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13[[quoteright:350:[[ComicBook/LegendsOfBaldursGate https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/thieves_cant.jpg]]]]
14[[caption-width-right:350:''Cant'' you understand them?]]
15
16->'''Newscaster:''' The spike claimed she would use the peg as a snap with palliads; the nabbed cove says the doxy will meet the chats.\
17'''Translator:''' Sorry, no idea on that one.
18-->-- '''Series/HorribleHistories''', [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=v9akhuIQNlc "News in Tudor Criminal Slang"]]
19
20Being in crime is risky business. Just going about a dishonest day's work can land in you in prison, banished, or even with your neck in a noose ([[CruelAndUnusualDeath or worse]]). And since you never know who's affiliated with the police, or who's interested in the reward you have posted on your head, it's in your best interest to keep things secret, even from those who might overhear you.
21
22Enter the Thieves' Cant, a secret language used by such lowlifes to go about their daily "business" without being caught. The language can range from elaborate slang lexicons to entirely different languages unrelated to those spoken by the everyday folk. The TropeNamer is the RealLife [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thieves%27_cant Thieves' Cant]] (also called "Rogues' Cant" or "peddler's French"), which was used by criminals, beggars, and others on the fringe of society in Great Britain for some time; similar cants were present throughout Europe. This history is probably why such cants are prevalent in MedievalEuropeanFantasy, though they show up elsewhere as well.
23
24This cant is often the working language of a ThievesGuild. If you don't know cant, you "cant" get in.
25
26If characters are trying to infiltrate the criminal underworld, or require their assistance, [[OnlyTheKnowledgableMayPass expect knowledge of cant to be a prerequisite for gaining anyone's trust]]. A character with a criminal past will often be revealed to be fluent in cant; this can be used as a way to introduce his criminal history as well. In many games influenced by ''TabletopGame/DungeonsAndDragons'', the common [[FighterMageThief Thief]] class will have a specific Thieves' Cant language usable only by that class.
27
28Related to SpySpeak, which is simply speaking in code, as opposed to using new vocabulary and languages -- though criminal Spy Speak may well evolve into Thieves' Cant should it catch on with others in the criminal world.
29
30----
31!!Examples:
32
33[[foldercontrol]]
34
35[[folder:Films -- Live-Action]]
36* The premise of ''Film/GentlemenOfFortune'' is that a nice-hearted kindergarten teacher has to infiltrate the criminal underworld, posing as his criminal doppelganger. He prepares for that, in particular, by studying Fenya. Other criminals he interacts with also mix a lot of Fenya words into their speech.
37* In ''[[Film/OceansEleven Ocean's Twelve]]'', Danny and Rusty engage in this with their contact Matsui. A confused Linus decides to get in by [[WaxingLyrical quoting the lyrics]] to Music/LedZeppelin's "Kashmir". The others inform him that he just [[MyHovercraftIsFullOfEels called Matsui's niece a whore]], but later admit that the whole thing was just an elaborate prank.
38[[/folder]]
39
40[[folder:Literature]]
41* The Secret Drasnian Language in ''Literature/TheBelgariad'' is a variation, both in that it was developed for spies (though still largely used by thieves, simply because many of them are the same people), and because it's a sign language. As Drasnians are a FantasyCounterpartCulture of Italians (in part), they are known to [[ItaliansTalkWithHands gesticulate greatly while talking]], so the language is designed to allow its users to have a secret conversation with their hands while simultaneously holding a more mundane one with their voices.
42* The Literature/BernieGunther series of detective novels, set in Germany during the Nazi era and the post-war era, are full of this, even though most of the people using the slang are cops. A lighter is a gun, nails are cigarettes, a bull is a cop, bells are diamonds, a sniffer is a private detective.
43* In ''Literature/ABrothersPrice'' all of Jerin's family are fluent in thieves' cant, due to their grandmothers having been thieves.
44* Briar peppers his dialogue thief slang in ''Literature/CircleOfMagic''. He confuses the others by calling themselves kids, which [[DeliberateValuesDissonance they take to mean baby goat]] since the word isn't widespread, and persistently calls their [[TheDandy well-dressed]] teacher Niko a "Bag" (i.e. moneybags, a good target for thievery).
