Nanny
English
Danish
Jamaican Creole
Alternative forms
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /ˈnanɪ/
- Hyphenation: na‧nny
Noun
Nanny (plural: Nanny dem or Nannys dem, quantified: Nanny)
- (slang) A J$500 banknote.
- 2007, Melville Cooke, “What can a 'bills' do?”, in The Jamaica Gleaner (in English):
- “I do not know when the $100 became a 'bills', as it is commonly referred to (it has been more recently referred to as a 'dollar', no doubt as its purchasing power falls). Of course, the $500 note is known as a 'Nanny' and I am reminded of a story about a motorist's encounter with a traffic policeman. […] ”
- Bredren, yuh can bruck a nanny?
- My friend, do you have change for a J$500?
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Proper noun
Nanny
- (historical) Nanny of the Maroons — the Jamaican heroine.
- 2006, Andrea Elizabeth Shaw, Andrea Shaw Nevins, The Embodiment of Disobedience: Fat Black Women's Unruly Political Bodies (in English), →ISBN, page 70:
- “The history of Jamaican national hero Nanny of the Maroons is also a narrative about the renegotiation of space — literal and figurative space. […] ”
- Every Jamaican love Granny Nanny.
- Every Jamaican loves Granny Nanny.
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Swedish
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