jabroni

Etymology
According to Dwayne "The Rock" Johnson, who popularized the term, he borrowed jabroni from the, who used the word backstage. Prior to jabroni being popularized by Dwayne "The Rock" Johnson, the term had also been used by, , and other members of and  while in.

Jabroni is a specialized rendition of the wrestling term. It is perhaps a humorous pseudo-Italianized form of it (see popular Italian words in American lexicon, e.g., , ), but compare American slang/dialectal , of. Surmised in a 1994 Los Angeles Times article to be from Italian-American slang, from , from dialectal . Ultimately from , and first attested by in his 1967 novel A-18, although claims of hearing the term date to at least c. 1953. It may also be.

Noun

 * 1)  A performer whose primary role is to lose to established talent.
 * 2)  An obnoxious or contemptible person; a loser.
 * 1)  An obnoxious or contemptible person; a loser.
 * 1)  An obnoxious or contemptible person; a loser.
 * 1)  An obnoxious or contemptible person; a loser.