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See also: Gyál

English

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Etymology 1

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Noun

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gyal (plural gyals)

  1. Alternative form of gayal (Indian cattle)

Etymology 2

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Borrowed from Jamaican Creole gyal (girl), from English girl.

Noun

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gyal (plural gyals)

  1. (MLE, MTE) Pronunciation spelling of girl.
    • 2006, “A Little Bit of Shhh”, in Vertically Challenged, performed by Lady Sovereign:
      It's cold: there's a new top gyal on road / Running t'ing, running t'ing, running t'ing – everything: oh, you've been told
    • 2019, “Vossi Bop”, performed by Stormzy:
      Man, I wouldn't even try my luck with her / Gyals say I'm boujee
Derived terms
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Anagrams

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Jamaican Creole

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Alternative forms

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Etymology

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Derived from English girl.

Pronunciation

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  • IPA(key): /ˈɡʲal/
  • Hyphenation: gyal

Noun

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gyal (plural gyal dem, quantified gyal)

  1. girl
    Nuh ramp wid har. A bad gyal dat.
    Don't mess around with her. That girl's tough.
    • 2007, Robert Lalah, “Portia's potable water - Hot topic in cool Manchester”, in The Jamaica Gleaner[1] (in English):
      “"Gyal make haste wid di water nuh man! Why you one haffi have five bucket?" one woman shouted. She kicked aside a white bucket that was under the pipe and the water from the tank started to fall on the ground. "Do nuh take it out pan di water!" a woman standing nearby shouted hysterically. []

Usage notes

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As an interjection (e.g., "'Ey gyal!") the term can take on pejorative connotations and can be extremely offensive.

Descendants

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  • English: gal; gyal
    • Icelandic: gella
    • Japanese: ギャル (gyaru)

Further reading

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  • gyal at JamaicanPatwah.com
  • gyal at majstro.com