How Bougie Lost Its Original Meaning
In contemporary American vernacular, calling someone “bougie” often carries a tone of light admiration. It suggests a life marked by taste, financial comfort, and upward mobility. Although there may be an undercurrent of teasing, the label typically signals aspiration rather than criticism.
Historically, the meaning was different. Bougie comes from ‘bourgeois’, a French word for describing the socioeconomic middle class but not necessarily from the perspective of wealth distribution alone. Rather for the materialistic aspirations and conventional attitudes that this group valued (said as historical observation, not judgment by any means). The bourgeoisie thus lived with awareness of their position between proletariat struggle and elite privilege.