"Nyah nyah nyah nyah nyah nyah" is the lexigraphic representation of a common children's chant. It is a rendering of one common vocalization for a six-note musical figure[note 1] that is usually associated with children and found in many European-derived cultures, and which is often used in taunting.[1][2][3][4][5][6]
Variations
editThe tune has many variations on how "nyah-nyah" is vocalized (e.g., "Nuh nuh nuh nuh nuh nuh"),[7] some examples of which include:
- "Nanny nanny boo boo", "Na-na na-na boo-boo", or "Neener neener neener" in the United States[8][9]
- "Du kan ikke fange mig" in Denmark (meaning "You can't catch me")[citation needed]
- "Na na na na nère" (also "nanananère") in France[10]
- "Naa na na naa na" in the Netherlands[citation needed]
- "Ña ña ña ña ña ña", "Chincha rabiña" or "A que no me pillas" in Spain[citation needed]
- "Naa na banana" in Israel (meaning "mint (and) banana")[citation needed]
- "Läl-läl-läl-läl lie-ru" (a taunt) or "Et saa mua kiinni" in Finland (meaning "You can't catch me")
- "Skvallerbytta bing bång" (meaning "Tattletale ding dong")[11] or "Du kan inte ta mig" in Sweden (meaning "You can't catch me")[citation needed]
- "Ædda bædda buse" in Norway
- "Lero lero" in Mexico
- "La la la la la la" in Turkish
- "Wêla kapela" in Southern Africa
- "Não me pega" in Brazil (meaning "(You) can't catch me" in Portuguese)
- "Non mi hai fatto niente, faccia di serpente" in Italy (meaning "You didn't hurt me, you snake face" in Italian)
- "Zakochana para, Jacek i Barbara" in Polish (meaning "A couple in love, Jack and Barb", used by children to make fun of people in love)[citation needed]
The tune is also heard in Canada, Australia, Spain, Portugal, Germany, Serbia, Slovenia, Bosnia and Herzegovina, United Kingdom, and Iceland.[citation needed] Children in Korea use a different figure for teasing, la-so-la-so mi-re-mi-re with the vocalization 얼레리 꼴레리 (eol-re-ri kkol-re-ri)[citation needed] while a Japanese variant is so-so-mi-mi so-mi-mi[citation needed] and in Mexico a so-la-so-mi, so-la-so-mi figure is found.[citation needed]
The initial taunt is sometimes followed by further verses using the same tune, for instance in America "Nanny nanny nanny goat, cannot catch a billy goat" or following "Nanny nanny boo boo" with "Stick your head in doo-doo". French children might follow "Na na na na nère" with "Pouette pouette camembert". In Croatia, children sing "Ulovi me, ulovi me, kupit ću ti novine. Novine su skupe, poljubi me u dupe" (which means: "Catch me, catch me, [if you do that] I'll buy you a newspaper. Newspapers are pricey, kiss my tushie").[citation needed]
While the word "nyah" is now defined as being in and of itself an expression of contemptuous superiority over another, this is by derivation from the "nyah-nyah..." chant rather than vice versa[12] so the "nyah-nyah..." vocalization version of the chant is, at least in origin, an example of communication entirely by paralanguage.[7] Context-meaningful words are sometimes applied ad hoc, however, such as "Johnny is a sis-sy", "I got the blue one", or "I can see your underwear!".[4] Shirley Jackson referred to it as the "da da, da-da da" or "I know a secret" chant in Life Among the Savages.[13]
Other uses
editNon-taunting uses are also seen, also associated with children. Several playground songs use the "Nyah nyah..." musical figure, including A Tisket, A Tasket; It's Raining, It's Pouring;[citation needed] and some variants of Ring a Ring o' Roses,[6] Bye, baby Bunting[2][5][6] and Olly olly oxen free.[1] The tune has been used as an advertising jingle by the confectionery company Haribo.[14]
The figure is used in the Benjamin Britten opera The Rape of Lucretia (1946) for a scene where the Roman and Etruscan generals mock each other.[2]
Descendents centered the song "I Don't Want To Grow Up" around the figure in their 1985 album of the same name.[citation needed]
The tune (in both the "nah" and "nyah" forms) features as the chorus of the theme song 'It's Not Fair' from the 'Horrid Henry' animated TV series on CITV.[15]
See also
editNotes
edit- ^ Sometimes five-note, with the first two notes combined as one long note ("Nyaaahh nyah nyah nyah nyah") or other variations, such as the third note shortened or the fifth note stressed in volume, intonation, or duration, and so forth.
