Jass 1913

Cohen, Gerald Leonard gcohen at MST.EDU
Mon Mar 21 22:14:25 UTC 2011


 
Buried in my "jazz" notes is a frame in an early 20th century cartoon (pre-1913, IIRC), with "jass" apparently meaning "yes." (Thanks to Barry Popik for sending it to me).  This "jass" is spoken by someone not natively American (in the Katzenjammer Kids?), and I assumed that it is somehow a cross between Geman "ja" and English "yes."  I'll try to locate it when I have time.
      At least until now I didn't attribute any importance to it and therefore didn't bother to include it in my 
Comments on Etymology items on the origin of the term "jazz." IAC, I believe Ben is right to reject
"jass" below as referring to music.  
----G. Cohen
 
Ben Zimmer wrote (Mon 3/21/2011 12:30 PM):

And now that I check the page image, I don't think the context was
ragtime at all. The item titled "Agreed" occurs far down in the
column, nowhere near the earlier items on sheet music. So there's
nothing suggesting this has anything to do with music -- just a
"yes"/"yas" variant in all likelihood.


On Mon, Mar 21, 2011 at 8:36 AM, Ben Zimmer wrote:
>
> Not sure if this has anything to do with jazzy "jass" (despite the
> ragtime context) -- perhaps just a variant of "yes" (cf. "yas",
> "yassuh")?
>
>
> On Mon, Mar 21, 2011 at 6:08 AM, Stephen Goranson <goranson at duke.edu> wrote:
> >
> > America's Historical Newspapers
> > The State; Date: 01-03-1913; Issue: 7747; Page: 4, col. 6-7; Location: Columbia, South Carolina
> > Headline: Answering Back
> >
> >       "Sheet Music"
> > Greensboro News
> >  "Sheet music--snores," says the Columbia State. Aw, rag-time.
> >
> > Memphis Commercial Appeal
> >  The Columbia (S.C.) State spreads itself to say "Sheet music--snores." Which sounds like a wet blanket on harmony.
> > ....
> >       Agreed.
> > Greensboro News
> >  The Columbia State thinks it's curious how long down the man higher up usually is. Jass!

--
Ben Zimmer
http://benzimmer.com/

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