PingersĪs we find ourselves at the height of music festival season, let’s look at a timely example. Researchers also believe they get better results from surveys if they use the same language as people using drugs. The slang words can be metaphors for the drug effects or appearance, giving health professionals an understanding of a person’s drug use experience. Another study used slang terms in Instagram hashtags to document drug use patterns.įor clinicians and researchers, slang offers insights into drug users’ beliefs and behaviours, which can in turn guide interventions. More recently, one study analysed Twitter posts to identify new slang. The authors found people in prison, who commonly used opiates, knew more slang words for heroin than college students did. In 1979, researchers created a drug slang association test to identify if the number of slang names people knew related to their use of a drug type. With this in mind, researchers seek to identify drug subcultures through understanding language use. The use of slang indicates a person uses drugs because they know the secret language of a subculture. The use of slang can indicate to others a person uses drugs. The definition included how beginners were taught special smoking techniques by hostesses, likely sex workers. For example, Maurer’s glossary featured the term ‘to vipe’, meaning to smoke marijuana. The definitions reflect the social and cultural values around drug-taking practices at the time. The aim was to guide law enforcement as well as to inform doctors, parents and teachers about drug use. A bit of historyĬlinicians and people who study drug use have attempted to catalogue slang terms for drug use since the 1930s.ĭavid Maurer, an American linguistics professor who studied the use of language in the American underworld, published the first glossary of drug slang terms in 1936. The use of language around drugs is important because people using drugs referred to by slang names could misunderstand what they’re getting.Īt the same time, tuning in to drug slang offers researchers and health workers an avenue by which to track patterns of drug use. From pingers (MDMA), to fishies (GHB) to going into the K-hole (ketamine), slang use marks someone as an insider with knowledge and experience of illicit drug use. Slang names or street names for drugs are common. Tasmanian Times was intrigued by this linguistic approach to understanding drug use and reproduces it with thanks to The Conversation. The issue of pill testing is likely to come up again this year, regardless of whether we finish the summer without a drug-related festival tragedy. Tasmania is still in party mode with events like Party in the Paddock, Fractangular and more.
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