Chemistry:Blowing a raspberry

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Short description: Act of making a noise like flatulence

File:Blowing a raspberry.ogv Blowing a raspberry, razzing or making a Bronx cheer, is to make a noise similar to flatulence that may signify derision, real or feigned. It is made by placing the tongue between the lips, or alternately placing the lips against any area of skin, and blowing. When performed against the skin of another person, it is often a form of tickling.

A raspberry (when used with the tongue) is not used in any human language as a building block of words, apart from jocular exceptions such as the name of the comic-book character Joe Btfsplk. However, the vaguely similar bilabial trill (essentially blowing a raspberry with one's lips) is a regular consonant sound in a few dozen languages scattered around the world.

Spike Jones and His City Slickers used a "birdaphone" to create this sound on their recording of "Der Fuehrer's Face", repeatedly lambasting Adolf Hitler with: "We'll Heil! (Bronx cheer) Heil! (Bronx cheer) Right in Der Fuehrer's Face!"[1][2]

In the terminology of phonetics, the raspberry has been described as a voiceless linguolabial trill, transcribed [r̼̊] in the International Phonetic Alphabet,[3] and as a buccal interdental trill, transcribed [ↀ͡r̪͆] in the Extensions to the International Phonetic Alphabet.[4]

Name

The nomenclature varies by country. In most anglophone countries, it is known as a raspberry, which is attested from at least 1890,[5] and which in the United States had been shortened to razz by 1919.[6] In the United States it has also been called a Bronx cheer since at least the early 1920s.[7][8]

See also

  • Golden Raspberry Awards, which are named after the term
  • Linguistic universal
  • The Phantom Raspberry Blower of Old London Town
  • Flatulence humor

References

  1. Hinkley, David (March 3, 2004). "Scorn and disdain: Spike Jones giffs Hitler der old birdaphone, 1942". New York Daily News. http://www.nydailynews.com/archives/news/2004/03/03/2004-03-03_scorn_and_disdain_spike_jone.html. 
  2. Gilliland, John (April 14, 1972). "Pop Chronicles 1940s Program #5". https://digital.library.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metadc1633240/m1/. 
  3. Pike called it a "voiceless exolabio-lingual trill", with the tongue vibrating against a protruding lower lip. Pike, Kenneth L. (1943). Phonetics: A Critical Analysis of Phonetic Theory and a Technique for the Practical Description of Sounds. Ann Arbor: University of Michigan Press. 
  4. Ball, Martin J.; Howard, Sara J.; Miller, Kirk (2018). "Revisions to the extIPA chart". Journal of the International Phonetic Association 48 (2): 155–164. doi:10.1017/S0025100317000147. 
  5. raspberry (3rd ed.), Oxford University Press, September 2005, http://oed.com/search?searchType=dictionary&q=raspberry  (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)
  6. razz (3rd ed.), Oxford University Press, September 2005, http://oed.com/search?searchType=dictionary&q=razz  (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)
  7. Runyon, Damon (19 Oct 1921). "All Chicago backs up its footballers". San Francisco Examiner. Universal Syndicate: p. 19. https://www.newspapers.com/image/457777070. "....the East will grin and give Western football the jolly old Bronx cheer." 
  8. Farrell, Henry L. (30 Nov 1922). "Wills looks like boob in Johnson bout". San Antonio Evening News. United Press: p. 8. https://www.newspapers.com/image/39276030. "While the crowd was giving vent to the 'Bronx cheer' and hurling garlands of raspberries from the gallery...."