释义 |
black and tan adjective catering to both black and white customers US, 1887- Many of these small clubs have become, for all practical purposes, “black and tan” spots where whites and Negroes (of opposite sexes) mix, not furtively. — Jack Lait and Lee Mortimer, New York confidential, p. 45, 1948
- In some places–like Georgia–the Populists “fused” with the lily-white wing of the Republican Party, not with the so-called black-and-tan wing. — Stokely Carmichael and Charles V. Hamilton, Black Power, p. 68, 1967
- As one old queen–who had the apartment next to Spencer’s–told me–“My dear–it was really too much. It was a regular black and tan fantasy.” — Herbert Huncke, The Evening Sun Turned Crimson, p. 43, 1980
- My father was a regular at the Oasis as well as at the other all-black nightclubs, including bars that catered to all races, called “black and tan” bars. — Kim Rich, Johnny’s Girl, p. 81, 1993
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