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Double-Barreied
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Why are there so many coloured sportsmen/women who have hyphenated surnames?
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A reminder to start with: Describing someone as 'coloured' is considered to be extremely offensive. (When I was teaching the use of that term would have constituted grounds for dismissal).
However I suspect that women who reach the highest levels in sport (irrespective of their race or ethnicity) might be more likely than average to want to 'retain their identity' when they get married, but also to embrace their partnership with their husband, resulting in them combining both their surnames.
However I suspect that women who reach the highest levels in sport (irrespective of their race or ethnicity) might be more likely than average to want to 'retain their identity' when they get married, but also to embrace their partnership with their husband, resulting in them combining both their surnames.
//A reminder to start with: Describing someone as 'coloured' is considered to be extremely offensive.//
True, and yet a major civil rights organisation in the USA is called The National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP). Funny old world.
To answer the question, I don't know - but perhaps some people just like to make a bit of a thing about clinging to their roots.
True, and yet a major civil rights organisation in the USA is called The National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP). Funny old world.
To answer the question, I don't know - but perhaps some people just like to make a bit of a thing about clinging to their roots.
I describe myself as coloured.
A pom that has lived in Oz since the age of 1.
White during winter, coloured during summer.
Starts as red, turns brownish (nearly black!), fades again to white.
Sometimes during winter I almost turn blue.
If I envy someone I turn green.
Feeling sickly?, I don't want to describe that colour.
Angry, well, I see red.
A pom that has lived in Oz since the age of 1.
White during winter, coloured during summer.
Starts as red, turns brownish (nearly black!), fades again to white.
Sometimes during winter I almost turn blue.
If I envy someone I turn green.
Feeling sickly?, I don't want to describe that colour.
Angry, well, I see red.
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