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Questions tagged [pejorative-language]

This tag is for questions about pejorative language. Pejorative language is any language that portrays someone or something in a negative light, no matter whether it is intended to be disparaging and derogatory, contemptuous or disapproving, belittling or offensive, or even abusive. It’s anything that makes someone or something look bad.

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A notorious incident in Bentley family history is when William, the first Bentley in America, murdered his neighbor Thomas Godby on February 9th, 1628. The incident was detailed at trial. A witness ...
Anthony J. Bentley's user avatar
1 vote
4 answers
339 views

I'm writing an article about war refugees in Georgia and I have to translate a word used to address immigrants, refugees which is derogatory and I cannot find a direct translation of. The word ...
maritaa mm's user avatar
19 votes
2 answers
3k views

Donald Trump seems to have idiosyncratic ways of pronouncing names of people or places he dislikes. Whenever Donald Trump says "China", it totally grates on me, it sounds extremely harsh and ...
Barmar's user avatar
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1 vote
1 answer
331 views

Why do we add the suffix -ski to people's names, and where does it come from? Examples: Kate → Kateski, John → Johnski. Does it work with all names?
JConstantine's user avatar
1 vote
0 answers
598 views

The answer doesn't have to be specific to any religion or faith group, or even any calendar whether it's the Gregorian calendar or any others. I was thinking about similar words like scrooge or humbug ...
uzab's user avatar
  • 11
1 vote
0 answers
92 views

I'm looking for amusing (including disparaging) nicknames for the USPTO that can be traced back to an historical primary source, including but not limited to famous inventors such as Thomas Edison or ...
Stephen Gucker's user avatar
15 votes
6 answers
5k views

I'm looking for a phrase that describes someone who's really bad at cooking, similar to 'green fingers' for someone who's good at gardening. There doesn't seem to be any such phrase from a Google ...
Allure's user avatar
  • 1,097
14 votes
5 answers
2k views

As I understand it, linguists (and the rest of us) call pieces of derogatory or negatively-valenced language ‘pejoratives’. But is there a similar term for pieces of commendatory or positively-...
76987's user avatar
  • 575
4 votes
1 answer
114 views

I've noticed there's a verb fressen in German whose meanings include "to eat" but it has an animal sense, i.e. ich esse, but Mein Hund fresse. Which leads me to ask these questions: Are ...
Derek's user avatar
  • 41
5 votes
2 answers
466 views

As you may have already known, and for those of you who don't know, hillbilly hell is a term used to mock the countryside in the USA, with all of its perceived flaws (insular, racist, decaying ...). ...
Carl Warren's user avatar
1 vote
2 answers
2k views

What is the origin of the Australian slang “pommers” to refer to English people? (I’m uncertain as to the spelling) Why is this the term that is used?
TylerDurden's user avatar
-3 votes
2 answers
121 views

Is there a way to find out if a word is commendatory, derogatory / pejorative, or either? Does any dictionary say that out explicitly, instead of requiring users to infer from the given senses? For ...
Tim's user avatar
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0 votes
3 answers
2k views

There is a particular Twitch streamer from a video game I played, MermaidonTap. If you subscribed and follow her, not all but most of her public streams, she uses "fuck" and a lot of the ...
Sunie's user avatar
  • 11
2 votes
1 answer
2k views

What do you call it when someone is being back-handed in a way that looks and sounds nice outrightly but is intended to be mean? Passive-aggressive is too obvious. The equivalent to Bless her heart. ...
Melinda's user avatar
  • 21
1 vote
4 answers
345 views

I am trying to find a word that can be used in formal situations for referring to an unprincipled, unpleasant person. I'm looking for a more formal or civil way to say this, rather than the uncivil “...
Bob Dobbs's user avatar
0 votes
1 answer
3k views

Does a word exist that describes someone who is either a) resistant to, b) afraid of, or c) refuses to learn new technology?
user463542's user avatar
-1 votes
1 answer
322 views

