Bloodclat
Jamaican patois for woman's sanitary towel, used as a derogatory descriptive term. A severe profanity thought to originate from the unsantitary nature of the female period (blood clot). It can be used in many contexts, especially to back up a strong statement.
The worst possible way to insult a Jamaican is to refer to them as an excretion from the human body. What seems to be the most dominant curse is to refer to someone as a "Ras clot" "bongo clot," or "bumba clot." In these contexts, the term "clat" or clot does not mean a "cloth". Calling someone one of these words is like saying they came from a 'blood clot' and not an ovum from their mother's womb.
Bloodclat in Music and Literature
The word bloodclat has been used widely in reggae or Dancehall music from the rise of its popularity by artists such as Peter Tosh, and in roots poetry.
"yu come from
a little island
wid a bloodclat dialect
acting like yu
used to wear long pants
go bout yu business
nobody wan hear what
yu ahfi seh
zeen
yu's a little undadeveloped
squid
zeen
you's a little
youth man
a boy not yet
in high school" quote Professor Opal Palmer Adisa; Californian College of Arts. Award winning author.
Bibliography
- "Dictionary of Jamaican English", 2nd ed. F. G. Cassidy and R. B. Le Page, 1980.
- "Understanding Jamaican Patios", Adams, Emilie L. Kingston, Jamaica: Kingston Publishers Limited, 1991
- "The Rastafarians", Barrett, Leonard E. Sr. Boston, MA: Beacon Press, 1997
- "Rhetoric of Reggae Speech", Snider, Alfred, C. 1998.
- "Rasta/Patois Dictionary", editor Pawka, Mike
- Glossary from "The Harder They Come", 1972
See also
Jamaican patois Jamaican English