• Agent641@lemmy.world
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    13 days ago

    People started referring to Glock handguns with extended magazines as ‘Gluzi’, being short for glock-uzi.

    The Uzi is another gun with a commonly extended mag that pokes out the bottom of the grip, hence the comparison.

    The slightly derogatory ‘Gluzi’ became ‘Glizzy’

    Now, another more derogatory nickname for a gun with a mag that sticks well beyond the handgrip was “Hotdog” because, well it looks like the sausage sticking out the end of a hotdog bun.

    So people are calling these guns “hotdogs” and “glizzy”, and so naturally, at a barbecue somewhere where the sausage was notaby longer than the bun, someone must have started referring to their extended sausage hotdog as a “Glizzy” as a joke, comparing the sausage to the extended mag of a Glock, and it stuck. The comedy lives in referring to an innocuous food item as a weird looking, often gang or crime-associated style of gun. Maybe because there’s a high chance of encountering both kinds of Glizzy at certain barbecues, and bystanders are subject to the ol’ switcharoo when one person asks for a Glizzy, and received a hotdog. Or maybe they asked for a hotdog, and recieved a gun, IDK I wasn’t there.

    • _stranger_@lemmy.world
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      13 days ago

      I hope you made every word of this up, because this is the de facto history of glizzy now. Like, a screenshot of this comment should be the entire Wikipedia page.

    • PrincessTardigrade@lemmy.world
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      11 days ago

      Dang and here I thought Australians were the first to call a hotdog a glizzy. And I assumed it was glistening with grease, and that’s why they abbreviated to glizzy. According to a quick search, you appear to be correct tho with the glock-uzi slang