45* ''Literature/{{Discworld}}'':
46** The ''Discworld Thieves Guild Diary 2002'', includes a dictionary of cant. It also reminds licensed thieves that a failure to speak in cant could call their legitimacy into question, just like failing to wear a BlatantBurglar outfit.
47** In ''Literature/GoingPostal'', Vetinari attempts some cant and gets it wrong, warning Moist that he could be "dancing the sisal two-step". He is discreetly informed that he meant "the hemp fandango".
48** When Vimes is thrown back in time in ''Literature/{{Night Watch|Discworld}}'', he has to remember all the thieves' cant from thirty years ago. When he meets young Nobby Nobbs, he lists off a string of offenses that includes "running rumbles, snitching tinklers," and "pulling wobblers", which trips him up because the last is from the present day. Nobby quizzes him on several other phrases, like oil of angels[[note]]a bribe[[/note]] a dimber[[note]]a beggar or a handsome man[[/note]] and fleaguing a jade[[note]]shoving ginger up the arse of an old worn-out horse so it'll look frisky in front of buyers[[/note]]. The whole scene is likely yet another allusion to ''Literature/LesMiserables'', seen below.
49* Fenya (Russian thieves' cant; see below) crops up every now and then in the ''Literature/ErastFandorin'' series, such as when Xavery Grushin (a police inspector in disguise) manages to defuse a conflict with a Moscow gang in ''Literature/TheDeathOfAchilles'' by speaking fluent Fenya, which convinces them he is a friend, [[spoiler:though not quite]].
50* Present in the ''Literature/GentlemanBastard'' book series, which also includes an intricate sign language disguised as innocuous hand movements so not only do outsiders not know what is being communicated, ''they don't even know communication is taking place''.
51* The Victorian criminal slang used by the crooks in ''Literature/TheGreatTrainRobbery'' is so impenetrable that their trial often has to be stopped so that the upper-class courtroom lawyers and judges can spend several minutes trying to extract from them what they actually mean. The thieves are so used to speaking this way that they often don't actually know any other way of saying something, and it can take quite a while for both parties to be able to understand each other, even when they are legitimately trying to speak clearly.
52* The French cant of Argot features heavily in Creator/{{Victor Hugo}}'s ''Literature/TheHunchbackOfNotreDame.'' A dissertation on the language can also be found in ''Literature/LesMiserables''.
53* In Creator/StevePerry's ''[[Literature/MatadorSeries The Machiavelli Interface]]'' former prostitute Dirisha Zuri has to translate some of this for the other Matadors (Emile Khadaji used a street kid to send a message to the group), and comments that the slang has evolved some since she was a kid.
54* In the ''Literature/TalesOfKolmar'' trilogy, there is a mercenary's cant. Jaime, a former merc/assassin, is able to speak it.
55* ''Literature/TortallUniverse'': In ''Literature/BekaCooper'', residents of the Lower City, where the line between legal and illegal is very thin, have an extensive slang vocabulary, most of which is cobbled together from historical slang ("foist/pickpocket" and "doxy/prostitute", for example). People from [[Music/SkidRow the Cesspool]] neighborhood have their own subset of slang that is considered to be particularly disgraceful.
56* In ''Literature/VattasWar'' the pirates conquering the galaxy have their own secret language. In the last book [[spoiler: one of the younger Vattas realizes the enemy language is quite similar to the "family code" used by one of his classmates, her father turned out to be a spy but she didn't know and actually helped translate for the coalition.]]
57* ''Literature/VillainsByNecessity'': Arcie (thief) and Sam (assassin) have a conversation in rogues' cant so an evil sorceress won't know their plans to get the drop on her.
58[[/folder]]
59
60[[folder:Live-Action TV]]
61* In ''Series/{{Cheers}}'' episode "[[Recap/CheersS1E19PickAConAnyCon Pick a Con, Any Con]]", the gang asks con artist Harry the Hat about George, a different con artist who ripped off Coach. Harry loses them with his thieves' cant.
