304:
mixture of races. I am from
Southwest Louisiana and we use (especially the old folks) this word all the time. Sometimes in Creole Zydeco and area rap songs. Some with different view and from other parts of the USA or other countries may refer to the term Mulatto as having one black / one white parent. The usage depends on locality and the ever changing English language. Words do change meaning by locality and cultures. I feel that an Black Asian can call themselves Mulatto. Yes, the word Mulatto did derive from Latin word Mule , which was first used to describe mixed Moorish/Spanish/North African Canary Islanders. Like I said word meanings change. For the North African - Sub-Saharan debate. I feel that , it is just a distinction for North Africans to consider themselves Arabs because of their Muslim religion. I never understood why they class themselves from other Africans on the continent. I cannot tell them what to call themselves but as far as I am concerned they reside on the continent of Africa so they are Africans. Just as my national identity is American since I reside on the continent of North America. To clear things up , they are light skinned African blacks, they are tribes who live in remote Africa who had no contact with the outside world until recently and they are light skinned. So they were probabaly light skinned black tribes members who ended up in the Trans-Atlantic Slave Trade. I have read and heard about light skinned blacks completing admixture tests and coming with 90-100% sub-Saharan African ancestry. I also heard of a very dark skinned man who lived his life as a black man with a black family who also did a admixture test to find that he was abt. 95% European and the rest was Native American. Well as for race I am a multi-ethnic Louisiana Creole. creolegenealogyqueen@yahoo.com
2419:- You are talking above the average person, and of a more scholarly study of the history of Man. We can't give definitions, or write articles, of a word and it's origin and also give a lesson in the history of Man. You are right that we(probably, almost definitively) all originated from Africa. And that many of our ancestors that left the Continent of origin have African blood. But, when those ancestors left they developed new blood too. Whether through diet, environment or other means. For example, some say the early Man who went to Europe "mingled" with the Neanderthal. This is almost conventional wisdom those who study this aspect of anthropology. In any case, we give the definition and history of the term, we don't base it on anthropology. Thanks for the question.
3430:@, you do have a seat at the table of this conversation but you don't represent all of us. Hell, I even dig, the reappropriation of this term as "Latto." While I may adopt THAT term in certain social circles, a stranger aping it back to or in reference to me would be a gross assumption of familiarity and therefore disrespectful in my eyes. Even more, the moment I hear someone outside my race use "Latto" or refer to me as "Latto" at work, I'm going right to HR because it's NOT for them. YOU may be okay with it, but I'M not. And just like "Nigga," while they may say it behind closed doors or in THEIR inner circles or rap it out loud with their favorite hip-hop track, a non-Black person bet'not let it slip out around me.
2881:
and father were not the only black-white couple, just the first. None of the children of these marriages identifies as anything other than mixed and that is pretty common as is the choice the president made. If a picture is going to be put up, it should be someone who identifies with the label. As far as it being derogatory, it does compare a human to a mule but there's no other term of that specificity in
English. For a long time I've answered "black and white" which in the past would produce puzzlement but today does not. People still don't in general deal well with anything presented in too stark or matter of fact a way and like it or not this is the word we have so ... .
876:
how much you want to hide the history of a word from public view. I shortened it to include only the meaning and not etymology since for some odd reason you feel upset that mulatto means a mule. So I didn't include the etymology, I included the meaning of the word mulatto itself by stating "..Spanish word for mule..". Which is, to your chagrin, exactly how the other entries (castizo, mestizo) you provided, presented their terms in the opening sections. I'm sure the word 'mulatto' has taken on new meanings, by different people, in different regions today, but the fact of the matter is that the word itself 'mulatto' means 'a mule'. You can't really run from that. Sorry.
1505:
physical results of mulatto offspring, but the various types of mulatto ancestry, from ambiguous to specific, to recent (or first generation). Unless there is a unanimous consensus, I see this objection as coming from you only, as in your opinion. It's subjective. Please view the bios of each person. With the exception of
Cornell West and Vanessa Williams, who are African-American descendants of slaves, all bios indicate specific European and sub-Saharan African recent ancestry or parentage. I'm putting the gallery back up until I'm notified of an official Knowledge violation, not one based on personal opinion. Please explain to me how that is racist.
3266:. Although an English term, it is a term resulting from the colonization of the Americas in which we are all intrinsically linked in this hemisphere. This same spelling (mulatto) is also used when writing about other countries within the Americas, especially in Haiti where it is still used and is spelled "mulâtre." Your examples, although in good faith, are much further away in comparison. The meaning (offspring of one white parent and one black) is the same in English, French, Portuguese and Spanish, just as the word "negro/negre" means black, used negatively or not. Are we going to say "negro" no longer means black in English? No.
5037:- I would say it is a dated and potentially offensive in North America, since those are defining characteristics. It seems accepted use in many locations and is not a current and explicit pejorative even among North Americans, so whether one is offended or even recognizes the word seems more a personal variable. But it also seems not as accepted as Mestizo, Pardo, or Cafuzo. Colourism concerns make any racial term touchy and potentially offensive, but this one seems simply not a hot button. It seems more touchy to choose among more recent racial labellings e.g. 'black' vs 'negro' vs 'African-American' vs 'Mixed'. Cheers
3941:, only some hours before, you reverted me without taking part in the discussion, although the edit summary of the very edit you reverted contained the link to that discussion. So I assumed that this is the way you normally edit. Also on this page I left a link to this discussion in one recent edit summary (18.52, 29 Nov, before you reverted it was no. 5 from the top). Please note that I didn’t accuse you of bad faith, I just thought it necessary to remind you of the rule. Since you said it was a mistake, I retract it. For the rest of what you said, I’ll answer on your German user’s talk page.
539:
there was not the mixing of the races that there is today. The politically correct (?) term "biracial" is confusing because without seeing the person one cannot denote what races have been mixed. If one cannot use "Mulatto" as it has been coloquialized into what some consider offensive what is going to be the new word for someone with a mix of
Caucasian and Negriod genes? BTW there is no "black" race. The correct word in the English language is "Negriod". Are we so politically correct that we cannot even still speak the Queen's English? MarshallB. BTW my partner considers herself "Mulatto"
3570:, Knowledge is an universal encyclopedia, not just an encyclopedia for countries with the English as its primary language. This is just the English version of Knowledge, but read by people all around the world with English as a second language. Therefore, people should know that mixed people of European and African ancestry are called Mulattoes in countries like Brazil. This person them said that this article is just about the English term. But as far as I know, there's no articles about the word in other languages. So why isn't this article about this word in general? The page
839:
the etymology at the very beginning, especially since there is an entire section dedicated to this. How does the word coming from mule give the reader any more knowledge on it's present-day usage right from the top? Are you trying to give the word a negative connotation? Then including the Latin word from which mulo came from? That is way overdone in my opinion. I know I'm not the only one who feels that way because I wasn't the person who originally moved that out. Again, etymology is good to include, but it has an entire section, so it's unnecessary to put it at the top.
3061:
children of mixed couples. It is used in everyday life by some of the most liberal people I know. "Children of mixed marriage" is a broad expression and it can mean anything-from mixed race to couples of different nationalities or even religion. So it's not used for "multiracials" when you want to be more clear. Reading this article came as a surprise to me.... does the rest of the english-speaking world avoid that term or only USA? I believe this only applies to North
America, so that should be made more clear.
3592:
same etymology, which derives from comparisons between people and livestock in slaveholding places. In
English, it is without question demeaning, and this is the English Knowledge, so that will be the dominant tone, absent significant references otherwise. The Portuguese article, which is well referenced, notes that it has been described as a racist term by some scholars, and is not commonly used nowadays. I will look at adding those references once I've reviewed them in more detail
4873:
English-speaking countries but not in
Spanish-speaking countries, we should say that. If the reliable sources say it's offensive and Knowledge editors say "but not everywhere", then leave it out because we only go by the sources we're summarizing. Based on the thread above, it seems likely that something like "Its use is considered outdated and offensive in many places, especially English-speaking countries" might be called for, but I don't see many sources linked there. —
31:
4286:
in
English. This editor was a source of considerable exasperation for others, including myself, so I would appreciate it if we could avoid characterizing other editors' comments as "melodramatic." That's a personalized comment that is unhelpful. It appears that other languages are following the same trend as English, but more gradually. Whether ot not the inclusion of "in English" or its absence captures that accurately is the central issue.
2187:
black blood classified a person as black; and to be black was to be a slave.... By prohibiting racial intermarriage, winking at interracial sex, and defining all mixed offspring as black, white society found the ideal answer to its labor needs, its extracurricular and inadmissible sexual desires, its compulsion to maintain its culture purebred, and the problem of maintaining, at least in theory, absolute social control. (pp. 289-290)
1382:
shouldn't use the word "kid" or "kids" when referring to children because the word "kid" is used to describe a baby goat. How many people have used the word "kid" or "kids" when referring to children in the general sense or when even referring to their own children? When a mother says "I'm going to go put the kids to bed" I'm sure the first thing you picture is not a human mother putting her baby goats to bed now is it?
1509:
in between, who are born of mulatto ancestry, or of sub-Saharan/European (Caucasian) parentage. I wanted to included more, because I know there are more, but didn't want to make the gallery to long. I think it's pertinent that people read the article and understand that mulatto isn't just pertinent to a specific range of looks, but it's very broad. I wanted to add more range, using someone like
959:] No one is trying to hide the etymology of the word, as there is an entire section of the etymology (2 paragraphs). This article should not be about the term, but it should be about the people who are part black and part white. I disagree that the etymology needs to be at the beginning, but thank you KuamrFilo for at least trying to compromise on this, as I am concerned that you would state
2646:'s additions regarding South Africa appear to be valuable, but they need more specific citation. For example, any attribution of purpose or intention behind an action (such as ". . . the aim of subdivisions was to enhance the meaning of the larger category of Coloured by making it all encompassing;") ought to have its own reference to a particular statement in the source.
3423:"Negro." We don't refer to Frederick Douglass as "Negro." We use "African-American." It would be absolutely disrespectful to refer to him using the contemporary language. We don't refer to Hervé Villechaize as a "midget" even though he actually preferred the term. We use "little people." Or acknowledge that people are "born with dwarfism" rather than call them "dwarfs."
2978:. Most of the material in the section, "Africa", seems to belong in an article on racial classification and identification in South Africa, not here. Moreover, nearly half of the section, "Latin America and the Caribbean", is about the United States, which is not usually regarded as belonging to either of those regions, and which has its own section, further down.
2236:
obtaining special jobs and other favored treatment for their mixed children (Reuter, 1970:129). Many of the sexual contacts between the races at this time took still other forms, such as prostitution, adventure, concubinage, and sometimes love. In rare instances, where free Blacks were concerned, there was even marriage (Bennett, 1962:243-68). (pp. 38-39)
2570:
208:
Factbook, it gives 81% as white and 10.9% as mixed, so I find it hard to believe that 76% is correct. Many of the other countries don't add up either. Does anyone know where the percentages came from originally or did someone just guess or did someone vandalize the numbers? Cuba shows 51% and the
Dominican Republic shows 73% in the CIA Factbook.
4680:: Mulato/Mullato is a term used across multiple languages and cultures. It has already been shown, that in Spanish and Portuguese (where the term originated) the term does not carry the same offensive connotation as in English and has in some cases become a sign of pride and identity. This is the English-Knowledge, yes, but English is a
3804:). I don't know what this article is "clearly" about, since I got the impression that some editors who worked on it didn't know that either. We simply cannot use an offensive word in wikivoice. And there no way to define a group of human beings across different societies just by way of their degrees of European and African ancestries.
760:
that you can't describe yourself as a mulatto, but to remain intellectually honest as to its etymology. At this point, you may remove the etymology, or derivation of the word mulatto, but I will state the meaning of the word itself in the opening paragraph. Same difference, surely, but there really is no running from 'mule'. Sorry.
