She sat in a bus seat on an Alabaman bus that was meant for a white person.
Not a Welsh word. Perhaps it is an English word for a person from the state of Alabama in the USA?
Well I'll give you a hint you can ask my friend Tony Amaoto he lives in MI novi He's been in Albama so i think he knows that and he hasan Alabaman acsient
Alabaman Mississippian Georgian Floridian Tennessean Kentuckian N. and S. Carolinian Louisianan Arkansan Missourian Illinoisan Indianian Ohioan Virginian W. Virginian Pennsylvanian New Jerseyite Rhode Islander Delawarian Marylander Connecticuter New Hampshiran Vermonter Mainer Massachusett Michigander Wisconsinite Minnesotan N. and S. Dakotan Nebraskan Kansan Oklahoman Coloradoan Wyomingite Montanan Idahoan New Mexican Arizonan Utahan Nevadan Californian Oregonian Washingtonian Hawaiian Iowan Alaskan Texan New Yorker Hope this helps!
There are a lot of variables to consider such as: * If you were a wealthy white Alabaman with good social connections and part of the landed gentry with a diversified conservative portfolio and not involved with margin accounts you would have survived the Stock Market Crash, purchased choice property from distressed landowners for pennies on the dollar and you would have prosperred and multiplied your already substantial position. * Wealthy whites that lacked the correct connections and were overextended in the margin market took what they could for their homes, farms and forever abandoned the south with what they could salvage. * White Industrial workers were at the mercy of their employers and suffered. * White subsistence farmers with a clear title suffered, survived and sometimes prospered. Black subsistence farmers rarely survived with their farms intact and none were known to have prospered, all suffered and most were driven back into a worse poverty then slavery, * Poor whites suffered but they were always proud that they were better off then the poor blacks whose suffering was even greater since they could not even join the Okie exodus.
Alabama..............Alabamian/Alabaman Alaska.................Alaskan Arizona................Arizonan/Arizonian Arkansas.............Arkansan California............Californian Colorado.............Coloradan Connecticut.........Connecticuter/Nutmegger Delaware.............Delawarean Florida..................Floridian Georgia................Georgian Hawaii..................Hawaiian Idaho....................Idahoan Illinois...................Illinoisan Indiana.................Hoosier Iowa.....................Iowan/Iowegian Kansas..................Kansan Kentucky...............Kentuckian Louisiana..............Louisianan Maine....................Mainer Maryland...............Marylander Massachusetts......Bay Stater Michigan...............Michigander/Michiganian Minnesota............Minnesotan Mississippi............Mississippian Missouri...............Missourian Montana..............Montanan Nebraska.............Nebraskan Nevada................Nevadan New Hampshire...New Hampshirite New Jersey..........New Jerseyan/New Jersyite New Mexico..........New Mexican New York..............New Yorker North Carolina......North Carolinian/Tar Heel North Dakota........North Dakotan Ohio.....................Ohioan/Buckeye Oklahoma............Oklahoman/Sooner Oregon................Oregonian Pennsylvania........Pennsylvanian Rhode Island.......Rhode Islander South Carolina....South Carolinian South Dakota......South Dakotan Tennessee..........Tennessean Texas..................Texan Utah....................Utahn Vermont..............Vermonter Virginia................Virginian Washington.........Washingtonian West Virginia.......West Virginian Wisconsin............Wisconsinite Wyoming.............Wyomingite
Harper Lee's first and only novel, To Kill a Mockingbird,won the 1961 Pulitzer Prize for Fiction.The book was popular with readers and became an immediate commercial success, aided by praise from prominent newspapers and periodicals. Time Magazine summarized the book's appeal in an August 1, 1960 review, "Author Lee, 34, an Alabaman, has written her first novel with all of the tactile brilliance and none of the preciosity generally supposed to be standard swamp-warfare issue for Southern writers. The novel is an account of an awakening to good and evil, and a faint catechistic flavor may have been inevitable. But it is faint indeed; Novelist Lee's prose has an edge that cuts through cant, and she teaches the reader an astonishing number of useful truths about little girls and about Southern life."Both the Literary Guild and Reader's Digest chose To Kill a Mockingbird as one of their book club selections, ensuring wide readership.The 1961 Pulitzer jury penned the following notes in their recommendation to the Pulitzer Prize Board:"...certain novelists, whose earlier work had aroused our hopes, published disappointing books during the year [referring to 1960]. William Styron's long-awaited Set This House on Fire and John Updike's Rabbit, Run both lavished major talents on minor themes... Fortunately, however, the stream of new talent which constantly revitalizes American fiction produced at least two first novels of unusual distinction. The first and more ambitious of these was To Kill a Mockingbird by Harper Lee. Set in her native Alabama, the book sums up in its seemingly artless tale the pride and shame that are integral to Southern living... This is our choice for the Prize."To Kill a Mockingbird won the 1961 Pulitzer Prize because the jurists recognized Harper Lee's compelling story as an honest commentary on life and racism in the South, published during an era when the civil rights movement was challenging Jim Crow and the unfair treatment of African-Americans in the US.