释义 |
nig-nog noun- any non-white person UK, 1959
Rhyming slang, by virtue of the rhyme with WOGNIGGERWOGLove Thy Neighbour, a UK television comedy which ran to seven series, 1972–76, the white-skinned characters routinely called their black neighbours SAMBO(S) - This means all these nig-nogs are getting up to heaven, and perfectly decent blokes like you and me, who have never even committed adultery, we can’t get up there–we’re be being kept out by these [New] Guineans. — Peter Cook, Not Only But Also, 1965
- [He] had referred to coloured people as “them coons” and “nignogs” in the way that say Alf Garnett does[.] — Johnny Speight, It Stands to Reason, p. 232, 1973
- You take it from me, nig-nog. You go stealing white man’s motor cars you get white man’s stick. — Scum, 1979
- Oh look another nig nog up to no good. If they weren’t all villains, the police wouldn’t stop ‘em[.] — Donald Gorgon, Cop Killer, p. 40, 1994
- Not something the nig-nogs care for, mind[.] — David Peace, Nineteen Seventy-Four, p. 102, 1999
- a fool; a novice UK
Military use, possibly from obsolete slang “nigmenog” (a fool), probably informed by racist sentiments. - WATSON: [...] How long have you been a sergeant? VALE: Two days. WATSON: Still a nig-nog. — Graeme Kent, The Queen’s Corporal [Six Granada Plays], p. 84, 1959
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