Mulatto - Wikipedia The English term and spelling mulatto is derived from the Spanish and Portuguese mulato It was a common term in the Southeastern United States during the era of slavery Some sources suggest that it may derive from the Portuguese word mula (from the Latin mūlus), meaning 'mule', the hybrid offspring of a horse and a donkey
Mulato - Wikipedia, la enciclopedia libre Según el diccionario de la RAE, el término mulato se refiere a una persona nacida de negro y blanca, o de blanco y negra [1] Sin embargo, en algunos idiomas como el inglés, mulato se considera un "epíteto animalizante que asimilaba la mula como un animal híbrido a la ascendencia africana mestiza", [ 2 ] mientras que en el original
The Mulatto Community, Globally, a story - African American . . . *On this date in 1441, we briefly discuss the Mulatto community In anthropology, Mulatto is a historical racial classification of people born of one white parent and one Black parent (Anglo and Negro) Academia Española traces its origin to the word mulo in the sense of hybridity, originally used to refer to any mixed-race person […]
Mestizo vs. Mulatto — What’s the Difference? Mestizo refers to individuals of mixed European and Indigenous American descent, while Mulatto describes those of mixed European and African ancestry
MULATOS | Definición, significado y características Usualmente, dentro del marco del periodo histórico de la América colonial, el término mulato es utilizado para referirse a aquellos que han nacido de la unión biológica entre un blanco, esto es, una persona de ascendencia estrictamente europea, y una persona negra, que en aquel entonces eran de ascendencia puramente africana
Mulatto - Etymology, Origin Meaning - Etymonline Originating from Spanish Portuguese mulato, meaning "young mule," this term (1590s) denotes mixed European and black African descent, reflecting its hybrid meaning