The decrepit car is often old and damaged and barely functioning. Many slang terms are used to describe the cars, which vary by country and region, including jalopy and banger .
Age, neglect and damage tend to increase vehicle maintenance costs. Vehicles can reach the point where these costs will be considered to exceed the value of storing them. Such vehicles are generally disarmed for some or are abandoned; However, some owners choose to maintain the vehicle. These old, neglected and often non-functional cars have been used not only for transportation but also as racing vehicles. Their use has given them a place in popular culture.
Video Decrepit car
History
During the 1930s, especially after the Great Depression, the market for used cars began to grow and old cars often became a form of transport for the poor. Cheap dealers can get cars for very little, make aesthetic adjustments, and sell cars for more. The overheated Rodder also bought a dilapidated car as a racer base, and early racing cars were called banger racing in the United Kingdom and jalopy racing in the United States.
A jalopy is an old-style American-style racing class, often racing on a ground oval. Initially the beginner class behind the midget, but the vehicle becomes more expensive as time goes on. Jaloman races began in the 1930s and ended in the 1960s. The race car had to be from before around 1941. The famous racers included Parnelli Jones.
Maps Decrepit car
Terminology
Many slang terms are used to describe the cars, which vary by country and region, including hooptie , jalopy , warehouse , clunker , lemon , banger , bomb , bats , rust bucket , voodoo , crash , bucket , death trap , disaster on wheels , "racket" or "shitbox"
Australian English
In Australian slang, the term bucket rust , bunky , old bomb , paddock basher or bomb used to refer to old cars, rust and/or slums. The term 'paddock bomb' or 'paddock basher' often refers specifically to cars that are no longer fit for riding on public roads, but used to get about the fields. Many rural children learn to drive in an unregulated way in paddock bombs.
English English
In English the term "old rust bucket" or just bucket is used to refer to aged cars but the preferred term is the old banger, often abbreviated to be banger . The origin of the word is unknown, but it can refer to an older tendency of older vehicles that are maintained poorly to re-fire. The terms shed and cut and shut are also used, although cut and shut refers specifically to cars made by welding the front of a car. to the other, usually after the original two cars were damaged.
English North America
In American slang jalopy , clunker , heap , old rust bucket and bucket is also used. So is the hitter and the more urban hooptie , which gained popularity from the funny song "My Hooptie" by Sir Mix-a-Lot.
The word jalopy was formerly common but is now rather old-fashioned. Jalopy seems to have replaced flivver (1910), which in the early decades of the 20th century also meant only "failure". Other preliminary terms for carcasses include heap, linny (1915) and crate (1927), which may have originated from World War I pilot slang for an old plane, slow and unreliable. In the second half of the 20th century, coarse terms became popular, such as "junk boxes".
The origin is unknown, jalopy was recorded in 1924. It is possible that Spanish-based Spanish-language non-Spanish based longshoremen, referring to the discarded car destined for slacking in Jalapa, Mexico, announces a goal on the pallet. "jalopies" rather than multiples or ownership of Jalapa. Another possible origin is the French "chaloupe" which refers to the "motor boat" and can refer to the sound of an old car.
The 1929 definition of jalopy reads as follows: "a cheap car, a car is only suitable for garbage". This definition remains the same, but takes a few moments to spell for standardization. Among the variants have jallopy, jaloppy, jollopy, jaloopy, jalupie, < i> julappi , jalapa and jaloppie . John Steinbeck pronounced it gillopy in In Dubious Battle (1936). This term is used extensively in Jack Kerouac's book On the Road, first published in 1957, although written from 1947.
Georgia Tech, an engineering school in Atlanta, Georgia, is proud of the practice of engineering students who maintain antique cars, and the school still maintains Ramblin 'Wreck, a popular school symbol. Their campus radio station, WREK, is named after the Ramblin 'Wreck From Georgia Tech icon.
The term is also used throughout the history of Archie Comics, in particular referring to the open red antique car Archie Andrews.
In 2009 the term "clunker" was widely used in connection with the Car Rebation Rebate System in the United States, also known as the "Cash Program for Clunkers".
Damaged cars used on Indian reservations in the United States and Indian reserves in Canada are often referred to as reservation cars or rez sprinters for short. The rez car culture is explored in the documentary Reel Injun , and also briefly depicted in Smoke Signals . Keith Secola (Ojibwa) recorded the song "NDN KARS" describing such a vehicle in 1987. Originally appearing as a cassette release, it was used in Native American-made Dance Me Outside. It's on his album Circle (AKINA Records, 1992). The poem activist Russell Means titled "Indian Cars Go Far" (1993) also described the "Indian car" as a decrepit vehicle.
See also
- 24 Hours LeMons
- Car Art
- Banger Racing
- Cash for Clunker
- Demolition derby
- Depreciation
- Lemon (car)
- Milo tin, a derogatory term for Malaysia which refers to un-repaired or poorly-worked cars.
- Pimp My Ride
- The vehicle roller scheme (United Kingdom)
- Damaged page
Note
References
External links
- How to Eliminate Old Car - WikiHow article about getting rid of an old car
- Guide To How To Dispose Old English Cars
Source of the article : Wikipedia