Racism: Difference between revisions
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{{wiktionary}}{{Merge| | {{wiktionary}}{{Merge|[[Racism]], as per the conclusion of 'Slurs and Derogatory Terms' TempForums thread. Contents have been copied to there and reformatted, as per same conclusion.}} | ||
'''"Blackamoor"''' was an archaic and generally offensive term used to refer to dark skinned people usually of [[African]] ancestry. | '''"Blackamoor"''' was an archaic and generally offensive term used to refer to dark skinned people usually of [[African]] ancestry. | ||
Revision as of 16:10, 24 April 2023
It should be relocated at [[Racism, as per the conclusion of 'Slurs and Derogatory Terms' TempForums thread. Contents have been copied to there and reformatted, as per same conclusion.]] because of unknown reasons. The editor who placed this tag here didn't enumerate them.
Talk about it here or check the revision history for additional comments.
"Blackamoor" was an archaic and generally offensive term used to refer to dark skinned people usually of African ancestry.
The 14th century knight Mulberry initially described the African American soldier Floyd, who he came across having been transported to the American Civil War, as a blackamoor. (AUDIO: Renaissance of the Daleks)
Martha Jones was shocked to hear William Shakespeare describe her as a "delicious blackamoor lady." (TV: The Shakespeare Code)