释义 |
hunky; hunkie noun- a white person US, 1959
Derogatory. - The night before I had let a hunky called Big John have a dollar’s worth of chips in the poker game for a monkey which he had carved from a peach seed[.] — Chester Himes, Cast the First Stone, p. 66, 1952
- [W]hich brought them to the Negroes or whites, usually huge, the whites most often Polish or Hunkies[.] — Norman Mailer, Miami and the Siege of Chicago, p. 88, 1968
- He said, “I’m going to buy this building and turn this into a Nigger bar. I’m going to bar all you laughing hunkies.” — Iceberg Slim (Robert Beck), Trick Baby, p. 149, 1969
- Farvel hunky motherfuckers. — Cecil Brown, The Life & Loves of Mr. Jiveass Nigger, p. 88, 1969
- [W]hat did they care about a handful of red-neck religious-nut hunkies[.] — Terry Southern, Blue Movie, p. 15, 1970
- Dem hunkies couldn’t care less if a nigger was born on Mars. — J. Ashton Brathwaithe, Niggers–This is Canada, p. 24, 1971
- I guess every hunkie in the neighborhood must’ve called the po-lice soon as they saw us walkin’ down the street. — Odie Hawkins, Ghetto Sketches, pp. 119–120, 1972
- an Eastern European; a Slav; a Hungarian US, 1909
Disparaging, but usually more illustrative of the speaker’s lack of geographic knowledge. - Those hunkies were lush crazy and could they drink. — Mezz Mezzrow, Really the Blues, p. 71, 1946
- She’d been teaching sixth-grade Polacks and Hunkies so long that she thought she could treat everybody as if they were one of her sixth-grade pupils. — James T. Farrell, Saturday Night, p. 9, 1947
- He played the line with a cigarette dangling out of his Hunky mouth. — Clancy Sigal, Going Away, p. 52, 1961
- Right, why should we get behind some hunkie we don’t even know? — John Sayles, Union Dues, p. 38, 1977
- In the locker rooms of the Eighteenth District Station and around the cop bars, he called Italians guidos or wops, Poles polacks, Bohemians hunkies, Mexicans spicks or greasers, and African-Americans niggers or darkies. — Robert Campbell, Boneyards, p. 10, 1992
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