Does the English language have any words in present use that would be synonymous with the figurative sense of the now obsolete mesel, 'a repulsive or loathsome person'? I am well aware of the tons of ...
lly's user avatar
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2 votes
1 answer
1k views

Is peasant when used in general to describe a modern socioeconomic class considered to be derogatory? Apparently there is no issue when talking about European history... I read in the Brtitannica ...
Cascabel_StandWithUkraine_'s user avatar
0 votes
0 answers
29 views

What could be the word to best describe this following scenario: Parent 1: Why did you give the child a high-sugar drink when I specifically asked you not too? Parent 2: It's fine everybody, the ...
user1946932's user avatar
23 votes
6 answers
6k views

I’m wondering how widespread geographically and in time was the usage of calling a paper “face book” (list of 1st year college students with photos, hometown & dorm room) a “pig book”, and what ...
David H Couch's user avatar
-3 votes
1 answer
222 views

Is there a phrase that expresses the rebellion of the "native" troops protesting yet another battle against daunting odds when they have already proven themselves to be beyond compare... ...
Cascabel_StandWithUkraine_'s user avatar
2 votes
1 answer
122 views

Is there a bitter phrase that signals pejorative connotations when talking about grants distribution? Unfortunately, grants system is not perfect and can be abused by irresponsible people who suck-up ...
IlliakaillI's user avatar
1 vote
3 answers
768 views

I'm looking for a word to use in a self-deprecating context meaning 'overly sensitive or precious'. I ordinarily might say: I'm going to sound like a princess here or I'm going to be a snowflake ...
dwjohnston's user avatar
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13 votes
3 answers
7k views

Inspired by this question. What is the etymology of the phrase "stone-throwing devil"? Is there any evidence that it has been used as either a racial or religious slur historically or in ...
Geoffrey's user avatar
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9 votes
3 answers
2k views

J.E. Lighter, Random House Historical Dictionary of American Slang (1994) provides this entry for "Dutch act": Dutch act n. Und[erworld] suicide.—constr[ued] with the. [Earliest cited ...
Sven Yargs's user avatar
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2 votes
1 answer
192 views

Lucy from Charles Schultz's Peanuts strip is often described as a 'fussbudget', for example here: 'Lucy: Fussbudget to Feminist'. What is a British English equivalent to 'fussbudget'?
EleventhDoctor's user avatar
0 votes
1 answer
481 views

Jester means professional fool. Fool is a bad word. Is Jester word derogatory?
Marion Jeff's user avatar
0 votes
1 answer
2k views

I'm trying to pin down a word or phrase that concisely describes a person who intentionally gets other people to do things for them that they could easily do themselves, as a form of either conscious ...
Matt2infinity's user avatar
9 votes
2 answers
2k views

From Freedmen's Bureau records as excerpted in Sterling's brilliant We Are Your Sisters: Emmeline Ellaby jumped out of the cotton and called them damned bitches and said that everyone of them damned ...
Rusty Brooklyn's user avatar
0 votes
1 answer
152 views

One of my characters is a young graduate student who leaves her adviser. He takes her research code and he gets his other students to use it, not forgetting to say all sorts of mean things about her ...
user3653831's user avatar
  • 1,133
-2 votes
1 answer
425 views

I received an e-mail from Spotify Customer Support a few months ago. They ended the email with the following: "Looking forward to hearing from you. Let us know if you have other questions or ...
pilti's user avatar
  • 119
5 votes
12 answers
10k views

I need a derogatory term for housewife. I couldn't find any in online dictionaries and I'm not sure I have ever heard of any in any language I'm familiar with. But I'm thinking there must be something ...
user3653831's user avatar
  • 1,133
1 vote
1 answer
652 views

According to the OED https://www.oed.com/viewdictionaryentry/Entry/67623) "faggot" and "fag", used to refer to gay men in a derogatory way are "originally and chiefly North ...
Edward.Lin's user avatar
2 votes
3 answers
260 views