62-->'''Harry''': Any bird-dogger knows him. He runs paper and cubes, mainly in the crib, sometimes up against the wall. Puts on a straight-up-guy front, and then grinds away slow with coolers and hop toads, real rip and tear kind of stuff.\
63'''Sam''': ''(obviously clueless)'' That sounds like him.
64** Averted a little bit later in the conversation, when Sam asks "What do you call the guy that brings the money?", and a nonplussed Harry responds "We call him the guy that brings the money."
65* ''Series/CrossingLines'': Tommy and his brother talk in Travellers' Cant while held in an interrogation room together so that watching police can't understand. London, however, knows it too.
66* ''Series/HorribleHistories'' did a sketch in which the news was read out in Tudor criminal slang. It ended in an EvenTheSubtitlerIsStumped situation. They later did another sketch featuring Victorian criminal slang.
67-->'''Ringleader:''' Alright, this is a flummet job. We'll need a rook, some Davy's dust, and a [[HaveAGayOldTime fagger]]. Luckily I knows a nimmer who'll crack a crib for a spangle. Any questions?\
68'''Crook:''' ...Sorry, I'm new. Could we run through that again?
69** Another sketch focuses on a new recruit to a Victorian criminal gang similarly struggling with their language, until one of them blurts out “We’re planning a burglary.” [[spoiler: Cue UndercoverCopReveal]].
70[[/folder]]
71
72[[folder:Radio]]
73* ''Radio/JohnFinnemoresSouvenirProgramme:'' One sketch has two criminals outlying a heist with this, only to get confused over terminology, and in one case finding an example redundant. At the end of the episode, we get an explanation for most of them, showing that several of them were executed through some prior sketches.
74-->'''Boss:''' But what if a police officer overhears us?
75-->'''Crook:''' Then he'll know that after committing our robbery, we plan to ''drive away!''
76[[/folder]]
77
78[[folder:Tabletop Games]]
79* ''TabletopGame/DungeonsAndDragons'':
80** Thieves' Cant is a language spoken by members of the [[ClassAndLevelSystem Thief class]] that is limited to discussion of thievery-related activities (burglary, fencing loot, confidence games, etc.). It can be used by someone to identify themselves as a thief to other thieves.
81** The ''TabletopGame/{{Planescape}}'' setting uses actual words from Victorian-era cant as part of planewalker slang. Unfortunately, [[DidNotDoTheBloodyResearch they didn't always do a good job of checking their meaning]].
82* ''TabletopGame/WarhammerFantasyRoleplay'': Thieves' Tongue is one of the "Secret Languages" that characters can [[SkillScoresAndPerks train as a skill]], allowing them to speak in one language but add secret meaning through "signifiers, body language, and/or code words".
83[[/folder]]
84
85[[folder:Theatre]]
86* In Elizabethan times, Thieves' Cant (the real one) was heavily featured in what was called "rogue literature," especially theater aimed at the lower classes. ''The Beggars' Bush'', a play by Francis Beaumont, John Fletcher, and Philip Massinger, is almost entirely in Cant.
87[[/folder]]
88
89[[folder:Video Games]]
90* ''VideoGame/EverQuest'' features Thieves' Cant as a language spoken only by the Rogue class.
91* ''VideoGame/FallenLondon'' uses occasional bits of Victorian thieves' cant in some of its stories and item descriptions, such as referring to TheCon as a "flash lay", or a set of lockpicks as "kifers".
92* ''VideoGame/FinalFantasyXIV'' features a bit of this in Limsa Lominsa (a city-state sitting on the coast and well known for its history with pirates and thieves of all manners.) This is seen most prominently in the Rogue's Guild and the quests revolving around it.
93* In ''VideoGame/WorldOfWarcraft'', Gutterspeak was originally the thieves' cant of Lordaeron before the kingdom fell to the Undead Scourge. After the undead regained their free will and founded the Undercity in the catacombs of the ruined capital Lordaeron, they designated Gutterspeak as their official language.[[note]]Even after being freed from the Scourge, the Forsaken were rejected not only by mortals at large, but by their own families in life as well. As such, Gutterspeak, the language of the outcasts, seemed appropriate to them.[[/note]]
94[[/folder]]
95
96[[folder:Web Comics]]
97* In ''Webcomic/RustyAndCo'', Stabs' family of [[{{Hobbits}} halfling]] rogues [[http://rustyandco.com/comic/level-8-6/ have a code]] for discussing their criminal activities in inoccuous-sounding euphemism. It's thoughtfully close-captioned.