2858:(Haiti) were among the richest in the all of the New World. All words come from somewhere; the word "gay" at one time meant happy. Words change. But I suppose "other" and "mixed" are more appropriate methods of categorization. (sarcasism). Furthermore, these caregories can equate to combinations not specfic to "black" and "white."
1744:". If there are facts that are well documented, with valid sources, perhaps a sentence or so could be added to that section. Some of which is already described there. For any addition describing large groups of people whitening their skin color to classify themselves as "Mulatto", there would have to be detailed sources and data.
121:
with both blacks and whites.� Not just difficult, but impossible.� My belief is that because of this, we cannot consider ourselves to be of "both" races, but of neither - since we are not not "racially bonded" with both.� As mulattoes, we are a people, and the only people that we can really feel a "racial bond" with is eachother.
3318:"Its use is considered outdated and offensive", there are two sources listed with this, neither say anything about the term being outdated or offensive, so not sure why that was added or those sources were cited. As such, I'm removing that sentence and sources, which are not even sources for that statement to begin with.
2066:, which the lead sentence describes as, "a term commonly used in the United States to refer to a person who is born from one white parent and one black parent, or more broadly, a person of any 'mixed' ancestry." Input from editors not involved in the edit-warish exchanges above would probably be useful. I'll mention that
2290:
rather than mulatto; nor does it reveal the comparitive unknown number of the remaining 48.4% that did coose to self identify as not white, but qualified to be mulatto and if mulatto was a choice. Furthermore, the sample that was studied for the article revealed mixes of
European, African, and native American DNA.
3166:
desired by people, specially in Spain, that’s why they have sunbaths and go to uva rays baths compulsively. It is not pejorative at all. All the opposite; a mulato/a person is beautiful always. That includes the song. He’s showing his rhythm to a beautiful ‘mulata’ woman. Así que de peyorativo nada majete.
1891:"do what I say or I will beat/kill you", there are not many "choices". Add that to the fact that slaves were not even counted as People, but as property, and how can anyone ask for a page number on this fact? So please, if you want to change this article, propose them here on the Talk page first. Thanks.
4238:
I don't know a lot about the history of racial categories in Dutch culture, but I would not be surprised if it were similar to the Anglo-Saxon world. It is also common that due to cultural similarities and wide use of the English language, the Dutch are the first to adopt cultural tendencies from the
3989:
Please don't forget that people in Brazil don't speak English, so they use the Portuguese word "mulato", not the English word "mulatto". On the other hand, if you really think that dictionaries are no reliable sources on the use of the English word "mulatto", as you said above, it will be hard for us
3974:
Well said. Mulatto is an archaic word in English. In Brazil, though some people have opposed its use in recent years, it is still deeply ingrained in popular culture, and used in academic settings to describe a social category that, unlike in the USA, was clearly distinct from "black". In Haiti it is
3960:
Knowledge; but it is also (by far) the most international Knowledge and being able to communicate in another language and correctly interpreting it within its cultural subtext are two different things. Especially in cases like this particular article, where the word used is in fact a direct loanword.
3923:
is a word occurring in multiple languages, whose speakers might have different cultural attitudes towards this word, i.e. non-offensive, obsolete, descriptive, etc.. I do not contest the fact, that it is considered offensive in contemporary English; but as long as the only lexical sources are limited
3896:
I've taken the liberty of overlooking some of your ( Rsk6400 ) recent edits and I'm sorry to say this, but your style of editing and communicating can come across as quite accusative and aggressive at times. I don't think it's particularly constructive to seemingly assume a racist-bias when people do
3629:
I've already shared those thoughts. If you are not Mulatto, you have no say no so, period, over a term that is ours, as you are unqualified, inexperienced, & uneducated to be telling me and the millions of people like me how we are to feel about a term that is OURS & that was designed for us.
3279:
However, I agree that "mulatto" is not a Spanish word; derived? Yes. It is also debatable on whether or not it is considered offensive, especially when it was because of the southern Democrats of the 1930's who pushed to remove it (disenfranchising?) from the census which had it used from 1910-20, in
2973:
made some deletions today of matter that, while unsourced, was apparently credible and should not have been deleted, in my opinion, but simply tagged with "citation needed". I started to revert the deletions, but, honestly! The whole article is such a mess that I can't really say whether or not the
2369:
Moors were/are not a black population. They are Berbers . If anything, North Africans are darker today than they were in the past since so many Sub-saharan Africans were brought to North Africa as slaves after the advent of Islam. The middle East is a different story however, since black slaves were
1524:
There is information about 'mulatto' populations in parts of Europe born to these types of unions that should be included. There is a huge population in Switzerland, for example. There is also mulatto 'legacy' ancestry in places like Tanzania where there is a population cognizant and accepting of it.
1516:
There should be a subsection somewhere discussing the trend of European and continental African dating, offspring and unions that started in the mid-1900s. It's significant, and a huge sub-topic to explore. I came across a thesis about the resulting population in Germany written by a graduate student
1186:
Of course "mulatto" may not literally mean a mule right now because words change meaning over time. But the fact of the matter is that "mulatto" is derived from the Spanish word for mule. It is this that is a fact. It is this which should be stated in the article. Etymology is the study of origins of
759:
Either way an encyclopedia must have accuracy if general knowledge is out there, not frivolous speculation. Of course words meaning change over time, but general knowledge is that mulatto means a mule. No matter how desperately you want to talk around that, the fact will always remain. I'm not saying
370:
are derived from the Latin for black, but no one would seriously argue that they aren't widely seen as archaic and racist on the basis of the etymological argument that anon keeps reinserting. The origins of words and the meanings that they acquire over time through usage often have little to do with
4285:
I have no strong opinion, and administrators won't arbitrate content. I note that we've seen profoundly disruptive conduct from a now-blocked editor who asserted ownership over the term, and who asserted that there was nothing at all offensive and outdated about it, which does not agree with the use
3959:
If one already knows the subject, one generally doesn't need to look it up in an encyclopedia; so I would not make the assumption that the average reader is aware of not just an identical word, but an (at first glance) identical term having cross-linguistic nuances. Yes, this is the English-language
3737:
Words have different meanings in different languages. I'm convinced that our readers know that. Everybody who has ever learned a second language knows that words sounding similar and having the same root can be very treacherous. So, we don't have to mention that the word "mulatto" is an English word
3414:
We could draw a comparison to the term 'Coloured.' (Which, by the say, is called out as being a slur in many places in the Knowledge article.) Well, how can it be a slur? Hello! NAACP! That MUST mean that it's accepted...and by golly, it WAS the right term at one point. So, would YOU take offense to
3397:
Why aren't we given the same kind of consideration as anyone else. You ask someone to stop kicking your chair on the plane, and the non-sociopathic members of society will absolutely do so. You're asked by a colleague to stop using the term "Bitch" because she finds it offensive, and responding with
3060:
South Slavic nations use the term all the time to describe so that should be mentioned. I also clearly remember one elementary school textbook that taught us about different races, tolerance, mixed marriages etc. That's where I read the word "mulattio" for the first time, along with other terms for
2880:
Yes, agree he is the thing referred to, and if it were not for the fact that he had gone to such great pains to establish himself as black rather than mixed race, a choice all of us in his position have had to make, then I would agree he would be a good choice for the picture. In my family my mother
2849:
In my opinion someone doesn't have to state to be something if he is something. This is encyclopdia where controversial sections (not saying that this truly is) can be made about a person; it's called editing without biases even if its not in favor of the subject being said. He has a white (European
2720:
Yea, I think this article is supposed to be more about the term, Mulatto. Most of the things you are referring to probably belong in the Multiracial article. It makes more sense that way, I believe. It could be that I am being too Americancentric, but I don't know if other English language countries
2456:
during the same period and long afterwards.) The article did cite a book in support of its dubious statement, but didn't specify a page, so the reference couldn't be conveniently checked. I dare say that if the relevant passage could be found, it would say more or less what I have said here, or at
1890:
considering the amount of scholars/sources that describe the master-slave rapes. The fact is, it's not only the opinion of the overwhelming amount of scholars/sources, but just plain common sense, that a Master-Slave "sexual relationship" is rape . When a "sexual relationship" begins and ends with a
381:
Negro is not a racist term: in fact it was the only non-derogatory term available for much of US history because the term "black" was itself considered racist! Not until the black power movement in the 50's and 60's when they started using it in a positive manner did it become politically correct to
4656:
Since this article is part of the English Knowledge, we don't have to clarify the language. Words, even if they sound similar and have the same root, are different in different languages. Of course we can add sections on the use of "mulato" in Brazil or "mulâtre" in francophone countries. According
4352:
May I suggest this solution: You add something based on reliable secondary sources to the section on Brazil. But please remember that an 80-year-old celebrity might not be the best source for the current use of the word, especially since he doesn't self-identify as "mulato" but says that his father
3565:
This article claims that the term is offensive, without clarifying any details. But in reality, in Spanish and Portuguese, as well as even in English if you're in a Spanish speaking country, this term has no negative connotation. Someone said to me that this shouldn't be added to this page because
3389:
The dilution of this term is a product of internet disinformation. Do a search. You'll see that it is a HIGHLY contested topic - showcasing the fact that its not just a small group of folks making this up. Because of this, it has given folks license to completely disrespect others purely on a human
3293:
So with 212.163.26.99's argument considered, I wouldn't opt to renaming this article for the Spanish spelling in any way, but it does discuss all mulatto groups, not just in English-speaking countries. With the ever-so changing demographic of the United States and further entry of Spanish-speakers,
2391:
seriously flawed? AFAIK, homo sapiens first appeared on the scene somewhere in East Africa about 200,000 years ago, whereas the first Homo Sapiens setting foot in Europe is perhaps just 40,000 years ago. In other words, *most* of the ancestry of every white person on Earth is African and Black, and
1758:
Heh, its not about "whitening skin color" its about classication schemes becoming gradually whiter so that persons who would have previously classified as black become mulatto and people who used to be classified as mulattos become white. There is no change in skin color (which has no relevance for
1721:
Those facts are quite well documented in the large literature on race in Brazil, so I don't know why you would say that they cannot possibly be true. Tge fact that there may be a COI in inserting it (for which you have no evidence) is not a reason to include the material. The topic is not about the
1508:
The gallery is placed between the 'Colonial Era' and 'Contemporary Era' sub-sections to illustrated the type of mulatto posterity produced by both, regardless of social race labels/classifications applied during these eras. It doesn't matter, they're all American, whether they look white, black, or
875:
Whether or not this word, mulatto, receives a "negative connotation" by me stating the truth is not my concern. This is an encyclopedia after all, so facts outweigh any feel-goodisms. Like I said, the meanings of words change over time, sure, but the base meaning will always stay the same no matter
567:)Negroid was the correct reference and is/was specifically used to define a person with particular physiological characteristices. I'm not sure where/when/if Negriod was a word or who used it. A couple of points here. What does a person's personal viewpoint have to do with a so-called encyclopedia?
