It’s fast becoming obvious to me that words and phrases that were familiar to me in the 50’s and 60’s are fading into the oblivion of fogyism. C’est la vie, as Chuck Berry might say.
However, I’m just curious if any old farts over, say, 45, can attest to the fact that in the day a woman of questionable quality was referred to as a scag instead of the more recent skank.
Other competing terms of the same sort are welcome here. Just trying to decide if anybody else can back me up on this.
Now. What drove me to this thread was the thread on “tickling” and how we used to call “aggressive tickling” by the term “goosing.” I see in Urban Dictionary that “goosing” is way more nasty and evil than just mean tickling. And I now know better than to call something goosing unless it is.
But can you SCAG people confirm the old use of “goosing”?
BTW: I know that scag or skag also refers to heroin or other hard dope. (I wonder which usage came first!)
As I recall, a scag was a very unattractive girl, not necessarily one of ill repute. Of course, we picked up the term from adults, who probably meant it in a different way than we did.
Goosing was something my parents did to each other. It seemed to involve groping the other’s buttcrack somewhere near the taint, eliciting a startled yelp from the other party.
Back in the day (8th grade), scag was used with the same connotation of skank now. I recall hearing skank back then and thought it was something my sister made up.
Present day usage, in North Carolina: skank is a woman undesirable for reasons of looks and/or hygeine; scag is a female hardcore drug addict.
I’ve always known ‘goose’ to be a vigorous pinch to the buttcheek.
Hard both skank and skag in my youth. There seemed o be a subtle difference; a skag was worse than a skank. You could clean up a skank and make her presentable, where it would be much more difficult with a “ridden hard and put away wet” skag.
I had a strong feeling I could count on you for a little bit of support. I can’t swear that it wasn’t “gooch” in my case either, since I never saw it in print!
I seemed to equate scag with pig, which was more for looks than hygiene habits. We even had a code phrase to substitute for the word scag: “that girl eats corn.”
Well put! 25, Idaho. Skag is definitely out of favor in these parts but still recognized as the same as but a few degrees worse than a skank. Skag also implies that the person is older, as you said, worn-out.
This. My mother often described what I would call the “deer-in-the-headlights look” as somebody looking like “they’d been goosed and hadn’t jumped yet.”