98* ''Webcomic/{{Unsounded}}'': Nary and his gang, including his daughter Sette, use a fair amount of real thieves' cant such as jukrum, and their name Frummagem is inspired from a bit meaning hanged or strangled--Fummagemmed.
99[[/folder]]
100
101[[folder:Web Original]]
102* Several of the Blog/ThingsMrWelchIsNoLongerAllowedToDoInAnRPG involves talking the cant.
103-->201. My thief is prohibited from speaking solely in Cant.\
1042229. It's Thieves Cant. Not Illegalize.
105* In the ''Literature/WhateleyUniverse'', different locales have different variants of Thieves' Cant. In [[BigApplesauce New York City]], they tend to use show-biz slang. So a producer is the guy running the show, a prop man is a guy who relies on holdouts, et cetera. This tends to give you an idea of who's an absolute newbie.
106[[/folder]]
107
108[[folder:Western Animation]]
109* ''WesternAnimation/TheSimpsons'': In one episode, Grandpa Abe teaches Bart hobo signs (which were a real thing), such as one that advertises people willing to feed and put them up for the night... along with a house that has a ''mass hobo graveyard'' in the back. Cue the proprietor walking out to dump an armful of bindle-sticks into the trash can, and our two heroes running away screaming.
110[[/folder]]
111
112[[folder:Real Life]]
113* Aside from the TropeNamer described above, other examples exist as well, such as Rotwelsch in southern Germany and Switzerland and the Šatrovački in the Serbo-Croatian speaking areas of the Balkans.
114* Fenya (феня) or Fenka (фенка) is the dialect of Russian used by TheMafiya. Its use is declining, but it was prevalent in the 1990's, when criminal organizations operated largely unchecked.
115* [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Grypsera Grypsera]], a secret language of Polish prison inmates. It evolved in the 19th century in the areas of the Russian partition. Another secret language, ''kmina'', was used by Polish thieves.
116* During TheGreatDepression, traveling vagrants developed a ''written'' cant called [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hobo#Hobo_signs_and_graffiti hobo signs]] to alert other vagrants of certain services, conditions, and warnings. For example, they'd write a symbol on a surface or wall to indicate that a local was willing to provide a place to sleep for the night.
117* Many real-life cants drew much of their vocabulary from UsefulNotes/{{Romani}}, the language of the Roma people (commonly called gypsies in North America, though this is considered offensive in (western) Europe). The Roma were ostracized for centuries in European cities and towns and were forced to live on the outskirts of society, which generally entailed making a living off of crime, hence the stereotype of "[[RoguishRomani gypsy thieves]]." Because Roma were so prevalent on the societal fringe in Europe, cants took many words, even sometimes the bulk of them, from Romani.
118* [[UsefulNotes/KuKluxKlan Klansmen]] used [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ku_Klux_Klan_titles_and_vocabulary a specific language]] to speak between them. A lot of it is frankly kind of ridiculous, especially the ones that use a whole bunch of "Kl" substitutions. Of course, what ''isn't'' fundamentally absurd about a BrotherhoodOfFunnyHats-turned-gang of racists who dress up like {{Bedsheet Ghost}}s?
119* BritishEnglish/CockneyRhymingSlang may have started out as this.
120* A cant with a more well-established pedigree is [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Polari Polari]], which originated among Italian street performers, but soon spread to thieves, actors, homosexuals, sailors and other people who lived on the fringe of 19th and 20th century British society. Polari fell out of favor in the '60s, but it has received something of a resurgence in the 21st century, in particular after ''Series/QueerEyeForTheStraightGuy'' brought the word "zhoozh" (style, smarten up, generally make something look nice) into the general vernacular.
121[[/folder]]

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