303:
This article on mulattos were bad , but I have read worst. First of all, I feel that you have to be a Mulatto to know. However , their are people who call themselves Mulatto and do not know what it means or where it comes from. I never seen such a debate on the term Mulatto before. The term means a
139:
To those mulattoes who read read this website, and have websites themselves, I would encourage you to copy this flag and display it on your website, even if it is a personal homepage that is not dedicated to the issues discussed here on this website.� I would ask that you do not link this flag back
135:
To clear things up, this flag is no longer a mockery of the Dominican flag.� I designed it the day after the heated discussion.� After that, I didn't even touch it until a few weeks later.� When I was�over my anger, I looked back at the flag which I have designed, and I realized how much the colors
120:
Our discussion was mostly about my guest editorial that was posted on a website called Interracial Voice.� The name of the editorial was called Mulatto: A "Race" of People".� In the editorial, I spoke of how it was diffucult to "play both sides of the fence", in other words, to feel a "racial bond"
2830:
Agree but not for the reason you state. While he acknowledges being mixed race, he explicitly identifies as black and not as mixed race. Therefore it's not appropriate to put his picture. As far as the term itself being offensive, I don't take it so, it's in the nature of American English or maybe
2186:
mulattoes were symbols of rape and concubinage. Gary B. Nash (1974) summarized the slavery-era relationship between the rape of black women, the handling of mulattoes, and white dominance...It was resolved by insuring that the mulatto would not occupy a position midway between white and black. Any
838:
I shan't get into an edit war over something so silly, but I really don't understand your insistence on including the etymology at the very beginning. Mulato may derive from the word mulo meaning mule, but that is not what it means now. Including a full definition does not mean you have to include
763:
It is not a generally accepted fact that mulatto comes from mule. Accepted by whom? If you cannot show any development from the original Latin and Arabic through mule and then mulatto, you are making impossible intellectual leaps. You comment, therefore, regarding the relationship between mule and
573:
For instance, just 15 years ago I asked a fellow student if she thought that Blacks tended to associate with other Blacks, referencing an article I had been reading. She, a Black woman corrected me and told me that I should say colored, not Black. My response was that I wasn't referring to colored
487:
In all sensibility, mabye there should be a directory for anyone who searches "bi-racial", further emphasizing who they would like to search for, ex. mulattoes, mestizos, etc., but at the same time, unless society pushes along a new word, mulatto is the most commonly accepted word that describes a
278:
Edit: Yes there are mulattoes in Africa. Mulattoes (half black and half white) would be a subset in the set coloreds because coloreds usually include anyone with partial African ancestry in South Africa. Even an indian could be considered a colored in South Africa. I agree with you that egyptians,
207:
I reordered the countries from highest to lowest percent of mulatto population in Latin America and noticed some discrepancies in the numbers and some sources. Puerto Rico sticks out the most at 76%?? It looks like this used to be a different number and someone changed it. When I look at the CIA
5100:
There isn't enough information on this page. Say if someone were to really extensively look into the term and the people who are identified as mulatto, you would not be able to get much. Each country in Latin America, for example, should have their own section like the "mestizo" article. It would
4971:
Following a neutral point of view, and avoiding anglocentric bias, one should not assume it is offensive in most languages because it is offensive in English. We should both state languages where it is offensive, and where it isn't. Currently all sources provided are exclusively about the English
3591:
This again? In English, it's outdated and offensive. In Spanish and Portuguese it may not be, but you'll need references to state that, since it's referenced as offensive in English. There are 49 Knowledge articles in other languages concerning the term, mostly poorly referenced. They discuss the
3422:
At the very least, we can all agree that referring to a mixed-race person as "mulatto" is outdated and not the politically correct term of the day. In the articles where we keep referring to people as mulattoes, it's inappropriate because of the lack of parity with how we treat other terms. Like,
3393:
In a group therapy session, a peer used the term. I gently corrected her saying, "hey, would you mind not using the term 'mulatto'? It's widely considered to be a racial slur and I personally find it offensive." Her response? "My BLACK friend said that it's okay, so I'll used it as much as I want
3385:
I am also a 'mixed-part-Black' person. I'm betting, however, that I'm either a bit older than you are or perhaps hail from a different part of the country than you do. I've noticed that millenials, genZ'ers, and Black folk not born in the US or raised in certain parts of the country have begun to
1655:
I actually think it is quote relevant to know that the definitions of mixed race categories such as "mulatto" are socially variable just like other racial categories. I agree it was possibly excessive and I am not sure the source supported it entirely. But I think it is very relevant to include -
538:
What is a Mule? It is the result of breeding a horse with a donkey ie: crossbreeding. I think that it is logical to think that at the time of the origin of the word that "mulado" or "mulato" was meant to denote the "crossbred" aspect of the term. The world was a homogenious place at that time and
180:
The flag was mad by warbird miller he was the frist mulatto to think up of a flag for us.Many mulatto support this flag if you do internet search you can see that.And to and many flags are made up by someone at frist and the people support there country flag how do you think these flags come from
3015:
The term is no longer salient in any English-speaking society at any level, and it's inappropriate to refer to modern-day persons of mixed race as "mulattoes", even if the Spanish, Portuguese, French, Creole, etc., cognates of that term are still current and inoffensive in other countries. In my
2785:
are of course entitled to do so; but I don't think they're entitled publicly to call anybody else by that term. Pres. Obama is not known to refer to himself publicly as a mulatto. To identify him as such here would reflect an unencyclopedic POV, which many readers would assume to be racist. I
2161:
and does not reflect the overwhelming view of scholars and historians. Not to mention the book you cherry-picked that quote from is neither about Mulatto's nor Master-Slave "relationships". For every one instance you can find making a description you provided, there are dozens of scholar/history
1504:
The gallery does not illustrate any racist terms. I used no racist terms in my submissions. Unless you're indicating the entire article is racist. Please explain. You're accusing me without explanation. Please cite the terms of which I am violating. The gallery illustrates, not only the various
396:
I agree that Mulatto is not in everyday use, but it does have some prevalence; also, Mulatto is actually the correct identifier for Colin Powell and Barack Obama, and the same argument can be said for the opposing viewpoint of "black racialist types." Bi-racial is a generic term that isn't very
3839:
It is not that hard. Just search form them in google. You can find hunderds of others if you search for mulattos in Haiti, Brazil or Angola. Dictionaries are not infalible. Some people find the term black offensive, but it is used in a Knowledge article, despite the fact that there is no way to
3418:
Hell, I actually have a Black friend that prefers that term just because she thinks it's prettier. And honestly, I less offended by Coloured than I am by African-American. So, let me go into the "Coloured" article and remove the statement about it being considered a slur to some people and then
2679:
I was wondering just how much the edition has to do with this article and the term "Mulatto". In fact, the whole section seems to be about other terms and the history of race relations in South Africa, instead about the subject of the article. But I did think the information was interesting, so
2289:
is a genetic analysis of, "The Ancestry of Brazilian mtDNA Lineages," and states that, "for the census in Brazil, 51.6% of Brazilians in 1996 classified themselves as white." This alone does not identify how many of those 51.6% would even qualify as mulatto, but chose to self identify as white
2054:. I know that it is an essay and not a policy, but it does describe a workable method for reaching consensus by identifying objections to edits and keeping discussion moving forward and help towards breaking deadlocks. That Bold-Revert-Discuss method is much superior to the Bold-Revert-Unrevert-
1411:
Including the United States, mulattoes have had more success and have had a higher status than darker-skinned contemporaries for a variety of reasons. This is particularly true in Haiti where they ran the country often and constitute or constituted a "ruling class." This article seems construed
1381:
OK this is kind of ridiculous, I mean it would be nice to hear about the actual Mulatto people and their significance in history instead of hearing people go back and forth on whether the word means "mule" or not. Words change meanings all the time but we still use them. I mean by this logic we
4894:
I fully concur with this assessment. In requesting this RFC in this form, Rsk6400 has limited the number of possible solutions / grounds for consensus considerably. This RFC should not be about whether "in English" ought to be added to the second sentence of the lead section, but rather on how
3165:
Since mulato/a is a Spanish term, we need here some clarification. Mulato/a is a perfectly ok term to describe a mixed black and white color of skin, regardless of the race or origin of the person. It means neither black nor white; it means something in the middle. Mulato/a s the model of skin
2853:
However, they used "half-breed" along with it, which is racist in my opinion. With that being said, it is only in the US where you would find the word mulatto to be thought of as negative. In Haiti, for example it is used extensively and often refered to the wealthy minority. Historically, the
1214:
Hi all, not realizing the debate of the etymology of mulatto I always assumed the that the term "melado" was of similar origin. However, this does not seem to be the case. Does anyone have information on it's origin? Is it an actual dictionary word or is it slang? Would this term be considered
639:
The bias has been changed heavily in favor of the theory that the word mulatto derives from the spanish word "mule", this is seen by the fact that the word mulatto is described directly as coming from "mule" in the first paragraph, whereas the word muwallad first appears in the next paragraph,
124:
I explained this to my friends, and they are against mulattoes having a culture of their own.� However, they are Dominican, and they have a culture, which I thought they took for granted.� Afterall, they can have a culture, and mulattoes can't?� Just who the hell do they think they are?� Well,
4004:
It will be hard to reach a consensus when dictionary entries are taken as proper and all encompassing reference-material for an encyclopedic articles. Also, let's keep this discussion of a sufficient intellectual level; I'm quite sure Knoterification knows that Brazilians do not speak English
2235:
Rapes occurred, and many slave women were forced to submit regularly to white males or suffer harsh consequences. However, slave girls often courted a sexual relationship with the master, or another male in the family, as a way of gaining distinction among the slaves, avoiding field work, and
3682:
There is nothing controversial about the word, visit my page, and defer to us on the subject as you do not have the lived experience of a Mulatto to be suggesting anything is controversial to us WITHOUT GIVING US A SEAT AT THE TABLE TO DISCUSS WHAT WE OWN, and that does not pertain to you:
3525:
Again, you people MUST DEFER TO THE MULATTO on the matter of whether or not WE find the term offensive, which we do not. What is about humbling yourselves that you have such a tough time doing? It is NOT AN OFFENSIVE TERM, PERIOD. Remove any negative connotation that you racist supremacist
3141:
In Brazil, many people of African descent consider the term "mulato", when used to describe race or skin color, to be an offensive racial slur, due to its commonly attributed etymology "mule-like", implying the bestiality of people thus described. —Daniel Ávila, 14:54 (UTC), 03 March 2017
3019:
Every one of the Thirteen Colonies, I'm pretty sure, passed numerous laws regarding "mulattoes" (usually in the context of "negroes, mulattoes, and Indians" and usually with the intent of restricting their conduct or licensing some abuse of them). I assume England also had laws concerning
857:
I was the one and I'll do it again. I already explained things on KumarFilo's talk page in good faith. What I was getting back can hardly called "assuming good faith". If he doesn't change his attitude and tries to work as a team I don't see any positiv future, to be quiet honest. regards,
1403:
In Brazil the black comunists sophism mestizos with mulattoes via the vague and pseudocientific term "pardo", because "pardo" not only "mullatoes"; "pardos" are mulatos, zambos/cafuzos and mamelucos/mestizos!and mamelucos not have black blood.; only mongoloid and caucasoid origins..!!(not
4872:
to do with how we treat a subject, and rejecting that idea is the main reason I'm bothering to leave this comment. The language of this project creates a systemic bias that we need to work to remedy as best we can, rather than reinforce. If the reliable sources say that it's offensive in
2909:
FWIW, this has gone round and round here, and right now we have an iconoclastic situation for the English term and I'm good with this. At one time there was a thumbnail gallery like for other ethnicities/racial groups but that's gone or moved now. Funny that the subject of this thread is
3401:
Now, yes, you will see the term used throughout time in ways that are accepted and respected. This is where we need to split the hair of context and usage. When it is used academically or artistically, it is never treated casually. formal. It's a statement. ("I am your son, white man!"
2395:
IMO, the summary ought to mention quite early both the lack of any biological significance of this term AND the fact that it is an offensive slander derived from "mule" - the sterile (genetic dead-end) offspring of a horse and a donkey. Or is this in fact not the origin of the term?
