Newest Questions Post a Question Search All Questions Please cite any factual claims with citation links or references from authoritative sources. Editors continuously recheck submissions and claims. Archived Questions Goto Qn. What is the origin of the "oggy oggy oggy, oi oi oi" crowd chant? Currently voted the best answer. One possible theory for the origin of the chant stems from Cornwall. An Oggy is a slang term for a Cornish pasty. Tin-miners' wives supposedly shouted "Oggy Oggy Oggy" when they dropped pasties down mine shafts to their husbands, to warn them their lunch was about to drop in on them.
Charming though this story is, it is only a story told to 'emmets' Cornish for 'ants' or the tourists who invade Cornwall in the summer , for although pasties were the staple fare of tin miners even the most bullet-proof of pastry would not have survived the drop down a Wheal shaft.
The chant is also the chorus of a Cornish folk song and has always been heard at Cornish rugby matches so this seems the most likely origin. West Country regional orig. Cornwall and Navy slang. A Cornish pasty. Probably an alteration of Cornish hoggan pastry, pie 18th century , perhaps cognate with Welsh chwiogen muffin, simnel-cake , of unknown origin.
In the s the Welsh folk singer and comedian Max Boyce popularised the chant in order to excite the crowd at his concerts. Boyce was also a big rugby union fan, and through him it then began to be adopted by Welsh rugby union crowds at international matches.
It was then adopted at British football grounds at some point during the postwar period, and was certainly in common use by the s. In the s the Welsh folk singer and comedian Max Boyce popularised the chant in order to excite the crowd at his concerts. Boyce was also a big rugby union fan, and through him it then began to be adopted by Welsh rugby union crowds at international matches. Soon it spread to rugby crowds at club level and eventually to many other sporting occasions at all levels.
The chant was also used by Coventry City football fans during the s and s in appreciation to then goalkeeper Steve Ogrizovic who had been nicknamed 'Oggy'. Members of Sussex Bonfire Societies recite the chant when passing pubs and large crowds.
Several variations of the "Oggy" chant have arisen as its cultural significance and recognition has grown. In the early s, Chelsea F. It had been heard at Australian sporting events as early as  It is worth noting that in many dialects of American English , "Augie" and "Oggy" are homophones.
The chant has also been adopted by the fans of newly promoted English rugby union premiership side, the Exeter Chiefs. They use the same form, but replace the word Oi with the word Chiefs. This was especially popular during his 50 goal season in the NHL season. It is a drinking chant in which every word just means Beer.
A more recent variant of the chant has been adopted by fans of the British male singer and former runner up of The X Factor , Olly Murs.
Wikimedia Foundation. A term of uncertain ori gin heard in the west of England. It more usually occurs in the form tiddy oggie … Contemporary slang. Oggy Oggy Oggy.
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