Well, originally the word "punany" or "punani" was used in India -- its in the Kama Sutra -- to describe the female sex organ.
Indian laborers were used to build roads in Jamaica and the Caribbean during the 1930's, 40's and 50's so a lot of Indian slang made its way into the Jamaican vernacular.
There are literally thousands of Jamaican dancehall records glorifying the punany....probably rivaled only by ganja songs. Ganja is also an Indian-based word.
Indian laborers were used to build roads in Jamaica and the Caribbean during the 1930's, 40's and 50's so a lot of Indian slang made its way into the Jamaican vernacular.
There are literally thousands of Jamaican dancehall records glorifying the punany....probably rivaled only by ganja songs. Ganja is also an Indian-based word.
by Anonymous August 14, 2003
by Anonymous May 22, 2003
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by Anonymous March 20, 2003
a tribes player who plays under multiple names. comes from the blue text created when you use an "alias"
by Anonymous February 07, 2003
by Anonymous February 24, 2003
A reorchestrated version of Stravinsky's Le Sacre du Printemps. Can be mistooken for the original very easily. Translated in English as "The Lice of Spring" (whereas the original is "The Rite of Spring") Contains "noises" idiots call music, whereas the rest of the "educated" world call it crap.
by Anonymous July 27, 2003