Crosswords0 min ago
The Bbc Racist, Surely Not?
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.I suspect Mr Fraser is Scottish. Is it possible to be racists, against ones own race?
Seems he's a bit of a controversial character
http:// www.new snet.sc ot/nns- archive /index. php?opt ion=com _conten t&v iew=art icle&am p;id=47 91:skin tland-i ts-only -satire -says-b bc-scot lands-d ouglas- fraser- &ca tid=4:c ommenta ry& Itemid= 35
Seems he's a bit of a controversial character
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hard to say. The other examples cited as getting people into trouble seem to couple Jock with some derogatory adjective - useless jock, sweaty little jock. In those cases, insults were clearly intended. Not so here. People are probably being oversensitive. It doesn't sound like a "colonial attitude" to me.
jno
/// hard to say. The other examples cited as getting people into trouble seem to couple Jock with some derogatory adjective - useless jock, sweaty little jock. In those cases, insults were clearly intended. ///
Would the same apply if a non British were to use these terms "useless Brit", "Sweaty little Brit"?
Insults yes, but racist insults?????????????
/// hard to say. The other examples cited as getting people into trouble seem to couple Jock with some derogatory adjective - useless jock, sweaty little jock. In those cases, insults were clearly intended. ///
Would the same apply if a non British were to use these terms "useless Brit", "Sweaty little Brit"?
Insults yes, but racist insults?????????????
Jock...racist? What arrant nonsense! I have lived for nigh on eight decades and have never felt anything but pride when the word has been used to refer to me. Here on AnswerBank, I myself have often used it to include me and my compatriots.
The word is just a friendly Scottish variant of John, just as Taff is a friendly variant of David (or its Welsh equivalent) and Paddy is a friendly variant of Patrick. Why would anyone, other than a plonker determined to be offended, find any of these derogatory?
I most certainly will never stop using it.
The word is just a friendly Scottish variant of John, just as Taff is a friendly variant of David (or its Welsh equivalent) and Paddy is a friendly variant of Patrick. Why would anyone, other than a plonker determined to be offended, find any of these derogatory?
I most certainly will never stop using it.
The Oxford English Dictionary:
Jock
"A by-form of the name John
A Scotsman or a member of a Scottish regiment
Any Scotsman, frequently as a nickname."
Clearly, the name Jack was a middle version between John and Jock. My quote above is from the printed version of the OED which dates from the mid-1980s. Consequently, any notion that it might be offensive is a very recent development, given that the OED does not even mention that.
I will remain perfectly happy to go on using it in exactly the way I always have and let "Disgusted of Tunbridge Wells" or whoever else objects just get on with it!
Jock
"A by-form of the name John
A Scotsman or a member of a Scottish regiment
Any Scotsman, frequently as a nickname."
Clearly, the name Jack was a middle version between John and Jock. My quote above is from the printed version of the OED which dates from the mid-1980s. Consequently, any notion that it might be offensive is a very recent development, given that the OED does not even mention that.
I will remain perfectly happy to go on using it in exactly the way I always have and let "Disgusted of Tunbridge Wells" or whoever else objects just get on with it!
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