Duang
Duang (Mandarin pronunciation: [tu̯áŋ]; pinyin: duāng; Zhuyin Fuhao: ㄉㄨㄤ) is a Chinese neologism that has become a viral meme despite its meaning being unclear. It has become a popular hashtag on Sina Weibo with more than 8 million mentions by the start of March 2015.[1]
History
The word was coined in a notoriously bad 2004 advertisement for Bawang Shampoo in which Jackie Chan says, "...after filming, visual effects are added, the hair – duang! – becomes black, very shiny and very smooth." The advertisement was the subject of a parody published on 20 February 2015 on the Chinese video sharing site Bilibili, featuring footage of Chan remixed to the tune of the viral Chinese song My Skate Shoes (我的滑板鞋).[2] In the video, Chan appears to say that he has no hair at all, with more interjections of "duang": "after a month of special effects, hair is – dua-a-a-ng – still I knew they're fake, that it's due to chemicals. Every day now, I'm adding special effects... added a lot of effects... hair – duang duang duang – is thick and shiny." The parody alludes to a 2010 scandal in which Bawang was accused of having added carcinogenic chemicals to its hair products.[3][4]
Jackie Chan acknowledged the parody by uploading a self-mocking microblog that imitated the sentence structure from the spoof advertisement. He also expressed his gratitude for the public’s attention and his determination to create more movies for his fans in the future. His optimistic personality and self-mockery won over many fans.
Meaning
Despite its widespread appearance, the meaning of duang is unclear; "What's the meaning of duang" became the main topic on Weibo.[3] Although there seems to be no meaning at all, many people still continue to use it in their everyday conversations. The BBC has suggested that the word is an example of onomatopoeia, a word phonetically imitating a sound.[1] While Chan used it as a "cartoonish sound-effect", as Ad Age puts it,[5] some have used it in the same spirit while others have adopted it as an intensifier; for instance, something might be "duang cute" or you might be "very duang confused".[1] Based on the words spoken by Chan in the shampoo advertisement, duang has been defined as meaning "add special effects" (Chinese: 加特效; pinyin: jiā tèxiào) in some Chinese sources.[6]
The meme has been picked up by a variety of advertisers, including Bawang itself, which has released its own spoof video, in addition to KFC, PepsiCo, China Eastern Airlines and Taobao. Durex issued an animated GIF showing a buzzing rabbit vibrator with "duang" as the caption. The meme's lack of any defined meaning has enabled advertisers and Internet users to create their own version of "duang" and define it as they wish.[5] Foreign Policy noted that while Chinese Internet users had a tradition of inventing new words or slang to get around government censorship, the Chinese government had lately managed to push back against this practice; it was thus perhaps "inevitable that a new word would emerge that simply meant nothing at all."[4]
Pronunciation
The word duang is not a permissible syllable in Standard Chinese. That is, Mandarin phonotactics does not allow the syllable. However, as both the onset d- and the rime -uang are both legal segments that occur in other syllables, the word is pronounceable in Mandarin.[6] Although the word was initially written without any indication of tone, it was later given a first tone reading as duāng.[6]
Chinese character
A character for duang does not exist in any Chinese dictionary and is not encoded in Unicode, but was created from the two characters used for Jackie Chan's Chinese stage name, Cheng Long (simplified Chinese: 成龙; traditional Chinese: 成龍; pinyin: Chéng Lóng, meaning "become a dragon"), stacked on top of each other.
References
- 1 2 3 "Millions share new Chinese character". BBC News. 2 March 2015. Retrieved 4 March 2015.
- ↑ Original video on Bilibili
- 1 2 Lee Min Kok (3 March 2015). "China goes ga-ga over new Chinese character 'duang'". The Straits Times. Singapore. Retrieved 4 March 2015.
- 1 2 Bethany Allen-Ebrahimian (27 February 2015). "The Word That Broke the Chinese Internet". Retrieved 4 March 2015.
- 1 2 Angela Doland (3 March 2015). "A Cheesy Jackie Chan Ad Just Went Insanely Viral in China". Retrieved 4 March 2015.
- 1 2 3 Mair, Victor (1 March 2015). "Duang". Language Log.
External links
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Duang. |