1726:
mulatto and a part of describing this concept is describing its history in different social contexts - such as Brazil where it is well known thaat Mulatto and the corresponding categories have been growing as people reclassify themselves under the influence of the idoelogy of Racial
3030:
The other slaveholding States (and, I presume, all the Colonies) had a legally-defined class of "free persons of color". It would be interesting to know whether the status of members of this class varied in any way according to the perceived or documented ratio of white to black
4410:
being offensive across all languages) that has no sources and hence should not be placed in the article while this discussion is still going on. Over the past few days, you, Rsk6400 have nevertheless reverted the article to contain your as of yet unsupported claim a total of six
3481:
Should there be something in the "Contemporary Era" that says that the term is now considered offensive, and is no longer used as a standard term? Because that's certainly the case, the dictionary lists it as such, and I was surprised that that wasn't mentioned anywhere in the
3901:
comes next. I think you should read that one as well. For example, I was not aware of this particular discussion on this talk page (started in march, revived a few days ago), I'm convinced you (and others) will have a far better experience if you'd assume good faith in your
3011:
is a salient term and a legal concept in the English-speaking tradition, having to do with the offspring and descendants of unions (of whatever character) between persons of European (mainly English) extraction and African (mainly or, as far as I know, entirely sub-Saharan)
128:
I was so angry at them for thinking that we weren't good enough to have our own culture, while at the same time, they were; that is why I came up with this flag.� This flag was actually a mockery of the Dominican flag, after the two friends of mine that upset me that day.
1689:: This theory is not supported by any other source and is based solely on the author's opinions about Brazilian categorizations. There is a lot of guessing, innuendos and conclusions drawn with almost no real data to back any of it up. This is an article about the word
2273:
re: References for the claim, "Contemporary usage of the designation is generally confined to situations in which the term is considered relevant in an historical context, as now most people of mixed white and black ancestry rarely choose to self-identify as mulatto."
4041:
In that comment you talk about your personal belief that "our readers" know that "words have different meanings in different language". You claim that "everybody" supposedly knows that "words sounding similar and having the same root can be very treacherous" and that
1390:
furthermore, there are many Mulattoes I've met that were not offended by the word Mulatto although not all knew the origins of the word the ones that did were still not offended by the term because they also knew that the meanings of words can change with the times.
3799:
I tried in vain to verify your claim about the books you mentions and also to look for "Mulatto" at jstor. But even if one or two historians should still use the word, the consent of all the dictionaries I consulted would absolutely trump those primary sources (see
1819:
I agree that sounds about right. Perhaps the OP or someone else would put a couple sentences or paragraph here, or in the article. I am not familiar with the social aspects of race in Brazil. As well as my obvious reading comprehension problem noted above. heh-heh
1385:
I mean come on,instead of bickering you could be listing more facts about the lives of mulatto/Biracial slaves during and after slavery, or the many civil rights leaders that were of mulatto ancestry how about listing Mulatto achievements because there were many.
1517:
a couple years ago. The article also doesn't discuss the initiatives taken by the British government to induce mixed race communities in Britian during the mid-1900s, and that the same sort of initiatives to taken by other European governments. People such as
708:
Website sited for etymology seems inaccurate and biased. Other origination of words on site are inaccurate and incomplete. Site should not be used as a proper source. Please site other sources (merriam-webster may be efficient enough for sourcing), thanks.
3280:
favor of perhaps an even more racist, "one-drop rule," which classified them along with the "negroes" (recently removed in the census during Obama's administration). During the 20-30s, I don't think it is even a question whether who's interests this served.
1772:
Lol! Well, that's much more believable than the way I was interpreting the section. Sorry about that. In any case, it still doesn't deserve it's own section, but I wouldn't be opposed at all it being mentioned in the Brazil section with a wiki-link to the
5101:
also be nice to bring the population table back, that was rediculous to delete that in the first place. The word may be offensive to English speakers, but censoring the article is not helpful for those who truly just want to use it for research purposes.
3003:
This is English Knowledge, and although it must maintain a global perspective, it should not attempt to define English terms by their cognates or analogues in other languages, or to explicate concepts in Anglo-American law according to the laws of other
2301:
While I am without comparative figures compiled to confirm or dispute the claim, "...most people of mixed white and black ancestry rarely choose to self-identify as mulatto", there are evidences from the internet that it is a term used to self-describe:
755:"(cur) (last) 00:47, 21 August 2008 Kman543210 (Talk | contribs) (19,277 bytes) (removed etymology; there is a difference between a definition and etymology; see mestizo, castizo, zambo; none have etymologies at beginning. See etymology section) (undo)"
4818:; stating simply that a "mulat" is a "descendant of a white and a black person" -- but I would ignore this and focus on the fact that is no longer a word used in contemporary Dutch; which I think the article kindly provided by TheBanner clearly shows.
3411:) It's conceptualized for political/philosophical discourse. ("the tragic mulatto" as concept similar to "the magical negro") It's NOT used as a casual and unnecessary descriptor, strewn about for others to assume its suitable for the daily lexicon.
2698:
That's a good point. Is this article about mixed-race persons in general, or mixed-race persons with African ancestry in general, or is it specifically about persons and groups historically referred to as "mulattoes"? There's already an article,
413:
I apologize, I meant "your" in a very general sense. Knowledge articles are supposed to be written from a general standpoint that reflects as many viewpoints as possible rather than pushing one strongly partisan viewpoint. I wasn't addressing you
3023:
Some, and maybe all, of the American colonies, and then States, made certain legal or social, or both, distinctions between "negroes" (sometimes called "blacks") and "mulattoes" (sometimes called "colored"), generally, I believe, in favor of the
2114:
Dorothy A. Mays wrote: "The nature of the sexual relationships between masters and slaves varied widely. Some relationships were outright rape, some the result of coercion, and others were the result of mutual consent." Dorothy A. Mays (2004).
580:
Etymology is very difficult as the English language was not standardised until the middle 1800s, so the arguments will continue. Common knowledge, or personal knowledge is not always correct (even if I'm always right - haha) - that is a joke.
4570:
I will also add that if the article was only about the term mulatto in Anglophone settings, than the categorization "offensive in English", would be redundant. But the article is clearly not only about the term mulatto in Anglophone settings.
2780:
modern person, or whether it should be consigned to history? I am of the latter opinion, except in the case of the rare modern person who voluntarily describes him- or herself by that term. Persons of mixed race who describe themselves as
2206:
1935:
replaced this paragraph with new content, still largely unsupported. The new content changed the focus of the paragraph, removing a heavy weight previously given to rape in a master/slave relationship in favor of heavier emphasis on mulatto
2196:
2201:
4337:(called "the preeminent language resource of the Standard High German language" by its WP article). But I still hold that while words in different languages may be similar, they are never identical (except, perhaps, scientific terms like
4097:
After three discussions in two languages, I have given up all hope that you will ever understand me correctly. I already gave Knoterification two warnings on their talk page, but I still hope that it will not be necessary to take this to
2653:'s only source is Palmer (2015), which she or he cites three times, without ever citing a specific page in the book. That makes it unreasonably burdensome for readers who want to verify the article's assertions. All articles have to be
574:
people as that would include any non-white group and I meant Blacks. How things change! Now I rarely hear someone say "colored". The North East USA, upstate NY is very parochial and the colleges closed minded (opinion of course - mine.
4692:. In this case especially, the context of Spanish-speaking and Portuguese-speaking cultures cannot be relegated to a secondary role, as it is within Brazil and the Spanish-speaking countries of South and North America that the term
2392:
so every white person is a "mulatto" by the definition given above. Richard Dawkins famously refuses to tick the "Caucasian" box on US Visa forms because there is no biological reality behind the US government's conception of race.
2090:
To put it simply, DD2K's point of view is: "ALL children between white men and black slave women were the result of rape." My point of view is: "Not all children between white men and black slave women were the result of rape."
2439:
I have deleted the statement, "Rape was not held to be a crime under Colonial Law." As written, the statement was demonstrably false: In the British-American colonies rape was a felony punishable by death, just as it was in
1394:
From what I've noticed the people that were offended by the term have been Blacks that were from two black parents to some it's taken as anyone who identifies as mulatto is trying to distance themselves from their black side.
4453:
In English and among many African Americans, the term "mulatto" carries offensive connotations. In Spanish and Portuguese, however, and among U.S. Latinos/as and Latin Americans, the term mulato/a (so spelled) not only does
1024:
Opening section: "In Sri Lanka, the names Mestiços (Portuguese for "Mixed People") or Casados ("Married") were applied to people of mixed Portuguese and Sri Lankan (Sinhalese people and Tamil) descent, starting in the 16th
4082:
As you were the one to raise this issue and given your last reply, I will assume that you will not seek to further contest Knoterifications edits concerning this particular issue in the future; thereby closing the matter.
3386:
accept this term partly due to the whitewashing of history. The term comes from mule. Quadroon and octaroon are very much its sister terms - both in meaning and as contemporaries. IT.IS.OFFENSIVE. And not just to me alone.
1995:
made some further edits to the article, saying, "Undid revision 550678046 by Tobby72 (talk)Not weighted properly. Vast majority of scholars(and obvious common sense) state slave/master 'relationsips' were rape by the very
3614:
If the term is outdated and offensive, I think the article should not contain information about "mulattoes" living today. As a first step, I removed the info box, but there is more that should be deleted. Any thoughts ?
338:
is not in current, everyday use in English speaking countries though you wouldn't know that if this article were your only source of info on the term. Colin Powell and Barack Obama are not commonly called "mulattos".
1528:
There needs to be expansion about the mulatto colonial populations of Africa as well as these people were very influential in those societies and contributed immensely in modernizing those regions (Sherbro clans).
2831:
English generally. I don't like "gay" and would much prefer homosexual which is used in some countries (nederlands, germany). It's pointless to obsess on trivial stuff when essential matters are not being addressed.
425:
is the "correct identifier" for Sen. Obama and Colin Powell, then you need to provide evidence to that effect. I'm open to the notion that people in US society still use the term as an identifier, but you must show
3944:
Regarding the content problem: As I already said above, I’m convinced that our readers know that different words have different meanings in different languages. And this is the English WP, so we use English words.
516:
mulatto is an offensive word to mixed people because its origins come from the word Mule. Its a word used to show mixed kids that their just like thier black parent, an animal for work and is not a human being.
1156:
just means a person that has visible traces of black and white parentage. As to the etymology of the word I cannot say anything except that the connection with a mule, if that was the case, is definitely lost.
4741:
I fail to see though, why this wouldn't be accounted for when writing that its offensiveness instead "differs cross-culturally". Or why its current offensiveness in multiple languages, would make it offensive
3897:
not agree with you, nor do I think that constantly quoting Knowledge guidelines or policies (sometimes not even supportive of your point/POV) is very helpful. The core tenet of Knowledge is WP:SOURCE, yes, but
4308:
American hegemony, as an agent of cultural homogenization, in action. Inn Brazil for example, some adopt the American way, others reafirm mulatto as a specific Brazilian social identity, for example musician
4046:
we don't have to mention that the word "mulatto" is an English word or that it is outdated and offensive only in English. Apart from the logic of that statement not being particularly sound, this seems to be
2058:
method which has been tried here. Regardless of how the section at issue got to be in its current state, can we please have some discussion aimed at establishing a consensus about what it ought to contain?
2703:", which makes me think that this article's focus should be narrower. From that perspective, there's probably a good bit of material in this article that belongs in (and perhaps duplicates) the other.
1536:
Unless an individual self-identifies as "Mulatto" according to a reliable source, we cannot use them as examples of Mulattoes or any other racial or ethnic category. Simply knowing their ancestry is not
3496:
Greetings. I will contact the dictionary editors to find out where they got the notion that 'Mulatto' is derogatory. I my-self claim Afro-Metis and Mulatto heritage and do not find this term derogatory.
2721:
use the term as an acceptable use for multiracial any more than Americans do. Seems outdated and offensive in most english speaking countries, though I know many South Americans look at it differently.
