  • using parental terms as nicknames
  • vernacular referents
  • video games
  • vine videos
  • violence in children's rhymes
  • Virgin Island Jazz
  • Virgin Island music
  • Viviane Chidid Ndour
  • voguing
  • waacking
  • Wabash Rag
  • wearing hats in church
  • wedding songs
  • West Africa
  • West African history
  • wheel and turn
  • When Pebbles Was A Baby
  • whooping cough
  • whooping cougn
  • Willie Dixon songs
  • Wilson Pickett
  • word origin and meanings
  • Word origins and meanings
  • work songs
  • Yoruba culture
  • Yoruba language
  • Yoruba names
  • Yoruba orishas
  • Yoruba poetry
  • Yoruba religion
  • Yoruba religion; Santeria
  • YouTube user names
  • YouTube viewer comment threads
  • Zamacueca
  • Zambian Gospel music
  • Zambian music and dance
  • Zimbabwe music and dance
  • Zimbabwean Gospel music
  • Zimbabwean music
  • Zip Coon
  • zoot suit
  • Zydeco music

Blog Archive

  • ▼  2014 (437)
    • ►  December (10)
    • ►  November (18)
    • ►  October (34)
    • ▼  September (39)
      • What "smh" REALLY Means (information & examples) P...
      • My Comments About A "Black People Talking White" V...
      • Heavenly Kingdom Kids - "Nagwode" & SuperKids - "N...
      • Baganda, Buganda, Muganda, Uganda & Janheinz Jahn'...
      • Five Videos Of The Bakisimba Dance (Uganda)
      • Five Videos Of Misty Copeland, American Ballet The...
      • Sweet Honey In The Rock - No Mirrors In My Nana's ...
      • What "Nana" Means In Akan Culture & The Use Of Th...
      • Pancocojams Update: 1 Million + Page Views !!!
      • Temne And Ibo (Igbo) Nation Dances & Songs From Th...
      • Cromanti Cudjoe (Beg Pardon) - Carriacou Big Drum...
      • "Can You Dig It" In Records & Movies (1969-1979)
      • Five Examples Of "Swing Down Sweet Chariot And Let...
      • Words For Father & Mother In Various African Langu...
      • Words For Father & Mother In Various African Langu...
      • Peter Tosh - Equal Rights & Justice (Examples & Ly...
      • Tofo Tofo (Mozambican Dance Group)
      • Children's Playground Rhymes About Shooting Someon...
      • Children's Playground Rhymes About Whippings (Span...
      • Five Videos Of Kenyan Vocalist Kwame
      • African American Slang In M.C. Hammer's "U Can't T...
      • Three Examples Of African American Street Vendor C...
      • South African Gumboot Dancing & The "Gumboots" Sta...
      • Speculations About The Origin & Meaning Of "Sangar...
      • "Sangaree" And "Sandy Ree" Song Lyrics
      • Eight Videos Of Oumou SangarĂ© (Mali vocalist)
      • The Word "Sambo" In Caribbean Folk Songs
      • "Sambo" In Examples Of Songs From Thomas W. Talley...
      • The Origins & Meanings Of The Word "Sambo"
      • A West African City Named St. Louis (Information &...
      • "Work It" (Virginia State University Cheer) & Othe...
      • "The Cat's Got The Measles And The Dog's Got The W...
      • The Old Time Music Roots Of The Camp Song "The Jay...
      • Seven Videos Of Aicha Kone (Cote d'Ivoire vocalist)
      • Seven Videos Of Guinea-Bissau's Carnival
      • Guinea-Bissau's Super Mama Djambo [band] (informat...
      • "Gon' Knock John Booker To The Low Ground" (child...
      • "Knock Jim Crow" - The REAL Origin Of The Dance So...
      • Two Versions Of "Jumping Judy" (prison work songs)
    • ►  August (32)
    • ►  July (53)
    • ►  June (39)
    • ►  May (33)
    • ►  April (30)
    • ►  March (44)
    • ►  February (50)
    • ►  January (55)
  • ►  2013 (63)
    • ►  December (37)
    • ►  November (26)
Powered by Blogger.

About Me

mukhiya
View my complete profile