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Do people in other countries...

Posted:
Wed Dec 19, 2007 2:31 pm
by muy_thaiguy
that are of, say, a minority in regards to skin color and such, call themselves African-British, or Spanish-Italian? Or any other similar instances? I don't think I have ever heard it from anywhere else but here in the states.

Posted:
Wed Dec 19, 2007 2:35 pm
by spinwizard
African and Asian British are used alot


Posted:
Wed Dec 19, 2007 2:35 pm
by Norse
Not really.
If anyone is a minority in Britain, they either call themselves, for example, "British", "Black", "asian".
I suppose you could say that we are pretty black-and-white about ethnicity in this country.

Posted:
Wed Dec 19, 2007 2:36 pm
by Norse
spinwizard wrote:African and Asian British are used alot

Never ever heard them terms.

Posted:
Wed Dec 19, 2007 2:41 pm
by Wisse
it is used but in an other way, example we don't say "i am asian-dutch" but we say "i am a dutch asian

Posted:
Wed Dec 19, 2007 2:47 pm
by browng-08
Up here in Canada, we usually use african-american or black

Posted:
Wed Dec 19, 2007 2:49 pm
by Koesen
Wisse wrote:it is used but in an other way, example we don't say "i am asian-dutch" but we say "i am a dutch asian
That's pretty rare though. In the Netherlands, it's far more common to call people either Dutch (or nothing) or after whatever country their family came from.
I never heard anybody describe himself or be described by others as 'een Nederlandse Aziaat' (Dutch Asian).

Posted:
Wed Dec 19, 2007 2:51 pm
by soundout9
In the USA i usually am discribed as a "cracker"


Posted:
Wed Dec 19, 2007 2:58 pm
by btownmeggy
Sometimes. In the multiethnic foreign countries I'm most familiar with, afro-brasileiro, afrocubano, and the like are commonly used. Brasilindio (for native peoples) is also pretty common.
However, I notice that Asians, sizeable minorities in these two countries, are usually just called chines or japones. Not chines-cubano or japones-brasileiro.

Posted:
Wed Dec 19, 2007 3:04 pm
by Snorri1234
Koesen wrote:Wisse wrote:it is used but in an other way, example we don't say "i am asian-dutch" but we say "i am a dutch asian
That's pretty rare though. In the Netherlands, it's far more common to call people either Dutch (or nothing) or after whatever country their family came from.
I never heard anybody describe himself or be described by others as 'een Nederlandse Aziaat' (Dutch Asian).
Me neither. All my asian friends call themselves chinese or wherever they're from.

Posted:
Wed Dec 19, 2007 8:32 pm
by Moghul
No such terms used in Denmark. In Britain, however, you can be a BBC - British born Chinese.

Posted:
Wed Dec 19, 2007 9:42 pm
by a-person1192
soundout9 wrote:In the USA i usually am discribed as a "cracker"

I'm a cracker too!


Posted:
Wed Dec 19, 2007 10:01 pm
by comic boy
spinwizard wrote:African and Asian British are used alot

Never heard either of them used, people will say they are British or, for example, Indian or Nigerian.

Posted:
Thu Dec 20, 2007 1:06 am
by -ShadySoul-
seeing as Canada is a very open country to immigration, then the people in here call them selfs the same way they called them selfs at home.

Posted:
Thu Dec 20, 2007 9:24 pm
by Guiscard
Some people I know prefer use British-Asian as a term when they want to recognise both their Pakistani or Indian culture as well as their Britishness. One of my good friends doesn't like to refer to himself solely as Asian because he thinks people will place too much weight on his roots and not on his present situation. He once said something along the lines of 'if you tell some people you're asian they assume you've got six wives, but if you say your British they assum you've gone to law school... So best of both.'

Posted:
Thu Dec 20, 2007 9:29 pm
by muy_thaiguy
Guiscard wrote:Some people I know prefer use British-Asian as a term when they want to recognise both their Pakistani or Indian culture as well as their Britishness. One of my good friends doesn't like to refer to himself solely as Asian because he thinks people will place too much weight on his roots and not on his present situation. He once said something along the lines of 'if you tell some people you're asian they assume you've got six wives, but if you say your British they assum you've gone to law school... So best of both.'
So, 3 wives and a frat boy?