1398:
Note: I'm also not implying that all Black people feel a certain way. nor am i implying that all mulatto, biracial, mixed race, multiracial feel a certain way I'm just stating what I've seen and heard.
3419:
randomly sprinkle it around as a descriptor in other articles. "MLK, a colored reverend, attended Boston University." "G.W. Carver was a colored scientist and inventor at the turn of the 20th century."
5059:. Since the article is about the people called Mulattoes in many different places this clarification is useful. I see that the lede has changed already, I think that the current version is also okay.
2173:
All slave women ... were vulnerable to being raped, but the mulatto afforded the slave owner the opportunity to rape, with impunity, a woman who was physically white (or near-white) but legally black
1068:" (in Spanish. NO! It's by your own research "mulato", ONE "t" only). Let me remind you, we're talking about the origin of the word, remember? So anyway, again, don't just change it again. Thanks, --
2370:
brought there from the horn of Africa in massive numbers shortly after Islam came about.. So Mulatto phenotypes are common in the middle east, in Saudi/Yemen they may infact make up the majority.
3325:
5012:
Knoterification who needs to disprove that (though this has in effect already been done) but for supporters of that statement to provide evidence in support; which has not been the case so far.
1685:" and "Studies have found a large trend in reclassification (blanqueamiento/whitening) from black to brown in the 1950 to 1980 period". Those are unsourced claims that cannot possible be true.
1683:
Research has found that the growth of the mixed race population is in part due to large numbers of blacks "whitening" (blanqueamiento) there racial classification by reporting to be mixed race
1421:
As a result, this article has limited usefulness. Ignoring the elephant in the living room may make some people feel better, but it doesn't help advance our knowledge of the world very much.
264:
In Europe, Africa, and Canada, there may be inhabitants who by simple definition of the word might be considered "mulattoes", but they don't automatically belong to a "mulatto" ethnic group.
117:
It really did not take much time or effort to come up with this flag.� I actually thought of this design after having a heated discussion with two friends of mine who happen to be Dominican.
3669:
3511:
3294:
it isn't so far-fetched to believe that these terms will reappear and reform. Currently, this article's scope is limited and should be broadened further by countries who still use the term.
125:
although they are Dominican, they were both black, and born in the United States.� With that being said, I could only guess that they developed some African-American perspectives on things.
429:
May I suggest that the discussion of mullawad and other etymology be developed in the etymology section and not in the intro? The way the article is now, it seems as if whoever wrote it is
5000:
1) That information has already been provided; see the above section; 2) The statement "it is considered offensive and obsolete" is different from "it is considered offensive and obsolete
3574:
clearly states that it depends on the language if it's offensive or not, and I think this page should too, especially since it already talks about its usage in Spanish speaking countries.
3034:
The article could profitably examine the legal and social distinctions made in those societies between whites and "mulattoes", on one hand, and between blacks and "mulattoes" on the other.
5076:, in other languages it's not considered offensive. Even in English, I've seen cases and certain countries where it's not necessarily offensive. I'd even go as far as saying "Its use is
3648:
elite? Or mulattos in Angola and Mozambique which were a privileged class during colonization? What about the term mulatto being deeply rooted in Brazilian culture, specially music like
1569:
I reverted an edit changing white to European and black to African because that's not what the citation says. If that change is appropriate, perhaps a different citation should be used.
2974:
deleted matter ought to be in there or not. As the previous thread ("South Africa") suggests, this article contains a good deal of information that belongs rather in the article,
4220:]. The article, from 2008, states that the term is offensive but the offensiveness is derived from the American usage. To my opinion, the addition of "in English" is not correct.
1412:
around American sensitivities and NAACP pressure to ignore skin color. While this is good for the future, it tends to ignore past reality and present reality in much of the world.
1330:
I've removed phrase this from the article lead. It seems to be trying to make an important point, imo; I would guess about the fact that we are all the same species whatever our
3526:
anti-Mulatto editors have ascribed to the term. I am Mulatto, and I'm telling you that it is not offensive. Who the hell are you to tell us how to feel about our own language?
3409:
2062:
It looks to me as if the main area of disagreement is how much weight should be given to information about master-slave rapes in colonial America in an article on the topic of
1034:
Right at the top: "In the Hawaiian language, hapa is defined as: portion, fragment, part, fraction, installment; to be partial, less. It is a loan from the English word half."
1215:
derogatory by most people? I've heard it used in a non-derogatory way which is perhaps out ignorance and would like information so as to use or not use this word in future.
3118:
is used not only in books etc. but in official U.S. documents of the English language. Although derived from the Spanish "mulato(s)," where foreign words usually receive an
2988:. Although I am not very learned on this subject, I'll make so bold as to offer a few thoughts on that, in hopes that others, better informed, will take up the discussion:
640:
etymology. Unless you can document one as being more likely than the other, then i see no reason why the "mulatto from mule" theory should be in the first paragraph solely !
5004:". The latter statement has been proven and isn't disputed by anyone here, but the former statement is as it implies cross-linguistic offensiveness and obsoletion. And for
1878:
It's controversial because, 1- you are trying to change a section in this article that has long-held consensus, and 2- you don't seem to realize the overwhelming amount of
1656:
much more relevant than the different population genetics studies that have no relevancy at all exactly because being "mulatto" is a social category and not a genetic one.
2448:, because the person of the slave was deemed property of the master, which, within grievously broad limits, the master could use or abuse as he saw fit. (Paradoxically,
4549:
2. If you knew even a little bit about Brazil, you would know Caetano Veloso has a deep influence in the country, not only as a singer, but also as a thinker and writer.
3742:
is certainly overlinking. Do modern historians really use the term "mulatto" when referring to Haitians or Angolans ? In that case, my Oxford dictionary would be wrong.
3700:
A given self-defined group does not have a veto over sourced content, nor may a particular editor credibly demand to be a self-appointed spokesman who dictates content.
2297:
actually states the opposite of the wiki claim, "Mulatto is the term commonly used in Brazil to designate the offspring result from the union of White and Black people."
3630:
Humble yourselves & defer to us. Remove any negative connotation that your non-mixed, racist anti-mixed-race & anti-Mulatto editors have ascribed to our word.
3329:
1882:(in this article and just in general) have written about the rape of slaves in the chattel slavery system. You seem to be cherry-picking some sources to fit your own
223:
I figured out that an anonymous user changed Puerto Rico from 26% to 76% yesterday, so I changed it back, although I'm still not sure what source the 26% came from.
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Should the words "in English" be added to the second sentence of the lead section ? The resulting sentence would be "Its use is considered outdated and offensive
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Than we should change the article, because it is clearly not about the use of term "Mulatto" in English, but in many languages. Just like the article for "Negro".
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populations, as well as places like Italy, Iraq, Oman and Yemen where the populations still display genetic evidence of the once dominant 'mulatto' populations.
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This flag has somewhat of a history behind it, but not that much.� As you can tell by the colors, and the way they are arranged, this flag represents who we are.
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When was this last updated? "enough to be considered black under South African law". Whaaaah? The apartheid is over by the way. I am going to delete that part.--
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cannot, or cannot do so convincingly (for example, because others bring forward source material that conflicts with this) provide these sources/references then
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level, or even the further point that especially in America, many so-called blacks have white ancestors, and likewise, there are plenty of American people who
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It is an opinion piece which seems to come to the conclusion that in contempory Dutch (and I would support this from my personal experience) the use of word
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Stop deleting my valid comments from an actual mixed-part-black person, someone actually qualified to be opining on the matter while the rest of you are not.
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descended) mother and a black (African) father so it qualifies as being a mulatto period. From 1850-1930, the mulatto was a seperate category in the census.
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Therefore I'm sorry, but have to ask again: what is your current position and what evidence (i.e. reference material) do you have to back this position up?
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Nonsense. Both cites clearly state that it’s outdated and offensive. Since this disruption keeps happening, I’ve extended the protection that just expired.
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are the same word as well as basic concept. I ask you directly Rsk6400, what is your current position and argumentation so that others may respond to it?
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in which the material relied on is to be found. I respectfully ask that fifi stahlman kindly improve the references in the material he or she has added.
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I d agree that its better to include in the Brazil section and with less emphasis, and with a stronger statement of relevance to the topic of the article.
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Than we should specify those languages (apparently Germanic languages). Currently despite the article claiming that, the sources only point to English.
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reflect merely one cultural sphere/ language, but make clear that the use and interpretation of this term varies both across time and cross-culturally.
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Louisiana had a multi-tiered system of racial classification, under which I gather rights and privileges increased with the percentage of "white blood".
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I could say "forget that everyone already knows that the moon landing is a hoax", it doesn't really mean anything. Seems more like a logical fallacy.
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was not held to be a crime. With proper citation, I would support the introduction of a statement to that effect in place of the one I have deleted.
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for "lily" white who have black ancestor, etc. (Please note, for the record, that I don't even agree with this whole framework of racial bias, but the
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The image titled Pinckney Benton Stewart on the mulatto entry is incorrectly labeled. The image is Homer Plessy of the famous Supreme Court decision.
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considered offensive, provide reliable sources to back up that information, and propose a section about the difference of use in those languages. :—
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It is controversial as to whether or not this term is offensive. Many do not find it derogatory in the least, but use it to represent our heritage.
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Apologies if my edit is bad; I don't know how to do this, but want to at least contribute my point of view. Please fix up my edit as appropriate.
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mulatto is erroneous. At best it is speculative; at worst tremendously specious. If the latter is true, your argument borders on de facto racism.
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An editor has twice recently placed a photo of Pres. Barack Obama on this page, and another editor has twice removed it. There should be debate.
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The source is probably reliable, but the relationship to this particular article is not relevant enough for inclusion. Due to, at the very least,
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I have to disagree. In Louisianna, mixed (black and white bi-racial) people are commonly known as mulattos. Both by the blacks and the whites.
4167:, before preceding to more formal steps, might I ask your opinion on whether the second sentence ("Its use is considered outdated and offensive
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South Slavic nations presumably use a cognate term in South Slavic languages. This article is about the English term. If it can be shown from
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Shouldn't this article mention the 'Moorish Empire' as this coincides perfectly with the etymology of the term? Also, what about the historical
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Have to admit I was expecting to see Nirvana's usage in Smells Like Teen Spirit mentioned here. Are there other references in films and songs?
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As I already said, I suggest you add something about Brazil, but please follow WP rules and also please try to avoid aggressive language.
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I think I've got that straignt. Some of the edits mentioned above were separated from one another by unrelated edits made by other users.
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2157:@Toby72 - It's not my point of view, it's history and backed up by the overwhelming amount of sources. Once again, your proposed edit is
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To this day, I am still friends with the two women, but we have both agreed not to discuss issues concerning race & culture anymore.
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Makes sense. Do you know if mulatto was ever a social category in the Dutch speaking world? Or was there hypodescent like in the USA?
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tunisians, libyans, algerians and moroccons are majority mulattoes because they have substantial African ancestry in their populations.
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is in current use, and is not regarded as offensive, in some English-speaking communities, that should be mentioned in the article.
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To that end, the first thing that needs to be done, in my view, is for us (or whoever is going to revise the article) to decide on
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I don't think you're being Amerocentric at all. The article does seem to replicate information from the identifiable 'multiracial'
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only such as in radio(s) etc. I suppose the same plurality reflects how negro(es) or tomato(es) is pluralized; also from Spanish.
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Agreed, this is completely out of place in the brief introductory paragraph. Perhaps it could be addressed deeper in the article.
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Maybe your a white racist you don`t even no any mulattos who the hell are you to tell someone there not a mulatto or biracial.
