Motoring11 mins ago
Why are some names acceptable and others not.
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.the word itself is just a shortened form of the longer word and were it not for the derogatory way it is usually used, most asians wouldn't mind the word being used.
it is others races intonation, intention and meaning when saying this word that has made it unnacceptable. it is the same sort of situation with n1gger or negro, and why black people can use the word to each other but no-one else can - same as asians
phrases like 'pakki shop'. 'effing pakki', etc that have created this
NORMANTHEDOG - it is hard to keep up with changes in language. My mum used to be told that she mustn't call people black, she must call them coloured. Then she was told that she mustn't call them coloured, she must call them black. Now, her work colleague has said she wants to be referred to as a person of colour. My mum is getting on a bit and finds it hard to remember. I've got a deaf friend and she has changed the way she wants to be referred to 3 times in the last few years.
I guess people outside a particular minority should make an effort to find out what people want to be called. And people within a particular minority need to understand that some people sometimes forget what the correct term is!
we had a similar discussion a few weeks ago at work, with half having the original point that it was a descriptive word and therefore shouldn't be a problem.
But at the end of the day it makes no difference to me, I'll simply use the extended version if the need arises, i.e. Pakistani
In the U.S you rarely here the word Oriental for an east Asian. I use that term in the U.K. but I've been it's not acceptable in the States.
Although the word Black is used, most Americans (or should I say Yanks in keeping with the theme of this thread) will use the term African-American. Possibly overdoing it somewhat. I remember somebody refering to Othello as 'that African-American character from Shakespeare'!!!
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