No - unless you are saying this to a oversensitive/paranoid person. Black People = people who are black.
Abraham Lincoln is often credited with popularizing the phrase "government of the people, by the people, for the people" in his Gettysburg Address in 1863, though the exact origins of the phrase are not definitively known.
The phrase of Greek origin referring to the common people is "hoi polloi."
"Usted tonto puta" translates to "you dumb whore" in English. It is a disrespectful and offensive phrase.
Abraham Lincoln wrote the phrase "government of the people, by the people, for the people" in his Gettysburg Address delivered during the American Civil War in 1863.
The translation of the Maori phrase "he iwi tahi tatou" is "we are one people."
Yes, very offensive.
no why would they its just a phrase or saying but nothing offensive
Bud is a phrase that country people use andBuddy is a phrase that black people say is a crack head.
The thing that Donald Sterling said that was offensive was to not take black people to games.
Euphemism
Ambiguous
Back in the past, my teacher told me, that white people would go on picnic to see black people get beat or something like that but I'm not sure
Euphemism
euphemism
It is two words really. The whole thing is a phrase calling someone the lord of gay which is offensive to gay people.
The phrase the thin black line means having the ability to balance two different ideas or groups. The phrase the thin black line is an idiom.
The phrase "act black" is loaded with the association of blacks with ghettos, but not all blacks live in a ghetto and not all people in ghettos are black. Thus, what you are really asking is, "Why do people who live in a ghetto act like people who live in a ghetto?"