What word would someone around the era of the Wild West (1850) use to describe a "posh fancy-pants"? I see that "fancy-pants" first known usage was in the twentieth century, so it'...
A. Kvåle's user avatar
  • 2,187
-1 votes
2 answers
2k views

I am having a really hard time seeing the nuanced differences between these three synonyms, especially vituperation and vitriol. I saw from my research that invective is used in more formal context ...
TLo's user avatar
  • 215
15 votes
11 answers
4k views

Advice being given because of the COVID-19 pandemic, includes the word “elderly”. I know someone aged 77 who does not feel elderly but does admit to being old. Is there more of a negative ...
Avrohom Yitzchok's user avatar
2 votes
3 answers
1k views

I thought it was an approving word which is used to describe the diligence of a producer or artist and therefore the abundance of their productivity.Then I just knew that it can also be used to ...
ZaneHsu's user avatar
  • 390
0 votes
2 answers
556 views

We call a well known actor, a 'famous' actor. Yet a well known criminal is called a 'notorious' criminal. In similar vein, a popular leader would be called a 'great' leader. But what would you call ...
Vigneswara Prabhu's user avatar
2 votes
2 answers
310 views

Is there a term or word for the process of a group of people taking (or attempting to) an insulting word/phrase and making it their own? I'm thinking about something more than normalization or ...
Matt Bartlett's user avatar
1 vote
2 answers
695 views

Is there any derogatory or negative connotation with the words "developing countries" and "underdeveloped countries"? Should I avoid using them? I read somewhere, don't remember where, that they ...
Sasan's user avatar
  • 3,505
2 votes
1 answer
313 views

As "lousy" is a pejorative for someone or something being infested with lice, why is it pronounced with a "z" instead of an "s" sound? OTOH, when a person is called a "louse," the "s" sound is used. ...
B. Clay Shannon-B. Crow Raven's user avatar
-1 votes
1 answer
155 views

Much ado is being made about the spirited exchange between Joe Biden and some corpulent guy in Iowa that took him to task about his son's dealings with some Ukrainian company. Biden's supposed to ...
grandtout's user avatar
  • 1,766
2 votes
0 answers
2k views

According to the records of the New Zealand Parliament, "John Boy" was considered unparliamentary language in 1977. What did the phrase mean though, back then, over there? Urban dictionary seems say ...
got trolled too much this week's user avatar
0 votes
0 answers
113 views

Someone who doesn't do anything required or expected but takes credit for having performed heroic deeds. I have considered 'cowardly', but it doesn't convey the complete meaning. An example ...
Susan's user avatar
  • 9
14 votes
4 answers
7k views

Recently in the news there's been some kerfuffle about a verbal exchange between CNN anchorman, Chris Cuomo, and a person who called him “Fredo”. In the cell-phone video, the man claims I thought ...
Mari-Lou A's user avatar
  • 95.1k
1 vote
2 answers
132 views

German law has three distinct terms in the context of insulting a person: § 185, Beleidigung -- Insulting a person. This covers e.g. flipping somebody off in traffic, calling somebody names etc. § 186,...
DevSolar's user avatar
  • 799
1 vote
1 answer
1k views

This question emerged out of a discussion on Mastodon about Ivanka Trump being called a girl, where it was claimed that “girl' is synonymous with 'young woman' in English”. Is this true? Is it sexism ...
rugk's user avatar
  • 137
1 vote
2 answers
182 views

What do you call a person who constantly tells others things they don't want to hear even though it's true? (Maybe even revels in their dismay) Something along the lines of Person A telling Person B ...
Jack Of Blades's user avatar
2 votes
3 answers
797 views

"Modish" appears as a derogatory word on Dictionary.com/Oxford website Lexico: https://www.lexico.com/en/definition/modish Do you know why this is the case? Is the word often used in derogatory ...
Jitesh Gawali's user avatar
2 votes
1 answer
987 views

Has autistic become an accepted cool pejorative through constant misuse? While I usually would not bother with Urban, the theme was taken up… Autism is typically said with a negative connotation. ...
Cascabel_StandWithUkraine_'s user avatar

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