References
edit- ^ a b Leonard Bernstein (1983). "Musical Phonology", lecture 1 of The Unanswered Question lecture series (Lecture). Harvard University, Cambridge, Massachusetts. Event occurs at 27:00. Retrieved 2016-08-29.
Research seems to indicate that this exact constellation of two notes [descending minor third], and its three-note variant, is the same all over the world, wherever children tease each other, on every continent and in every culture. In short, we may have here a clear case of a musical-linguistic universal.
, cited at Metzger, Patrick (2016-08-29). "The Millennial Whoop: The Simple Melodic Sequence That's Showing Up All Over Contemporary Pop". Browbeat (Slate's Culture Blog). Slate. Retrieved 2016-08-29. - ^ a b c Albright, Daniel (1999). Untwisting the Serpent: Modernism in Music, Literature, and Other Arts. University Of Chicago Press. p. 94. ISBN 978-0226012544. Retrieved 2016-08-29.
- ^ Tsur, Reuven (1992). What Makes Sound Patterns Expressive?: The Poetic Mode of Speech Perception. Sound & Meaning: The Roman Jakobson Series in Linguistics and Poetics. Duke University Press. p. 48. ISBN 0822311704. Retrieved 2016-08-30.
- ^ a b "A Feeling for Harmony: The 3-Semester Music Theory Course for Earlham College – Chapter 1E - Pentatonic Scale". Earlham College. Retrieved 2016-08-29.
- ^ a b Wells, John (2011-07-18). "Nuh-nuh (2)". John Wells's Phonetic Blog. Retrieved 2016-08-29.
- ^ a b c Wells, John (2011-07-25). "Nuh-nuh (3)". John Wells's Phonetic Blog. Retrieved 2016-08-29.
- ^ a b Wells, John (2011-07-15). "Nuh-nuh". John Wells's Phonetic Blog. Retrieved 2016-08-29.
- ^ Helgeland, Anne; Lund, Ingrid (2016). "Children's Voices on Bullying in Kindergarten" (PDF). Early Childhood Education Journal. 45 (1): 133–141. doi:10.1007/s10643-016-0784-z. hdl:11250/2429746. S2CID 73584991.
- ^ Karp, Mike (2005-08-02). "Is storage archiving child's play?". NetworkWorld.
- ^ Fagyal, Zsuzsanna (March 1999). "Combien de clichés mélodiques? révision de l'inventaire des contours intonatifs stylisés en français". Faits de Langues (in French). 7 (13): 17–25. doi:10.3406/flang.1999.1234. Retrieved 2017-06-10.
- ^ Lindström, Fredrik (November 2007). "Gammalt adelsprat" (in Swedish). Språktidningen. Retrieved 2018-05-06.
Hon skriver bolet, 'bordet', fälas, 'färdas' och gålen, 'gården'. Den sistnämnda formen är odödliggjord i den här ramsan: "Skvallerbytta Bing-bong/går i alla gålar/slickar alla skålar"; det är alltså inget nödrim!
- ^ "Definition of nyah in English". Oxford Dictionaries. Archived from the original on 2015-12-04. Retrieved 2016-08-30.
- ^ Jackson, Shirley (1963). Life Among the Savages. Farrar Straus Giroux.
- ^ "HARIBO GOLDBÄREN Klassiker: Bärenschau". YouTube. Retrieved 2021-11-23.
- ^ "Horrid Henry Theme Lyrics". Lyrics On Demand. Retrieved 2024-03-22.