If you hear this word on a cruise ship, you could be in trouble

If you hear this word on a cruise ship, you could be in trouble

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If you hear this word on a cruise ship, you could be in trouble
Author: Eleanor Noyce
Published: Jan, 31 2025 13:06

While guests might enjoy a week or so long holiday on a cruise ship, for the crew that work on board, it becomes their home. And living and working together in such close quarters, often for months on end, means that the crew can get pretty close — and even develop their own lingo. Travel influencer and cruise ship worker @cass_stefanie is originally from Cape Town, South Africa, but has travelled to six continents and more than 46 countries during her career on cruise ships.

 [Cruise ship off Jason Harbor]
Image Credit: Metro [Cruise ship off Jason Harbor]

It’s fair to say she’s pretty in the know when it comes to life on board — and she recently took to TikTok to share some cruise ship secrets, including a rather fruity codeword. ‘We use the term “banana” on a cruise ship when someone’s getting into trouble,’ Cass explained. ‘For example if you’re doing something like walking down the I-95 [the main corridor that joins the back of the ship with the front] with your AirPods in, we’ll stop you and be like “listen, don’t let anyone see you because you’re going to get a banana.”’.

 [View of ocean from cruise ship railing]
Image Credit: Metro [View of ocean from cruise ship railing]

cruise ship crew secrets 🤫 Part 1 You wouldn’t believe it if i told you that the lingo crew use is COMPLETELY different to how we speak on land 🤭 #cruiseship #crew #cruisetok. To date, Cass has no idea how the term came about and why — but it’s famously stuck among crew members. ‘When I first heard it, I was like “what?” I had no idea it meant trouble,’ she added. Cass isn’t the only cruise ship worker who has spoken out about this. In a viral Reddit post on the r/Royal Caribbean thread, crew member @SolAreiaLivros put together a whole list of jargon used on board.

By their definition, banana (not to be used with an article like ‘a’ or ‘the’ – just ‘banana,’ plain and simple) means ‘a scolding or an earful from your supervisor.’. The more you know. ‘If you see a crew sad or not smiling, you can jokingly ask them “Hi (crew)! Why are you sad today? Did you get BANANA from your amo?”,’ their post read.’. Elsewhere, they translated ‘amo’ as a ‘flattering way of addressing someone’ like your boss, supervisor, or senior, while ‘taka taka’ means ‘nonsense talk, gossiping or rambling.’.

‘If a crew forgets to hand you an item or an order and they come back to bring it to you and you wanna tease them you can say “I know why you forgot my extra towels. Because you do TOO MUCH TAKA TAKA with other attendants in the storeroom”,’ they added. It’s believed that the codeword banana came about because it’s linked to a superstition to do with bad luck. It’s said to date back to the 1700s, when trade ships carrying produce in the Caribbean and Spain started to disappear at sea.

As legend has it, bananas would be the only thing found floating among the wreckages. Speaking of hidden cruise ship lingo, there are also words that are technically banned. And just as blurting out ‘MacBeth’ is a complete no-no in the theatre world, talk of the Titanic is highly frowned upon while on board. Marc Sebastian, a passenger on the infamous nine-month cruise on the Royal Caribbean Serenade of the Seas liner found this out to his detriment when he mentioned the no-go name.

On TikTok, he revealed all about the awkward moment, stating: ‘Number one, you’re not supposed to talk about the Titanic.’. Marc was unaware of the unofficial rule when he started making smalltalk about the ill-fated vessel, which sank in 1912 after hitting an iceberg in the North Atlantic ocean. ‘I brought up to an entire room of people having lunch that our ship is only 100 feet longer than Titanic,’ he said in the clip. ‘Utensils dropped. Waiters gasped. It’s dead silent.’.

After the gaffe, Mark’s friend whispered across the table: ‘You’re not allowed to talk about the Titanic.’. ‘Well, it wasn’t like that was in the f***ing handbook,’ he joked in reply. ‘Not that I read the handbook, clearly.’. Do you have a story to share?. Get in touch by emailing MetroLifestyleTeam@Metro.co.uk. Set sail to the Mediterranean in 2025 – here's all you need to know. Private beach clubs, Art Deco delights and the world’s second-largest reef on the ultimate Caribbean cruise.

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