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If you contend that mulatto is a general term that people of African and European heritage use semi-regularly, it is your job to
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Unburdened By Conscience: A Black People's Collective Account of America's Ante-Bellum South and the Aftermath - By Anthony Neal
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Says who? All the other multiracial labels have the meaning of the word itself in the opening section. How is 'mulatto' exempt?
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I am working on a gallery for Brazil, and will be putting images and information together for other sections of this article.
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Whatever this article may be about, it is not, I think we can all agree, about mixed-race persons, or multi-ethnic cultures,
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added and removed some material in this and other sections of the article. saying, "readd quotes per WP:NPOV, plus add pics".
2135:@Wtmitchell- That looks like the sequence of events, except for the fact that the anon ip did not revert to the established
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Either clarify your position or let the issue go. Melodramatic passive agressiveness like the comment above adds nothing.
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in other languages. The fact that it was borrowed from Spanish (or more likely Portuguese) is irrelevant. The Dutch word,
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to my website (but, please do mention why the flag is there, and what it represents).��It is not my flag; it is our flag.
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Again, IT IS NOT AN OFFENSIVE TERM. Remove that racist projection from the description in the Mulatto description, NOW.
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You don't seem to get at least one point: It doesn't belong in the lead of an article about "Mulatto's" (people!!!!). --
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might be useful. It speaks somewhat to the subtopic at issue here, though not from an American Colonial Era viewpoint.
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I just hope that you don't work to 'narrow' the perimeters of this topic, because it's not narrow in the least bit.
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Removed all but the one as no process evident here and the one remaining the only one likely to be the basis of one.
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has no information whatsoever, but seems to be a mixture of advertisements, and perhaps a gateway to somewhere else.
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edit, apparently not noticing that the article had been anonymously reverted to one of his prevvious edit versions,
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Language is used so badly nowadays that few people understand the correct, as opposed to politically correct terms.
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Opening section: "The word mestizo originated from the Romance language / Latin word 'Mixticius', meaning 'mixed'."
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Opening section: "The word mestizo originated from the Romance language / Latin word 'Mixticius', meaning 'mixed'."
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https://www.uol.com.br/splash/noticias/2021/12/21/caetano-defende-uso-do-termo-mulato-nao-vejo-qual-o-problema.htm
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I am guessing here... but probably the word for mule and mullato and muwallad/muladi all share a common history.
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to English dictionaries; this claim cannot be extended to all other languages, whether explicitly or implicitly.
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Although mulatto in the English language technically has two versions of plurality, "mulattoes" and "mulattos;"
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Let's not muddle the waters here; as this whole issue is quite straightforward when it comes to WP:CITE: It is
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and that's not allowed. This article isn't here to convince people of your personal preference to use the term
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and take part in the discussion before making changes that didn't achieve consensus in an ongoing discussion ?
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Also, a person of lighter skin pigmentation that may refer to his/herself as the oxymoron, light-skinned black
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opinion the article should have nothing to say about modern-day persons of mixed race. (See point 1, above.)
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Currently the Spanish article has replaced the image of Obama, was still there as of the 5th of last month.
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I don't know where did you get these sources from, but - no matter how well reputed they may be - the word "
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There are Mulatto in Europa Africa and Canada they just go by diffrent names but they are still mulattos.
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someone calling you Coloured and/or continually referring to people in that manner after you educated them?
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has historical currency, and the mulatto designation is at least somewhat inherently related to that). Per
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I agree 100% with Vlaemink, I don't see why one would oppose specifying that it is offensive and outdated
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books that mention the prevalent rape of slave women in the Slave-Era. Just take a couple of quotes from
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This should be enough to start a discussion, and I'm out of time for today. Please add your thoughts.
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If you have discovered URLs which were erroneously considered dead by the bot, you can report them with
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the concept of Mulatto anyway) but only a change in how the boundaries between the categories are drawn.
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The onus is on you to provide that information, and evidence it is not offensive in other languages. —
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Mulattos in Brazil and Angola: A Comparative Approach, from the Seventeenth to the Twenty-First Century
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http://blackagendareport.com/content/most-visible-mulattoes-drake-and-obama-match-hip-hop-and-politics
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http://www.utne.com/Literature/Mulatto-Millennium-Racial-Identity-Multiracial-World.aspx#axzz2TTm97Nmx
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Sons of White Fathers": Mulatto Vengeance and the Haitian Revolution in Victor Séjour's "The Mulatto"
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Unrelated/contradictory references provided for the contemporary frequency of use of the term mulatto
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Right at the top: "The name Baster is derived from the Dutch word for ‘bastard’ (or ‘crossbreed'). "
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4746:. Especially with Spanish (~550 million speakers) and Portuguese (~250 million speakers) involved.
4435:) times, while lecturing other participants on edit-warring and the 3RR. This is not constructive.
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Sorry, my bad. the article is a frequent target of POV pushers and at first glance I misjudged. --
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Intersting article. I don't speak Dutch, but it appears to defend its use in the language, right?
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17 April edit, anon 69.105.28.149 reverted the article back to its state as of the last edit by
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In any case, there are dozens and dozens more sources that make the same descriptions. Thanks.
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Finally, the intro is written quite poorly, something I have tried to correct. Phrases such as
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should provide sources for that. If that is no longer your claim, you should clarify what is.
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4661:(the lead should summarize the article), we should do that first before we change the lead.
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3398:"My GIRLFRIEND said it's okay, BITCH!" is obviously a ridiculous and inappropriate reaction.
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asked me to take a look at this. Here is what I saw in a not-so quick look at recent edits.
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Opening section: "Castizo or castiza is a Spanish word with a general meaning of 'genuine'."
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Opening section: "Castizo or castiza is a Spanish word with a general meaning of 'genuine'."
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Having said that, my opinion of the matter at hand here is quite straightforward: the word
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3. I don't know what is the relevance of his age. Like it or not he is still alive and is
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likely etymology (according to experts on the Spanish and the Portuguese language), from
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Luiz Felipe De Alencastro In Racism and Ethnic Relations in the Portuguese-Speaking World
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And so on. The bottom line is mulatto means a mule. So I will state that and include it.
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I think that I explained my position well enough. Feel free to seek dispute resolution.
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used to refer to a small elite that until very recently held most power in the country.
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BEFORE colonization and slave trade began in Brazil, the term likely evolved in Europe.
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carry an offensive connotation but has in fact now become a sign of pride and identity.
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This section needs a serious cleanup. Also, it's transparently biased in favour of the
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This page needs to go into more information about the ethnicity in different countries
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Note that I never claimed that the term is offensive across all languages. Seems like
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If you found an error with any archives or the URLs themselves, you can fix them with
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differing (sourced/properly referenced) cultural attitudes should/could be included.
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negatively and I'm quite sure you (Rsk6400) are aware that even without an extra t, '
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define a group of human beings across different societies just by their skin colour.
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you, MULATTO!" and she continued to used the term as much as possible to refer to me.
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I stand with you in this quite firmly, J D, without the slightest need for a crutch.
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offensive in English. Rather, I would suggest others find the languages where it is
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http://web.archive.org/web/20010216050151/internettrash.com/users/mulatto/index3.htm
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Considering that there existed sub-Saharan descendants in Portugal and the rest of
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means. If you don't believe me, here is the official dictionary entry for mulato:
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Mulatto has always meant a person born of a Black (African descent) and a White.
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words. Etymologically, "mulatto" originates from "mulo", or mule. And that's it.
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are difficult at best to understand and seem unnecessary to tell the reader what
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If you wish to start a new discussion or revive an old one, please do so on the
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but that individual has no American ancestry. Will likely use him for Germany.
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You're correct. Un "Mulato no es un Mulo" and un "Mulatto es menos un Mulo"! --
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Nevertheless, it will state that mulatto means a mule in the opening section.
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or that it is outdated and offensive only in English. Also, adding a link to
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In the broadest sense, it is applied to persons of Black and White ancestry.
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i will see to this getting editted unless you can argue why it should not.--
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The corresponding German word "Mulatte" is also marked as "discriminatory"
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after the link to keep me from modifying it. Alternatively, you can add
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Who Is Black?: One Nation's Definition - By Floyd James Davis pp. 38-39
2207:
The Hemingses of Monticello: An American Family By Annette Gordon-Reed
2118:
Women In Early America: Struggle, Survival, And Freedom In A New World
1741:
1690:
1331:
949:
in Spanish does not mean mule, but it did derive from the Spanish word
354:
Secondly, the passage in the intro on the etymology of ethnic terms is
142:
4171:.") should contain the words "in English" or not ? Thanks in advance,
2577:
An editor has reviewed this edit and fixed any errors that were found.
4927:
4923:
3760:
Modern historians do use the term. Yes your dictionary is incomplete.
3000:", and presumably other, culture-specific articles, for those topics.
3685:
https://twitter.com/FTMPWorldwide/status/1537948648343908357/photo/1
2280:
http://www.servinghistory.com/topics/white_Americans::sub::Admixture
1681:: The entry makes claims not supported by the source. For example- "
3825:. To change the article, you need consensus here on the talk page.
1673:: The author of the source is an assistant professor of Sociology (
4919:
4334:
3649:
3571:
2542:
to keep me off the page altogether. I made the following changes:
1722:"word Mulatto" because this is not a dictionary - it is about the
1256:
Also setting Miszabot to archive threads not active for 120 days.
104:
100:
1740:
There seems to be a section in this very article already titled "
3406:
1920:
14 April version of the article had an initial paragraph in the
961:"it will state that mulatto means a mule in the opening section"
96:
4814:
has long since died out. The leading Dutch dictionary Van Dale
400:
Secondly, mullawad is expalined in the etymology section. And
4403:
will have to accept some form of consensus or differentiation.
2786:
therefore oppose putting Pres. Obama's picture on this page.
25:
4027:
Vlaemink, please read my comment of 08:53, 28 November 2022.
2202:
Black Cultures and Race Relations edited by James L. Conyers
1947:
reintroduced the emphasis on rape, citing supporting sources.
1669:
Well, there are a few things wrong with adding that section.
2557:
When you have finished reviewing my changes, please set the
4719:
The term in offensive in more languages than just English.
382:
use. Knowledge is for documenting history, not revising it.
2659:
references should specify the page or other exact location
2452:
sexual relations between blacks and whites were generally
4634:
This has been discussed extensively in the section above
2885:
would be great if we could introduce that in English :)
2518:
I have just added archive links to one external link on
1108:]. There is a difference between meaning and etymology.
4609:
RfC on the addition of "in English" to the lead section
4432:
4428:
4424:
4420:
4416:
4412:
2523:
2151:
2147:
2143:
2139:
2104:
2101:
2026:
2011:
2000:
1988:
1977:
1966:
1951:
1940:
1928:
1917:
1862:
1860:
1858:
1840:
999:
987:
801:
789:
665:
Mulato is not "small mule" in Spanish. It's "mulito".
655:
I see no significant changes in the etymology section.
4051:; and one rooted in your personal assumptions at that.
1039:
4341:). So the Brazilians just don't use the English word
1621:. Also, it's a bit concerning that wiki editors with
1588:
The links i posted were from peer reviewed journals.
2347:
Historical populations in Europe and their posterity
2287:
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1287189/
1011:
813:
4504:" in "Its use is considered outdated and offensive
1301:.Cananda .US .Latin america .Asia .Europea .Arabe
1030:
3813:Also: Please respect WP rules on edit warring, on
2384:Isn't the whole premise underlying the statement
1591:Can you please explain how they are unreliable? --
3668:Your viewpoint is controversial to say the least.
3225:on English Knowledge. Likewise, the Spanish word
1021:http://en.wikipedia.org/Mesti%C3%A7os_(Sri_Lanka)
4918:, since that seems to be standard in Knowledge (
2981:Clearly, the article needs a complete overhaul.
