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安裝中文字典英文字典辭典工具!
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- What’s the difference between ‘hillbilly’ and ‘redneck’?
Redneck usually refers to a white person who lives in a small town or in the country especially in the southern United States, who typically has a working-class job, and who is seen by others as being uneducated and having opinions and attitudes that are offensive
- REDNECK Definition Meaning - Merriam-Webster
The meaning of REDNECK is a white member of the Southern rural laboring class
- Redneck term origins: Is it a slur or Appalachian labor . . .
I, too, was confused to hear this new version of an old bit of folk wisdom, and went to check up on it The Oxford English Dictionary finds derogatory usages for redneck—when defined as “a
- Rednecks – Subcultures and Sociology - Grinnell College
Acts of owning large trucks, dating southern girls, and self-identifying as a hillbilly, or redneck, are common themes in country music Country music even tries to address aspects of racism in the modern day redneck
- The Redneck Stereotype | Facing History Ourselves
In their book The Companion to Southern Literature, Joseph Flora and Lucinda MacKethan describe the characteristics of the “redneck,” a stereotype of a particular kind of poor white Southerner that dates back to before the Civil War:
- Redneck vs. Hillbilly vs. Hick – What’s the Difference?
With colloquial terms for rural folks, the words "redneck," "hillbilly," and "hick" are usually the terms we see get thrown around But did you know that each of these delicate terms has its own distinct
- What does redneck really mean? A racist or just a country person?
Whether you believe redneck is simply a term of heritage or code for racial intolerance is all about perspective Some will think of bigotry where others will think of history, and both seem to be …
- Rednecks: A Brief History - JSTOR Daily
Now, our definition of redneck as defined via class, politics, and or rural geography gets a bit more jumbled Foxworthy, for instance, claims his “redneck” heritage even though he grew up in the suburbs of Atlanta, had an IBM executive for a father, and attended Georgia Tech
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