An African American during the Great Depression probably would have felt that the New Deal mostly helped white people and not others.
Rose Wilder Lane was not African American.
Canada practises religious and racial tolerance, I would hope that an African would be welcome in any church!
Not all african americans are black. It just means someone who was born in one but is a citizen of the other. For example, someone who was born in Africa but is now an american citizen would be an african american. I'm not sure what others would think about this, but I would suggest you could still be considered an african american if your parents/grandparents immigrated.
yes she is. any black person is African or African American is because our ancestors came from Africa (if your African American) during slavery and if they had kids it would go down in history
An African clawed frog would probably eat the minnows.
Probably Coffee.
The term "African American" can either refer to either a person resembling that of an african who is legally accepted as an American, whom I would assume listens to music any other american would. Since america has a lot of cultural diversity that could be anything from Country to Hip Hop. If you are referring to a person of the african ethnicity who lives in Africa, and conforms to African Culture, then they probably listen to african tribal music or anything popular in the charts. You can't really define a person's music taste by race, so you'll have to provide more details if you would like my response to be more complex.
The term "African American" can either refer to either a person resembling that of an african who is legally accepted as an American, whom I would assume listens to music any other american would. Since america has a lot of cultural diversity that could be anything from Country to Hip Hop. If you are referring to a person of the african ethnicity who lives in Africa, and conforms to African Culture, then they probably listen to african tribal music or anything popular in the charts. You can't really define a person's music taste by race, so you'll have to provide more details if you would like my response to be more complex.
Technically, yes. He is still African - American even thought he grew lighter.
Probably not, though the usage is somewhat undefined.In a combination of terms of this type, the first word (in the case of "American African", this is "American") is usually an adjective and the second ("African") is a noun. In English usage, the first indicates the source ancestry, and the second the place a person is associated with, usually by birth.So an Irish American is a person born, or at least raised, in the United States, with Irish ancestry. There is variation in what this means, as all US residents seem to be Irish Americans on St. Patrick's Day.And a French Canadian is a person born in Canada, but of French ancestry.But an American African would be rather too unspecific, I think. There are many countries in Africa, and I would expect the noun part of the term would refer to a nation, rather than a continent. So a person might be an American Liberian, a Liberian of American descent.The term African American (note reversed order) is somewhat exceptional, as it implies things that are only evident given a historic context. Most dictionaries define the term as an American of Black African descent, or even an American of sub-Saharan Black African descent. Some African Americans want to go farther, saying that to be truly African American, a person has to be descendant from people who were slaves in the old South, which would make Michelle Obama African American but Barack Obama not. But this is not a universally accepted idea, which, from a linguistic point of view, makes it nonstandard usage.
yes he would