2100:I would like to propose the following addition (
1677:), who has had a few of her theories published.
963:without regard for any other editors' opinions.
2680:decided to let others decide. Just my 2 cents.
2231:
2182:
2169:
2616:I have checked the archive link and it works.
2478:
2435:Deleted False Assertion Regarding Colonial Law
2739:in Anglophone countries (not just the US). --
1584:studies by peer reviewed Journals unreliable?
8:
2768:Clearly, Pres. Obama fits the definition of
2193:There are plenty of sources for these facts:
4949:- Adding "in English" suggests the term is
1625:keep trying to add this into this article.
3405:) It's a treatise on racial studies. (Ex.
3319:
3167:
3143:
3062:
3056:South Slavic Countries (Former Yugoslavia)
136:and their positions represent who we are.
3644:Why not? How else would you refer to the
2552:http://www.kacike.org/MartinezEnglish.pdf
1886:and adding them to the article, which is
146:
4868:. The language this Knowledge is in has
3213:on English Knowledge. The Italian word,
1152:I am Portuguese and I can tell you that
1086:I shall reiterate that the Spanish word
495:policy. Future violations may result in
5115:
3938:Regarding the AGF problem: In this edit
3193:is a Spanish term, but this article is
2312:http://mulattodebate.forumchitchat.com/
1292:Mulatto are found all over the world...
1102:which means mule, but that is not what
923:Would you mind giving example-links? --
4635:
3566:it's on English Knowledge, but as per
3326:2601:1C2:4F00:3D00:DDC7:4963:78A7:8FBA
1924:section which was largely unsupported.
1017:No etymology of any sort is provided.
819:No etymology of any sort is provided.
44:Do not edit the contents of this page.
5080:considered outdated and offensive."--
4159:This discussion has got out of hand.
1346:I bring this here for discussion. --
7:
4406:In the mean time, it is your claim (
3670:2601:182:4381:E60:BD7A:135:CE5E:1C5B
3512:2601:182:4381:E60:BD7A:135:CE5E:1C5B
1494:Gallery illustrating aesthetic range
362:. Plus, it's a bad, weak argument.
1973:added and rearranged some material.
1839:How is this addition controversial?
1377:Can we get into the mulatto people?
617:Etymology section a mess and biased
4816:doesn't note "mulat" as derogatory
4696:was/is most used. The lead should
4449:After a very quick google-search:
2479:I'm not sure citation 55 is worthy
1521:were born from such initiatives.
24:
5123:Link to site with picture of the
4684:and should therefore represent a
3233:, and shouldn't be considered in
3221:, and shouldn't be considered in
3209:, and shouldn't be considered in
2776:is an appropriate term to use of
2522:. Please take a moment to review
1962:edits, saying "WP is not a blog".
1693:, not the sociological views of "
437:is actually okay". That's really
330:This article is embarassingly bad
2568:
1943:series of three April 15 edits,
1565:White/Black vs. European/African
1447:" most certainly comes from the
1274:Removed them all, ordered list.
589:) Where do the tildes go? angsax
141:
29:
4378:who has pushed the claim, that
1027:So mestico means mixed people.
1000:http://en.wikipedia.org/Castizo
988:http://en.wikipedia.org/Mestizo
802:http://en.wikipedia.org/Castizo
790:http://en.wikipedia.org/Mestizo
4866:Summarize the reliable sources
4778:to the discussion (in Dutch).
2474:19:34, 18 September 2014 (UTC)
2146:. I would also add that I did
1098:derived from the Spanish word
1040:http://en.wikipedia.org/Baster
703:02:02, 21 September 2008 (UTC)
299:Mulatto in Southwest Louisiana
239:Mulatto in Europa Statistics
181:threw someone makeing it up.
1:
5111:02:34, 15 February 2023 (UTC)
5069:12:25, 21 December 2022 (UTC)
5047:06:30, 20 December 2022 (UTC)
5022:12:11, 17 December 2022 (UTC)
4996:17:42, 16 December 2022 (UTC)
4982:02:45, 14 December 2022 (UTC)
4967:20:15, 13 December 2022 (UTC)
4940:22:32, 12 December 2022 (UTC)
4905:14:38, 12 December 2022 (UTC)
4883:14:29, 12 December 2022 (UTC)
4842:19:36, 14 December 2022 (UTC)
4828:10:16, 14 December 2022 (UTC)
4806:02:50, 14 December 2022 (UTC)
4792:20:20, 13 December 2022 (UTC)
4770:22:36, 12 December 2022 (UTC)
4756:13:20, 12 December 2022 (UTC)
4733:12:36, 12 December 2022 (UTC)
4710:09:52, 12 December 2022 (UTC)
4671:09:32, 12 December 2022 (UTC)
4648:09:22, 12 December 2022 (UTC)
4627:09:14, 12 December 2022 (UTC)
4595:09:36, 12 December 2022 (UTC)
4581:13:33, 11 December 2022 (UTC)
4566:13:24, 11 December 2022 (UTC)
4518:09:57, 12 December 2022 (UTC)
4496:09:21, 12 December 2022 (UTC)
4474:09:56, 11 December 2022 (UTC)
4445:09:36, 11 December 2022 (UTC)
4363:06:55, 11 December 2022 (UTC)
4326:04:58, 11 December 2022 (UTC)
4304:20:16, 10 December 2022 (UTC)
4249:05:03, 11 December 2022 (UTC)
4234:19:36, 10 December 2022 (UTC)
4181:19:12, 10 December 2022 (UTC)
4126:14:40, 10 December 2022 (UTC)
3850:19:16, 30 November 2022 (UTC)
3835:18:50, 29 November 2022 (UTC)
3785:17:38, 28 November 2022 (UTC)
3752:08:53, 28 November 2022 (UTC)
3662:22:13, 27 November 2022 (UTC)
2950:07:14, 19 December 2015 (UTC)
2504:21:44, 6 September 2015 (UTC)
1431:02:30, 24 February 2011 (UTC)
1284:20:14, 16 February 2009 (UTC)
1266:20:02, 16 February 2009 (UTC)
1251:19:58, 16 February 2009 (UTC)
1173:10:44, 29 December 2008 (UTC)
1012:http://en.wikipedia.org/Zambo
945:I would like to clarify that
814:http://en.wikipedia.org/Zambo
681:14:16, 11 December 2007 (UTC)
610:15:49, 26 November 2008 (UTC)
555:15:22, 12 February 2008 (UTC)
508:04:23, 20 November 2006 (UTC)
457:12:38, 16 November 2006 (UTC)
409:05:54, 16 November 2006 (UTC)
376:12:38, 16 November 2006 (UTC)
4112:13:44, 9 December 2022 (UTC)
4093:11:37, 9 December 2022 (UTC)
4078:08:47, 9 December 2022 (UTC)
4064:08:03, 9 December 2022 (UTC)
4037:15:25, 8 December 2022 (UTC)
4023:09:31, 8 December 2022 (UTC)
4000:19:14, 7 December 2022 (UTC)
3985:19:49, 4 December 2022 (UTC)
3970:12:56, 2 December 2022 (UTC)
3955:10:48, 2 December 2022 (UTC)
3934:07:35, 2 December 2022 (UTC)
3882:19:01, 1 December 2022 (UTC)
3556:23:18, 30 October 2022 (UTC)
3506:05:51, 27 October 2019 (UTC)
3304:02:11, 18 January 2017 (UTC)
3161:Modern Spanish point of view
3132:07:04, 14 January 2017 (UTC)
2799:15:36, 3 December 2014 (UTC)
2611:04:42, 17 October 2015 (UTC)
1231:17:29, 31 January 2009 (UTC)
1031:http://en.wikipedia.org/Hapa
745:20:49, 27 January 2009 (UTC)
725:12:55, 7 February 2009 (UTC)
660:14:58, 8 February 2007 (UTC)
5090:00:36, 6 January 2023 (UTC)
4542:1. Yes he does. Mulato and
4395:If it still is however and
3718:23:14, 22 August 2022 (UTC)
3696:20:27, 22 August 2022 (UTC)
3640:20:25, 22 August 2022 (UTC)
3536:20:22, 22 August 2022 (UTC)
3492:21:31, 8 January 2019 (UTC)
3448:13:53, 2 October 2022 (UTC)
3375:20:20, 22 August 2022 (UTC)
2293:and finally, the 3rd link,
2018:reverted the prior edit by
1197:05:53, 2 January 2009 (UTC)
1140:03:17, 21 August 2008 (UTC)
1118:03:12, 21 August 2008 (UTC)
1078:03:08, 21 August 2008 (UTC)
1059:02:48, 21 August 2008 (UTC)
1045:So baster means a bastard.
973:02:42, 21 August 2008 (UTC)
933:02:32, 21 August 2008 (UTC)
916:02:30, 21 August 2008 (UTC)
901:02:25, 21 August 2008 (UTC)
886:02:17, 21 August 2008 (UTC)
868:02:11, 21 August 2008 (UTC)
849:01:49, 21 August 2008 (UTC)
833:01:35, 21 August 2008 (UTC)
650:19:06, 7 January 2007 (UTC)
634:12:43, 8 October 2006 (UTC)
533:22:21, 3 January 2008 (UTC)
5145:
4345:, but the Portuguese word
3625:09:04, 22 March 2022 (UTC)
3610:21:23, 19 March 2022 (UTC)
3586:18:47, 19 March 2022 (UTC)
3472:01:45, 23 April 2019 (UTC)
3104:15:31, 11 April 2016 (UTC)
3051:22:24, 17 March 2016 (UTC)
2820:14:21, 10 March 2016 (UTC)
2540:|deny=InternetArchiveBot}}
2515:Hello fellow Wikipedians,
2454:held to constitute a crime
2429:19:13, 25 April 2014 (UTC)
2406:17:22, 25 April 2014 (UTC)
2148:post to Toby72's talk page
1830:19:16, 20 March 2012 (UTC)
1802:18:54, 20 March 2012 (UTC)
1787:18:47, 20 March 2012 (UTC)
1768:18:40, 20 March 2012 (UTC)
1754:18:34, 20 March 2012 (UTC)
1736:18:18, 20 March 2012 (UTC)
1715:18:06, 20 March 2012 (UTC)
1665:17:45, 20 March 2012 (UTC)
1651:16:19, 20 March 2012 (UTC)
1613:15:07, 20 March 2012 (UTC)
1601:12:55, 20 March 2012 (UTC)
1469:23:04, 22 April 2011 (UTC)
1371:07:53, 21 April 2010 (UTC)
1356:05:04, 14 April 2010 (UTC)
1007:So castizo means genuine.
809:So castizo means genuine.
780:20:54, 7 August 2009 (UTC)
433:a particular view of "why
348:06:17, 23 April 2007 (UTC)
3867:Would you please respect
3678:13:52, 2 April 2022 (UTC)
3520:13:51, 2 April 2022 (UTC)
3358:03:11, 27 July 2022 (UTC)
3334:03:03, 27 July 2022 (UTC)
3077:16:19, 8 April 2016 (UTC)
2986:what the article is about
2962:Thorough revision needed!
2924:21:08, 12 July 2015 (UTC)
2895:19:19, 12 July 2015 (UTC)
2868:17:32, 12 July 2015 (UTC)
2841:14:05, 12 July 2015 (UTC)
2749:22:53, 9 March 2016 (UTC)
2731:20:30, 9 March 2016 (UTC)
2716:19:22, 9 March 2016 (UTC)
2690:19:13, 9 March 2016 (UTC)
2674:16:06, 9 March 2016 (UTC)
2629:16:17, 9 March 2016 (UTC)
2278:The first link provided,
2164:William's reference above
1579:20:18, 11 July 2011 (UTC)
1317:19:44, 30 June 2009 (UTC)
1210:just curious about melado
324:00:46, 25 July 2008 (UTC)
312:CreolegenealogyqueenLA337
289:01:22, 26 June 2008 (UTC)
274:23:27, 16 June 2008 (UTC)
259:02:14, 10 June 2008 (UTC)
197:02:02, 10 June 2008 (UTC)
99:, rendered in the colors
3542:Popular culture section?
