Derived from the Old French gai , the word originally meant cheerful, bright, or showily dressed.
For centuries, "gay" was used in literature and music to describe a carefree or showy lifestyle, most famously encapsulated in the phrase "a gay old time". II. Linguistic History: The "Gay Old Time"
During the 1960s, activists preferred "gay" over clinical terms like "homosexual" or slurs like "queer," viewing it as a more positive and empowering self-descriptor. IV. The "Gay Old Men": Navigating Aging and History
In the 1920s and 30s, the LGBTQ+ community began using "gay" as an underground code to identify one another without alerting the general public.
By 1955, the word had officially acquired the added definition of "homosexual," though the original meaning of "happy" persisted in older generations.
The shift of the word "gay" from a synonym for "joyful" to a primary descriptor for homosexual identity reflects broader 20th-century cultural transformations in language and social visibility.
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