Jawn is an
African-American vernacularslang term local to
Philadelphia and, by extension, the
Delaware Valley that may refer to a thing, place, person, or event, substituting for a specific name. Jawn is a context-dependent substitute noun; a noun that substitutes for other nouns.[1] Jawn can be singular or plural. Examples include: "These jawns are expensive!",[2] “Pass me that jawn.”, "That new jawn.", “This jawn is packed.”[3]
Jawn is believed to be derived from the word "joint".[4][5] Historically, the city's black population migrated to the
northern part of the city from Alabama, Georgia, and the Carolinas, bringing with them a
Southern dialect that carried words such as '
joint'.[6]
Culture
"Da Jawn" (1996) is a song on Kollage, the debut album of Philadelphian rapper
Bahamadia; it features fellow Philadelphian band
The Roots.
In the song "It's All For You" (1997), Mr. Eon of the Philadelphia rap duo
The High & Mighty says: "Somewhere in Philly, they call me 'the jawn'".
In the film Men in Black II (2002), while Agent J is explaining to Agent K that they replaced the car from the first movie, he refers to the car as "that old jawn."[citation needed]
In the song “November Has Come” (2005), a
collaboration between
MF DOOM and
Gorillaz, the line: “That said, nah, fo'real-a, the Villain on a Gorilla jawn?” appears, where the word “jawn” is used in the place of “song” or “album.”
In a scene in the 2015 Philadelphia-based feature film Creed, the character Bianca explains to
Adonis Creed the meaning of jawn.[7]
In the song "Routine" by
Wale, Akintimehin states, "Philly women really chillin' with me / Now I really can't stop sayin' jawn." which references his time spent in Philadelphia.[10]
The men in the
University of Wisconsin Marching Band's alto saxophone section use the slogan "Sancta jawn, musica sancta" which translates to "Holy jawn, holy music" in
Latin.
Jawn is an
African-American vernacularslang term local to
Philadelphia and, by extension, the
Delaware Valley that may refer to a thing, place, person, or event, substituting for a specific name. Jawn is a context-dependent substitute noun; a noun that substitutes for other nouns.[1] Jawn can be singular or plural. Examples include: "These jawns are expensive!",[2] “Pass me that jawn.”, "That new jawn.", “This jawn is packed.”[3]
Jawn is believed to be derived from the word "joint".[4][5] Historically, the city's black population migrated to the
northern part of the city from Alabama, Georgia, and the Carolinas, bringing with them a
Southern dialect that carried words such as '
joint'.[6]
Culture
"Da Jawn" (1996) is a song on Kollage, the debut album of Philadelphian rapper
Bahamadia; it features fellow Philadelphian band
The Roots.
In the song "It's All For You" (1997), Mr. Eon of the Philadelphia rap duo
The High & Mighty says: "Somewhere in Philly, they call me 'the jawn'".
In the film Men in Black II (2002), while Agent J is explaining to Agent K that they replaced the car from the first movie, he refers to the car as "that old jawn."[citation needed]
In the song “November Has Come” (2005), a
collaboration between
MF DOOM and
Gorillaz, the line: “That said, nah, fo'real-a, the Villain on a Gorilla jawn?” appears, where the word “jawn” is used in the place of “song” or “album.”
In a scene in the 2015 Philadelphia-based feature film Creed, the character Bianca explains to
Adonis Creed the meaning of jawn.[7]
In the song "Routine" by
Wale, Akintimehin states, "Philly women really chillin' with me / Now I really can't stop sayin' jawn." which references his time spent in Philadelphia.[10]
The men in the
University of Wisconsin Marching Band's alto saxophone section use the slogan "Sancta jawn, musica sancta" which translates to "Holy jawn, holy music" in
Latin.