Donate SIGN UP

The N Word

Avatar Image
hc4361 | 23:28 Tue 04th Dec 2012 | News
46 Answers
Has the N word been diluted and accepted in to common parlance as these magistrates suggest?

http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2242804/Rap-music-fan-shouted-n---black-man-CLEARED-racism-magistrates-accept-using-street-slang.html

Is it now only middle class white people that shudder at the word? Is it a good thing that the word is no longer taboo?

I have never said that word and can't imagine ever using it, but I don't use a lot of words that young people say today.
Gravatar

Answers

1 to 20 of 46rss feed

1 2 3 Next Last

Best Answer

No best answer has yet been selected by hc4361. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.

For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.
Why did the photographer have him pose with that dog and the vodka?
Semantics in extremis........
-- answer removed --
Question Author
To present him in a certain light to show that magistrates are numpties?
Question Author
Methyl, don't you listen to current popular music?
It's not the word, it's how it's used and who you use it to IMO.... but it is a word that you have to be very careful about.

I'd happily call my friends tw@ts, I wouldn't call a stranger that.

In my circle of friends I have a friend who calls another friend "Mr. Black" but they've been mates for over 30 years and it's taken as it's meant, I don't know the "Mr. Black" well enough to call him that, so although he's a friend I don't feel I could call him that.
The word is how young black people choose to describe themselves now, in that context it is no longer offensive.
read this link it describes it well but the word is Nigg@ with an a not an er !
http://www.urbandictionary.com/define.php?term=***
-- answer removed --
Link didn't seem to work try again
http://www.urbandictionary.com/define.php?term=***
You have to enter the word in the search bar then it works.
this has been noticed before

http://www.theanswerbank.co.uk/News/Question1194340.html

This what you're after, Eddie?

http://tinyurl.com/l2b7k
Question Author
Language and semantics are fascinating. I was brought up to believe that 'coloured' or 'people of colour' were the polite ways of describing black people.
Then that was a no-no and 'black' is the proper word to use.
My father said 'negroid' but never used the N word. I was brought up to believe that word is highly offensive, a swear word, I suppose.

Times they are a-changing
it's a not uncommon way for young black people to talk to each other. Coming from a white man it's always going to be dodgy.
-- answer removed --
That's it jno thanks.
I used to drink in an unlicensed club in Sheffield (run by a group of Afro-caribbeans) where I was always known as 'the white n*****". I regarded it as a compliment!
.


I use lots of words that teenagers dont
in fact a lot they probably dont understand

and so I expect teenagers to use words I dont.


I referred to my lady dog as a bitch in front of
some shelf packers who fell about roaring with laughter
and I could only conclude that they were not aware that the word had a canine context as well as the one they used.....
Chris Rock explains it all if you care to look on YouTube
Probably the only book in history to have had three titles is Agatha Christie's "Ten Little N******".
Due to changing attitudes it was later changed to "Ten Little Indians"

That too proved unacceptable so now it is titled "...And then there were none"

1 to 20 of 46rss feed

1 2 3 Next Last

Do you know the answer?

The N Word

Answer Question >>