Other Definitions
pickaninny (dict)

Pickaninny

Pickaninny (also pickaninnie) is a Pidgin word form derived from the Portuguese pequenino ("little") via Lingua franca. According to one hypothesis, pidgin has the same etymology. In the Southern United States, it was long used to refer to African American children. The term was still in some popular use in the US as late as the 1930s, but has fallen out of use and is considered racist. It was controversially used ("wide-eyed grinning picaninnies") by the British Conservative politician Enoch Powell in his "Rivers of Blood" speech on 20 April 1968. It is still in widespread use in Papua New Guinea, as a term meaning young child (or just young, as in the phrase 'pickanininy pig', meaning piglet). In certain dialects of Caribbean English, the words pickney and pickney-negger(pronounced "pick-knee" and "pick-knee nay-ga" respectively) are used to refer to children. See also: Nigger (word)

External links


For the chess term, see chess problem terminology.

 

<< PreviousWord BrowserNext >>
handsworth riots
lee h. hamilton
magical nyan nyan taruto
vladimir bukovsky
neotropical
collective rights
british rail class 10
ape canyon
aqa
katyusha (song)
edexcel
trs coraes
dmg radio australia
muhammad ii of khwarezm
strapdown
steamboat bill jr.
yang huangming
unterseeboot 853
quartodecimanism
gstreamer
res publica
michael everson
list of samanthas
sabre heavy fighter
ignacio ellacura
uss iwo jima (lph 2)
mingburnu
mailman
massive parallelism
double talk accusation
kitulgala
tariq ramadan
robert mcclelland
dennis the menace annual
asian cricket council
politika
amr khaled
active enterprises
1747 in music
are you experienced?
swimming at the 1924 summer olympics
myriapoda
merchant aircraft carrier
g6 howitzer