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AIBU?

Share your dilemmas and get honest opinions from other Mumsnetters.

To ask where this awful word came from?

216 replies

WhyCantIuseTheNameIWant · 21/06/2015 22:42

Fanjo.
Even my auto-correct doesn't like it. Fan jo.

OP posts:
TheFirstOfHerName · 21/06/2015 22:44

I think it might be Irish slang, but I might have imagined that.

DonkeyOaty · 21/06/2015 22:46

What is awful about it please?

ChaosTrulyReigns · 21/06/2015 22:47

Better than moist, though.

ImLizawithaZ · 21/06/2015 22:48

Grin Chaos

WhyCantIuseTheNameIWant · 21/06/2015 22:49

Donkey, I am not sure!
It bears little resemblance to the word it meant to replace.
It makes no sense, unless I have missed a link somewhere?
First, that is possible, thanks.

OP posts:
SnakeyMcBadass · 21/06/2015 22:49

I like fanjo. It's granny friendly without being twee.

SilverBirchWithout · 21/06/2015 22:50

Better than minge

TheNumberfaker · 21/06/2015 22:50

I presume from Fanny? I quite like it.
Sounds less quaint or ridiculous than fanny, not as anatomically incorrect blunt as vagina, not at all derogatory like cunt or pussy. It just sounds right to me!

DonkeyOaty · 21/06/2015 22:51

Mmmmmmmmmmmoyyyyssssst

I seem to recall Bill Bailey doing a thing on Carol Vorderman's voice while saying moist.

AnyoneForTennis · 21/06/2015 22:52

Sadly I think it's from an MN thread in the distant past?

thegreylady · 21/06/2015 22:52

I like it and have introduced my 3 teenage dgd's to the word.

SilverBirchWithout · 21/06/2015 22:52

Derived from Fanny I would think. I feel it works well as a term, non-offensive and not clinical. It's quite a jolly and friendly term to me.

LuluJakey1 · 21/06/2015 22:53

I like the word fanjo, better than fanny and definitely better than minge. My grandma used to say tutti-frutti which I often say at home but no one else seems to use it except me and DH.

SoldierBear · 21/06/2015 22:54

God knows.
Bloody stupid word!
Looks like banjo gone wrong.
Or fandango, which makes me think of Bohemian Rhapsody.
Never come across it anywhere but here.

Socalled · 21/06/2015 22:55

Definitely not Irish slang. I'm Irish and never heard the word until I came on MN four years ago - I assumed it was a Mn coinage..?

GayByrne · 21/06/2015 22:56

With you Socalled. Don't pin this one on the paddies lads...

Defo an mn thing.

TheNameIWantedIsTaken · 21/06/2015 22:56

I much prefer it to some other words that male me cringe. Moist has already been mentioned but another is gusset. Gunt for extra gross brownie points!

NoMontagues · 21/06/2015 22:58

It's not Irish slang. It's a mn thing.

CordeliaFoxx · 21/06/2015 22:59

Scottish as far as I'm aware, husband uses the word quite often

SoldierBear · 21/06/2015 23:00

See, this is where my confusion lies.
Minge and fanny are totally different, so what exactly is Fanjo supposed to refer to?
if it is vulva, then what's wrong with actually saying vulva? Fanjo isn't any shorter and IMO it is twee to make up a word instead of using the actual name.
(Not going into the whole business of people insisting on using vagina when they mean vulva)

CordeliaFoxx · 21/06/2015 23:00

It's not a MN thing, DH has never been near here in his life!

SoldierBear · 21/06/2015 23:02

Not Scottish slang. Never heard any Scot use it in my life until I came on here.

SilverBirchWithout · 21/06/2015 23:03

I assumed Fanjo was Vagina? I was just using Minge as an example of a word that is worse.

ShadowsCollideCantLogInToMN · 21/06/2015 23:04

Definitely not Irish. It's a word I'd never heard before I was on MN. In Ireland you're more likely to hear gee, guther, or flossie (though that last one may just be used by my cousin Grin. All hideous words, btw. I'm pretty sure fanjo is an MN thing.

CordeliaFoxx · 21/06/2015 23:04

Well DH is the only person I've heard use it in RL, he's Glasweigan, will ask him later!