chargie

Jamaican Creole

Etymology

Possibly from English charged. Literally another person charged for the same crime, a partner in crime[1].

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /ˈt͡ʃɑːd͡ʒɪ/
  • Hyphenation: char‧gie

Noun

chargie (plural: chargie dem, quantified: chargie)

  1. buddy, homie, friend, pal
    • 2020, Oneil Madden, The Jamaica Gleaner (in English):
      “Socio-linguistically speaking, it is normalised for Jamaican men to express manly affection by saying, "nuff/much love", "mi rate yuh", or "yuh a mi chargie" to each other. []
    Yuh a mi chargie.
    You're my pal.

References

  1. 2010, Arthur Hall, “No rights in 'Hell'- Memories of riots haunt former inmate”, in The Jamaica Gleaner (in English):
    “He explained that 'chargie' referred to persons charged jointly for one crime. []
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