The word 'barbecue' (also spelled 'barbeque,' abbreviated 'BBQ') entered English from Spanish 'barbacoa,' which was borrowed from Taino, the Arawakan language spoken by the indigenous peoples of the Caribbean at the time of European contact. In Taino, 'barbacoa' referred to a raised platform made of sticks set upon wooden posts — a multipurpose structure used for sleeping (above the damp ground and insects), for drying and storing food, and for smoking meat over a low fire.
The Spanish encountered these structures throughout the Caribbean and Mesoamerica in the late fifteenth and early sixteenth centuries. Gonzalo Fernández de Oviedo, in his 'Historia General y Natural de las Indias' (1535), described the 'barbacoa' as a framework of green wood set over a fire pit, used by indigenous peoples to slow-cook meat. The Spanish adopted the word and applied it increasingly to the cooking method rather than the structure.
The English form 'barbecue' is first attested in 1697 in the account of the buccaneer William Dampier, who described the practice in the Caribbean. The word was well established in American English by the eighteenth century, and George Washington himself recorded attending 'barbicues' (his spelling) in his diary. The earliest American barbecues were whole-hog affairs, roasting an entire pig over a pit of coals — a method that descended directly from the Taino technique.
The folk etymology that 'barbecue' derives from French 'barbe à queue' (from beard to tail, referring to roasting a whole animal from head to tail) is persistent but entirely false. It is a classic example of folk etymology: speakers invented a plausible-sounding French origin for a word that actually came from an unfamiliar indigenous language. The phonological similarity between 'barbecue' and 'barbe à queue' is coincidental.
The word's journey through American culture is inseparable from the history of the American South. Barbecue as a culinary tradition was shaped by enslaved Africans, who were typically assigned the task of tending the pits at plantation barbecues — a grueling job that required all-night vigilance. African-American pit masters developed the techniques of low-and-slow smoking, regional sauce traditions, and wood selection that define American barbecue to this day. The four major American barbecue traditions — Carolina (vinegar-based, whole hog), Memphis (dry rub, pork
In Mexican Spanish, 'barbacoa' survives as a distinct culinary term referring to meat (traditionally goat or beef head) slow-cooked in an underground pit — a technique that preserves the original Taino method more faithfully than the above-ground American barbecue. The taco chain Chipotle popularized 'barbacoa' as a menu term in the United States, reintroducing the Spanish form alongside the English derivative.
The Taino language, from which 'barbecue' originates, belongs to the Arawakan family and was spoken across the Greater Antilles (Cuba, Hispaniola, Puerto Rico, Jamaica). The Taino population was devastated by European diseases, enslavement, and violence within decades of Columbus's arrival. Despite this catastrophe, Taino words have achieved extraordinary global reach: 'barbecue,' 'maize,' 'hammock,' 'canoe,' 'hurricane,' 'tobacco,' 'savanna,' and 'iguana' are all Taino borrowings via Spanish, making the Taino language one of the most impactful linguistic substrates in the modern world.