Quinqui | |
States: | Spain |
Region: | Edges of towns |
Speakers: | ? |
Familycolor: | mixed |
Family: | Cant |
Iso3: | quq |
Glotto: | quin1236 |
Glottorefname: | Quinqui |
Quinqui jargon is associated with quincalleros (an itinerant group), semi-nomadic people who live mainly in the northern half of Spain. They prefer to be called mercheros. They are reduced in number and possibly vanishing as a distinct group.
The language is based on Germanía, an old Spanish criminal argot, with elements of Caló, a dialect of the Spanish Roma. The term comes from the word quincallería (ironmongery), from ironmongers who first used this cant as part of their trade. Because the men were frequently blamed for petty crime, the word is associated in modern Spanish with delinquents, petty thieves, or hoodlums. The mercheros identify as a distinct group separate from the Roma gitanos.
Scholars have many theories about the social origins of mercheros, summarized as the following: