释义 |
whitey noun- a white person or white people collectively US, 1942
Insulting; a gesture of resistance. - And then I got to see how Whitey treats his heroes. — Dick Gregory, Nigger, p. 72, 1964
- Shorty felt about the war the same way I and most ghetto Negros did: “Whitey owns everything. He wants us to go and bleed for him? Let him fight.” — Malcolm X and Alex Haley, The Autobiography of Malcolm X, p. 71, 1964
- “So long, whitey,” one of the Negro musicians said. — Nat Hentoff, Jazz Country, p. 72, 1965
- In 1939 Negroes were still relegated to sitting in the balconies of downtown theatres so we decided to change “whitey’s” rule. — Babs Gonzales, I Paid My Dues, p. 14, 1967
- It doesn’t matter, the end result, as long as trick Whitey, fuck up Boss Charley. — Lenny Bruce, The Essential Lenny Bruce, p. 12, 1967
- So white would get him a little taste of black gold for $10 or $15 and Black people helped him. — H. Rap Brown, Die Nigger Die!, p. 31, 1969
- The Black pimp’s fame and high status among lower-class Black males is assured by the fact that this income from his hos, both Black and White, originates largely from the pockets of Whitey. — Christina and Richard Milner, Black Players, pp. 11–12, 1972
- That’s the way Whitey is, man. He’ll do anything for money. — Odie Hawkins, Chicago Hustle, p. 134, 1977
- And as far as Mr. Viceroy Wilson is concerned, we are kicking the living shit out of whitey. — Carl Hiaasen, Tourist Season, p. 102, 1986
- The black man, he’s told whitey where it’s at. — Herbert Huncke, Guilty of Everything, p. 10, 1990
- an amphetamine pill US
- — Arnold Shaw, Dictionary of American Pop/Rock, p. 397, 1982
- in pool, the cue ball US, 1983
- — Mike Shamos, The Illustrated Encyclopedia of Billiards, p. 262, 1993
▷ see:WHITE-OUT |