Yes. You call Japanese people Japanese people.
Answer this question… Demetrio, who asks if someone is O.K. after he or she has been subject to a racial slur
Cracker
No word, term, or phrase is in itself a racial slur, but any word can be used as such if it is intended to denigrate, belittle, or malign another based on ethnicity. Words are amoral, and have no life of their own. They require intent, context, and delivery to be anything other than an abstract representation of concrete things and ideas.So, "border-jumper" can be a racial slur if it is delivered in a context meant to castigate another based on his ethnic origin.The actual term "border-jumper" literally means a person or thing that leaps over a boundary, and has no negative connotation other than what it is put to.
No. The word "slur" is not bad unto itself. A slur is a bad thing.
No - the Southern adjective "cotton-picking" is just used as emphasis, as in "wait just a cotton-picking minute!" Everyone in the South picked cotton when it was time to sell it, not just black people.
Yes, racial slur is a crime in Washington D.C.
The racial slur cost him his job.He was so drunk that he began to slur his words.Be careful not to accidentally make a discriminative slur at the meeting today.
Answer this question… Demetrio, who asks if someone is O.K. after he or she has been subject to a racial slur
U. S. Representative from Colorado Douglas Lamborn. And yes it is most certainly a racial slur.
A racial slur referring to Arab people
The term is an offensive racial slur.
The conductor told the bass section that it was very important that they learned to slur their notes.
welll nooooo
It can be, but generally it is accompanied by another slur to make it a racial slur or with a cuss word, for example :fu**ing cotton pickers, or "cotton pickin ni**er"... i am only using those examples so you can get a clear idea of what a racial slur involving the phrase "cotton picker" would be like, not to offend or degrade anyone.
Cracker
It is a slur of a common racial slur. Some young people use this spelling to get around word filters. They use it for both "bonding" uses of the word and to express racial hatred.
N also used to describe a racial slur.