Definify.com
Webster 1828 Edition
Neger
NEGER
,Definition 2024
Neger
Neger
German
Noun
Neger m (genitive Negers, plural Neger, diminutive Negerlein n or Negerchen n, feminine Negerin)
Usage notes
- Usage of Neger has been declining since the 1950s,[1] and aside from right-wing extremists,[1] most remaining users are over 60 (as of 2016).[2] In modern speech it is considered discriminatory and derogatory, and therefore avoided.[3][4]
Declension
Synonyms
- Farbiger (in a narrower sense)
- Afrikaner, Schwarzer
- Negro
- Mohr (dated)
- Nigger (offensive, ethnic slur)
Hypernyms
- Farbiger (in a broader sense)
Derived terms
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- 1 2 Kontroverse Begriffe: Geschichte des öffentlichen Sprachgebrauchs, reviewing press usage over time, says it now "functions as an explicitly defamatory term, and is avoided in public speech except by right-wing extremists", with the press already avoiding the term since the 70s.
- ↑ Erwin Ebermann, Afrikaner in Wien: zwischen Mystifizierung und Verteufelung, per surveys done in Vienna
- ↑ Neger in Duden online
- ↑ “Neger” in Digitales Wörterbuch der deutschen Sprache
neger
neger
English
Noun
neger (plural negers)
- (rare, sometimes eye dialect) Synonym of nigger [from 16th c.]
- c. 1700, ‘The Saint Turn'd Sinner’ (ballad):
- The Parson still more eager, / Than lustful Turk or Neger, / Took up her lower Garment, / And said there was no harm in't, / According to the Text.
- c. 1700, ‘The Saint Turn'd Sinner’ (ballad):
Anagrams
Danish
Etymology
From French nègre, from Spanish negro, from Latin niger (“black”).
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /neːjər/, [ˈneːjɐ]
Noun
neger c (singular definite negeren, plural indefinite negere)
- (now offensive) a dark-skinned person, especially a person of, or primarily of, Negro descent
- a ghostwriter
Usage notes
The term neger is now generally considered offensive; in its place, the term sort (black) is preferred.
Synonyms
- (dark-skinned, derogatory): nigger, abekat
- (dark-skinned, neutral): sort, farvet, afrikaner
- (ghostwriter): ghostwriter
External links
- neger on the Danish Wikipedia.Wikipedia da
Dutch
Pronunciation
Etymology
From earlier modern Dutch negro (“black person”) or from French nègre (“black person”), from Spanish negro (“black person”), from Latin niger (“black”), of uncertain origin but possibly from Proto-Indo-European *nókʷts (“night”).
Noun
neger m (plural negers, diminutive negertje n, feminine negerin)
- (informal) a negro (male)
Usage notes
- For many speakers in Belgium and the Netherlands it is a neutral and non-offensive way to refer to someone with a darker skin colour. In recent years under influence of the offensiveness of the etymologically related English nigger, some speakers do take offence, making it a topic of some debate whether the word can still be used neutrally or not, with varying opinions being held.
- In Suriname, the word is a derogatory term, except when used in the compounds bosneger and stadsneger.[1]
- The synonym zwarte can be used as a neutral alternative in all geographies and circumstances.
References
Synonyms
Related terms
- negeren
- negerzoen
- negroïde
- bosneger
Descendants
- Afrikaans: neger
Anagrams
Norwegian
Etymology
From French nègre, from Spanish negro, from Latin niger (“black”).
Noun
neger m
- (sometimes derogatory and offensive) negro
Inflection
Swedish
Etymology
From French nègre, from Spanish negro, from Latin niger (“black”).
Noun
neger c
- (derogatory, now offensive) a negro, a black person
Declension
Inflection of neger | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|
Singular | Plural | |||
Indefinite | Definite | Indefinite | Definite | |
Nominative | neger | negern | negrer | negrerna |
Genitive | negers | negerns | negrers | negrernas |
Usage notes
- The word, potentially having derogatory connotations, has been avoided since the 1960s, primarily in favor of svart (“black”) and afrikan (“African”)