SIPPIN' ON SOME SiSLURS... PICK YOUR WORST!

NiggaHate

Banned
C. POWELL APPROVED DAMIT!
DID I MISS ANY? FEEL FREE TO ADD


Alligator bait
(U.S.) also "Gator Bait." A black person, especially a black child. More commonly used in states where alligators are found — particularly Florida. First used in the early 1900s[clarify], although some hypothesize the term originated in the late 1800s[clarify].[1] (The phrase may have lost any racial connotation at all among fans of the Florida Gators, for whom it simply means "a rival team who loses or will lose to the Gators.)

Alabama porch monkey
A black Male

Ann
A white woman to a black person — or a black woman who acts too much like a white one. While Miss Ann, also just plain Ann, is a derisive reference to the white woman, by extension it is applied to any black woman who puts on airs and tries to act like Miss Ann.[2]

Ape
(U.S.) a black person.[3]

Aunt Jemima / Aunt Jane / Aunt Mary / Aunt Sally / Aunt Thomasina
(U.S. Blacks) a black woman who "kisses up" to whites, a "sellout", female counterpart of Uncle Tom.[4]

Boogie
a black person. Referring to "Boogie Woogie" form of jazz? Could come from W. African "Buuker" or "Buckra", meaning "Devil", "Boogie man" or "White Man". Turned around and used against Blacks by Whites.[5]

Buffie
a black person.

Bush Boogie
a black person. Derived from alleged jungle origins.

Cotton Gremiln
b. (U.S. black) a young, brown-skinned person 1940s–1950s

Colored
(U.S.) a Black person. Now typically considered disrespectful, this word was more acceptable in the past. The National Association for the Advancement of Colored People, for example, continues to use its full name unapologetically. Some black Americans have reclaimed this word and softened it in the expression "a person of color".

Coloured
(South Africa) a community of mixed origin, including Khoikhoi and Asian slaves, not derogatory but the normal term for this community (UK Commonwealth) a black person (while not usually intended to be offensive, the term is not regarded as acceptable by many black people)[9]

Coon
(AUS, U.S. & U.K) a black person. Possibly from Portuguese barracoos, a building constructed to hold slaves for sale. (1837).[10]

Crow
a black person,[11] spec. a black woman.

Gable
a black person.[6]

Golliwogg
(UK Commonwealth) a dark-skinned person, after Florence Kate Upton's children's book character [12]

Jigaboo, jiggabo, jijjiboo, zigabo, jig, jigg, jiggy, jigga (U.S. & UK) a black person (JB) with stereotypical black features (dark skin, wide nose, etc.).[13]

Jim Crow
(U.S.) a black person; also the name for the segregation laws prevalent in much of the United States until the civil rights movement of the 1950s and 1960s.[14]

Jim Fish
(South Africa) a black person[15]

Jungle Bunny
(U.S.) a black person. Jungle is referred to their jungle origins and bunny is referred to some people saying that jack rabbits looked like 'lynched' black people. [16]

******, kaffer, ******, *****, kaffre
(South Africa) a. a black person. Very offensive. Usage: ****** Boy was a famous autobiographical book by Mark Mathabane about his childhood in South Africa. (The South African Consul General in Lethal Weapon 2 calls Danny Glover a ****** and Mel Gibson a '****** lover'.) b. also caffer or caffre: a non-Muslim. c. a member of a people inhabiting the Hindu Kush mountains of north-east Afghanistan. Origin is from the Arab word ***** meaning 'infidel' used in the early Arab trading posts in Africa. The term passed into modern usage through the British, who used the term to refer to the mixed groupings of people displaced by Shaka when he organized the Zulu nation. These groups (consisting of Mzilikaze, Matiwani, Mantatisi, Flingoe, Hottentot, and Xhosa peoples inhabited the region from the Cape of Good Hope to the Limpopo river) fought the British in the ****** Wars 1846–1848, 1850–1852, and 1877–1878.)[17][18] See also ****** (Historical usage in southern Africa)

Leroy, LeRoy, Leeroy, LeeRoy "SLURP NUTZ" :lol:
Given name allegedly common among black people.

Macaca
Epithet used to describe a Negro (originally) or a person of North-African origin (more recently). Came to public attention in 2006 when U.S. Senator George Allen infamously used it to refer to one of Jim Webb's volunteers, S. R. Sidarth, when he said, "This fellow here, over here with the yellow shirt, macaca, or whatever his name is." [19]

Mammy or Mammy Woman
(U.S.) an unflattering term for a mature black woman — usually subservient (term popularized by Al Jolson in song and film), a pop culture example is Hattie McDaniel's character in Gone with the Wind for which she won the Academy Award[20]

Monkey
(UK) a black person.[21]

Mosshead
a black person.[6]

Mouley
a black person (often used by person of Italian decent)

Munt
(among whites in South Africa, Zimbabwe, and Zambia) a black person from muntu, the singular of Bantu[22]

Mustard seed
(U.S.) a light-skinned person with one white and one black parent[23]
Milada,/ half black, half white person. Oreo: Cookie:. </ref>

Nego / negão / negalháda
(Brazil)

Nig-nog or Nig Jig
(UK & U.S.) a black person.[24]

NIGG*R / nigra / nigga / niggah / nigguh / nigglet
(U.S., UK) a black person. From the word negro which means the color black in numerous languages. Diminutive appellations include "Nigg", "Nigz". The terms "Nigga" and "Niggaz" (plural) are frequently used between African-Americans without the negative associations of "******."

NIGG*R baby
(U.S. Military) obsolete: a type of large cannonball [first used in the 1870s][25]

NIGG*R head
1.)an isolated coral head: these are often a navigation hazard in coral reef areas. Also called a bommie. 2.) a species of tobacco plant (appears in Mark Twain's "The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn").

NIGG*R Knife
A broken bottle.

NIGG*R shooter
a slingshot[26]

Niglet
A young black kid.

Nigra / negra / niggra / nigrah / nigruh
(U.S.) offensive for a black person [first used in the early 1900s][27]

Nigre
(Caribbean)

Pint of Guinness / Mr. Guinness etc.
A black person with white or very fair hair, so called due to the drink Guinness, which has a black body and a white head.

Powder burn
a black person.[6]

Porch Monkey
A black person. However, in recent years, a large scale effort has began to reclaim the term for its original use; referring to anyone (especially a small child) who spends large amounts of time on their porch.

Chigger
A combination of a chink and a NIGG*R

Puddle Jumper
black person

Quashie
a black person.[6]

Sambo
(U.S.) a derogatory term for an African American, Black, or sometimes a South Asian person.[28][29]

Smoked Irish / smoked Irishman
(U.S.) 19th century term for Blacks (intended to insult both Blacks and Irish).[6]

Sooty
a black person [originated in the U.S. in the 1950s][30]

Spade
(U.S.) a black person

Spear Chucker
(U.S.) a black person

Tar baby
(UK; U.S.; and N.Z.) a black child.[31] See Tar baby.

Teapot
(British) a black person. [1800s][32]

Thicklips
a black person.[6]

Uncle Tom
(U.S. minorities) term for an African-American, Latino, or Asian who panders to white people; a "sellout" (from the title character of Harriet Beecher Stowe's Uncle Tom's Cabin.)

Zebra
(U.S.) an often self-referential or affectionate term applied those with parents of mixed race, specifically black and white. The term was further popularized by the 1992 film Zebrahead.

DARE I ADD NAPPY HEADED HOES???
 
your an ass for this thread. All these faggot ass white boys on this thread posing as a black man, you dont need to give them any more ammo to put us down. Shame on you "Black man"
 
2nopliesbf9.jpg
 
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