In political writing Replacing the letter
c with
k in the first letter of a word was used by the
Ku Klux Klan during its early years in the mid-to-late 19th century. The concept is continued today within the group. For something similar in the writing of groups opposed to the KKK, see , below. In the 1960s and early 1970s in the
United States, the
Yippies sometimes used
Amerika rather than
America in referring to the United States. According to
Oxford Dictionaries, it was an allusion to the
Russian and
German spellings of the word and intended to be suggestive of
fascism and
authoritarianism. A similar usage in
Italian,
Spanish,
Catalan and
Portuguese is to write
okupa rather than
ocupa (often on a building or area occupied by
squatters), referring to the name adopted by
okupación activist groups. It stems from a combination of English borrowings with k in them to those languages, and
Spanish anarchist and
punk movements which used "k" to signal rebellion.
In humor Replacing "c" with "k" was at the center of a
Monty Python joke from the Travel Agent sketch.
Eric Idle's character has an affliction that makes him pronounce the letter C as a B, as in "blassified" instead of "classified".
Michael Palin asks him if he can say the letter K; Idle replies that he can, and Palin suggests that he spell words with a K instead of C. Idle replies: "what, you mean, pronounce 'blassified' with a K? [...] Klassified. [...] Oh, it's very good! I never thought of that before! What a silly
bunt!"
KKK replacing c or k A common satiric usage of the letters
KKK is the spelling of
America as
Amerikkka (or
AmeriKKKa), alluding to the
Ku Klux Klan, referring to underlying
racism in American society. The earliest known usage of
Amerikkka recorded in the
Oxford English Dictionary is in July 1970, in an African-American magazine called
Black World. The spelling
Amerikkka came into greater use after the 1990 release of the
gangsta rap album ''
AmeriKKKa's Most Wanted'' by
Ice Cube. The letters
KKK have been inserted into several other words and names, to indicate similar perceived racism, oppression or corruption. Examples include: •
Republikkkan (
U.S. Republican Party) •
Demokkkrat (
U.S. Democratic Party) •
David DuKKKe (
David Duke), former
Grand Wizard of the
Ku Klux Klan, candidate for
United States Senate, candidate for
Governor of Louisiana, and
antisemitic conspiracy theorist Other uses American rapper
Tupac Shakur used the spelling "Amerikaz" for "America's" in his song titled "
2 of Amerikaz Most Wanted" featuring
Snoop Dogg, released in 1996 as part of his album
All Eyez On Me (which includes another satirical misspelling, the use of "eyez" instead of "eyes"). ==Currency signs==
Currency symbols like €, $ and £ can be inserted in place of the letters
E,
S and
L respectively to indicate
plutocracy,
greed,
corruption, or the perceived immoral, unethical, or pathological accumulation of
money. For example: •
Bu$h (for
George W. Bush,
George H. W. Bush, or the
Bush family) • Congre$$ (for
United States Congress) •
Co$ or
$cientology (for the
Church of Scientology): see also
Scientology controversies. •
Di$ney and
Di$neyland (for
The Walt Disney Company and
Disneyland): see also
Criticism of the Walt Disney Company and
Disneyland § Tickets •
E$$o (for
Esso): Used by the UK-based
Stop Esso campaign encouraging people to
boycott Esso, in protest against Esso's opposition to the
Kyoto Protocol. •
€urope (for
Europe) •
Ke$ha (singer-songwriter): adopted the dollar sign in her name while financially struggling as an ironic gesture. •
Micro$oft,
M$,
M$FT (for
Microsoft): see also
Criticism of Microsoft •
$ony (for
Sony) •
United $tates,
U$,
U$A (for the
United States) ==Word-in-word==