Nigga
Nigga
Nigga
Contents
1Usage
2Cultural influence
3Use in trademarks or brand names
4See also
5References
6External links
Usage
In practice, its use and meaning are heavily dependent on context.[1] Presently, the
word nigga is used more liberally among younger members of all races and ethnicities in
the United States.[2] In addition to African America, other ethnic groups have adopted the
term as part of their vernacular.[3][4]
Cultural influence
The term "nigga, please", used in the 1970s by comics such as Paul Mooney as "a funny
punctuation in jokes about Blacks",[10][not in citation given] is now heard routinely in comedy
routines by African Americans. The growing use of the term is often attributed to its
ubiquity in modern American hip hop music.[11][12] Examples include:
One of the earliest uses of the term in a popular song was the 1983 song New York New
York by Grandmaster Flash and the Furious Five, although it had featured in some very
early hip hop recordings such as Scoopy Rap and Family Rap, both from 1979. Ol' Dirty
Bastard uses the term 76 times in his Nigga Please album (not including repetitions in
choruses).[12]
Comedian Chris Rock's routine "Niggas vs. Black People" distinguishes a nigga, which
he defined as a "low-expectation-having motherfucker", from a "black person". In
contrast, Tupac Shakur distinguished between nigger and nigga: "Niggers was the ones
on the rope, hanging off the thing; niggas is the ones with gold ropes, hanging out at
clubs."[13] Tupac, who has been credited with legitimizing the term, said his song
N.I.G.G.A. stood for "Never Ignorant Getting Goals Accomplished".[14]
Use in trademarks or brand names
Until a 2017 ruling by the U.S. Supreme Court in Matal v. Tam,[15] the Lanham Act did not
permit registration of trademarks containing terms that may disparage persons or bring
them into disrepute.[16] Registration by the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office (PTO) of
terms that are historically considered disparaging to groups of people has been allowed
in some circumstances. Self-disparaging trademarks have been allowed in some cases
where the applicant has shown that the mark as-used is not considered by the relevant
group to be disparaging.[17]
In 1995, two Houston, Texas men filed a trademark application with the PTO for the
words "Naturally Intelligent God Gifted Africans", and its acronym. The application was
rejected, as were numerous subsequent applications for variations of the word "nigga".
Most recently, comedian Damon Wayans twice attempted to trademark a brand
name called Nigga, "featuring clothing, books, music and general merchandise".[11] The
PTO refused the application, stating "the very fact that debate is ongoing regarding in-
[ethnic]-group usage, shows that a substantial composite of African Americans find the
term 'nigga' to be offensive".[12]