3250:17:27, 31 May 2016 (UTC)
3182:14:05, 31 May 2016 (UTC)
2408:TheDag, April 25th 2014
2365:14:08, 28 May 2011 (UTC)
2339:17:59, 16 May 2013 (UTC)
1560:13:54, 28 May 2011 (UTC)
1546:14:16, 28 May 2011 (UTC)
1488:14:01, 28 May 2011 (UTC)
995:So mestizo means mixed.
797:So mestizo means mixed.
233:15:20, 9 June 2008 (UTC)
218:15:11, 9 June 2008 (UTC)
203:Latin America Statistics
4990:The Hand That Feeds You
4961:The Hand That Feeds You
3237:on English Knowledge.
2511:External links modified
2446:did not constitute rape
2261:17:10, 4 May 2013 (UTC)
2221:15:23, 4 May 2013 (UTC)
2131:08:57, 4 May 2013 (UTC)
2121:". ABC-CLIO. p.173. --
2085:01:33, 4 May 2013 (UTC)
1901:15:18, 3 May 2013 (UTC)
1873:20:18, 2 May 2013 (UTC)
1675:Luisa Farah Schwartzman
983:Here are the examples:
392:12:40, 2 May 2008 (UTC)
3990:to reach a consensus.
3087:that the English word
2239:
2190:
2176:
1984:, without explanation.
1845:should take a look at
1623:no other contributions
1036:So hapa means a part.
499:your ability to edit.—
404:is such a strong word.
4774:I had recently added
4049:argumentum ad populum
2050:Guys, please re-read
1323:Subjective in nature?
488:"specific" ethnicity
471:comment was added by
42:of past discussions.
4384:across all languages
2996:. We already have "
2565:to let others know.
2526:. If necessary, add
2150:, and mentioned the
1237:Merged Some Tags ...
1066:mulatto means a mule
149:File:Mulatto3214.jpg
2561:parameter below to
2142:, they just made a
2043:tag to the section.
1609:The Red Pen of Doom
1457:Northeastern Brazil
1455:", first spread in
629:, for some reason.
491:Please respect our
4636:#Anglocentric_bias
4218:this Dutch article
3458:Incorrect image id
1297:List of countries:
4864:
4300:
3714:
3606:
3561:Anglocentric bias
3354:
3336:
3324:comment added by
3241:J. D. Crutchfield
3184:
3172:comment added by
3157:
3148:comment added by
3110:Use "mulatto(es)"
3095:J. D. Crutchfield
3079:
3067:comment added by
3042:J. D. Crutchfield
2790:J. D. Crutchfield
2707:J. D. Crutchfield
2665:J. D. Crutchfield
2620:J. D. Crutchfield
2609:
2507:
2490:comment added by
2465:J. D. Crutchfield
2353:Iberian Peninsula
2342:
2325:comment added by
2083:
1476:Iberian Peninsula
1307:comment added by
1221:comment added by
1163:comment added by
1064:Now you slipped:"
770:comment added by
715:comment added by
693:comment added by
683:
671:comment added by
613:
596:comment added by
557:
545:comment added by
535:
523:comment added by
484:
356:original research
326:
310:comment added by
261:
249:comment added by
199:
187:comment added by
173:
159:comment added by
77:
76:
54:
53:
48:current talk page
5136:
5129:
5120:
4991:
4962:
4880:
4878:
4858:
4790:
4783:
4731:
4724:
4556:using the word.
4546:interchangeably.
4373:
4301:
4298:
4294:
4292:
4232:
4225:
4166:
3865:
3798:
3767:Marlene L. Daut
3740:English language
3736:
3715:
3712:
3708:
3706:
3607:
3604:
3600:
3598:
3355:
3352:
3348:
3346:
3314:Offensive status
3085:reliable sources
2972:
2649:More important,
2645:
2605:
2604:Talk to my owner
2600:
2575:
2572:
2571:
2541:
2533:
2506:
2484:
2457:least that rape
2418:
2341:
2319:
2077:
2042:
2036:
1880:reliable sources
1610:
1542:
1498:In response to
1319:
1233:
1175:
1154:mulato or mulata
782:
727:
705:
666:
612:
590:
540:
518:
466:
305:
294:Removed pictures
244:
182:
172:
153:
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150:
145:
73:
56:
55:
33:
32:
26:
5144:
5143:
5139:
5138:
5137:
5135:
5134:
5133:
5132:
5121:
5117:
5098:
5067:
4989:
4974:Knoterification
4960:
4932:Knoterification
4912:Strong Support:
4876:
4874:
4861:Summoned by bot
4834:Knoterification
4798:Knoterification
4781:
4779:
4762:Knoterification
4722:
4720:
4611:
4573:Knoterification
4558:Knoterification
4482:is attacking a
4367:
4318:Knoterification
4296:
4290:
4288:
4241:Knoterification
4223:
4221:
4216:Interesting is
4160:
3977:Knoterification
3872:
3859:
3842:Knoterification
3795:Knoterification
3792:
3777:Knoterification
3733:Knoterification
3730:
3710:
3704:
3702:
3654:Knoterification
3646:Haitian mulatto
3602:
3596:
3594:
3563:
3544:
3508:
3479:
3477:Offensive Term?
3460:
3350:
3344:
3342:
3316:
3163:
3139:
3137:Usage in Brazil
3112:
3058:
2966:
2964:
2763:
2639:
2637:
2608:
2603:
2573:
2569:
2535:
2527:
2513:
2485:
2481:
2437:
2412:
2372:107.222.205.242
2349:
2320:
2271:
2040:
2034:
1969:17 April edit,
1954:15 April edit,
1931:15 April edit,
1837:
1608:
1586:
1567:
1540:
1496:
1449:Portuguese term
1441:
1379:
1325:
1302:
1294:
1239:
1216:
1212:
1158:
765:
752:
737:HandGrenadePins
733:
731:African section
710:
688:
673:212.183.136.193
627:muladí/muwallad
619:
591:
547:123.242.230.166
467:—The preceding
441:of the article.
439:not the purpose
371:one another. --
332:
301:
296:
241:
205:
154:
148:
94:symmetric cross
82:
69:
30:
22:
21:
20:
12:
11:
5:
5142:
5140:
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5097:
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5063:
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5049:
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5030:
5029:
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5027:
5026:
5025:
5024:
4943:
4942:
4909:
4908:
4907:
4886:
4885:
4877:Rhododendrites
4855:
4854:
4853:
4852:
4851:
4850:
4849:
4848:
4847:
4846:
4845:
4844:
4758:
4736:
4735:
4713:
4712:
4682:world language
4678:Strong support
4674:
4673:
4610:
4607:
4606:
4605:
4604:
4603:
4602:
4601:
4600:
4599:
4598:
4597:
4568:
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4547:
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4532:
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4527:
4526:
4525:
4524:
4523:
4522:
4521:
4520:
4463:
4462:
4461:
4408:mulatto/mulato
4404:
4393:
4380:mulatto/mulato
4350:
4311:Caetano Veloso
4283:
4282:
4281:
4280:
4279:
4278:
4277:
4276:
4275:
4274:
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4271:
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4267:
4266:
4265:
4264:
4263:
4262:
4261:
4260:
4259:
4258:
4257:
4256:
4255:
4254:
4253:
4252:
4251:
4157:
4156:
4155:
4154:
4153:
4152:
4151:
4150:
4149:
4148:
4147:
4146:
4145:
4144:
4143:
4142:
4141:
4140:
4139:
4138:
4137:
4136:
4135:
4134:
4133:
4132:
4131:
4130:
4129:
4128:
4052:
3942:
3910:
3909:
3908:
3907:
3906:
3905:
3904:
3903:
3894:
3866:
3857:
3856:
3855:
3854:
3853:
3852:
3823:WP:NOCONSENSUS
3808:
3807:
3806:
3805:
3773:
3772:
3765:
3764:
3761:
3758:
3728:
3727:
3726:
3725:
3724:
3723:
3722:
3721:
3666:
3665:
3664:
3642:
3562:
3559:
3543:
3540:
3539:
3538:
3495:
3478:
3475:
3459:
3456:
3455:
3454:
3453:
3452:
3451:
3450:
3437:
3436:
3435:
3434:
3433:
3432:
3431:
3424:
3420:
3416:
3412:
3399:
3395:
3391:
3387:
3363:
3315:
3312:
3311:
3310:
3309:
3308:
3307:
3306:
3286:
3285:
3284:
3283:
3282:
3281:
3272:
3271:
3270:
3269:
3268:
3267:
3255:
3254:
3253:
3252:
3243:
3162:
3159:
3150:191.17.153.167
3138:
3135:
3111:
3108:
3107:
3106:
3097:
3057:
3054:
3044:
3036:
3035:
3032:
3028:
3025:
3021:
3017:
3013:
3007:Historically,
3005:
3001:
2963:
2960:
2959:
2958:
2957:
2956:
2955:
2954:
2953:
2952:
2931:
2930:
2929:
2928:
2927:
2926:
2902:
2901:
2900:
2899:
2898:
2897:
2873:
2872:
2871:
2870:
2856:Saint-Domingue
2854:"mulattos" of
2844:
2843:
2828:
2827:
2826:
2825:
2824:
2823:
2822:
2792:
2762:
2759:
2758:
2757:
2756:
2755:
2754:
2753:
2752:
2751:
2709:
2693:
2692:
2667:
2636:
2633:
2632:
2631:
2622:
2601:
2595:
2594:
2587:
2555:
2554:
2546:Added archive
2512:
2509:
2480:
2477:
2467:
2436:
2433:
2432:
2431:
2348:
2345:
2344:
2343:
2314:
2309:
2299:
2298:
2291:
2285:The 2nd link,
2283:
2270:
2267:
2266:
2265:
2264:
2263:
2243:
2242:
2241:
2240:
2226:
2225:
2224:
2223:
2209:
2204:
2199:
2194:
2191:
2180:
2177:
2167:
2155:
2133:
2109:
2108:
2097:
2096:
2093:Sally Hemmings
2045:
2044:
2023:
2008:
1997:
1985:
1974:
1963:
1948:
1937:
1925:
1904:
1903:
1853:(particularly
1836:
1833:
1817:
1816:
1815:
1814:
1813:
1812:
1811:
1810:
1809:
1808:
1807:
1806:
1805:
1804:
1775:Blanqueamiento
1719:
1718:
1717:
1695:Blanqueamiento
1615:
1585:
1582:
1566:
1563:
1549:
1548:
1500:User talk:Tarc
1495:
1492:
1491:
1490:
1440:
1437:
1436:
1435:
1434:
1433:
1416:
1415:
1414:
1413:
1406:
1405:
1389:
1378:
1375:
1374:
1373:
1324:
1321:
1309:74.176.126.128
1299:
1298:
1293:
1290:
1289:
1288:
1287:
1286:
1269:
1268:
1238:
1235:
1211:
1208:
1206:
1204:
1203:
1202:
1201:
1200:
1199:
1179:
1178:
1177:
1176:
1165:122.106.134.45
1147:
1146:
1145:
1144:
1143:
1142:
1123:
1122:
1121:
1120:
1090:does not mean
1081:
1080:
1048:
1044:
1042:
1035:
1033:
1026:
1023:
1006:
994:
982:
980:
979:
978:
977:
976:
975:
938:
937:
936:
935:
904:
903:
873:
872:
871:
870:
852:
851:
822:
808:
796:
751:
748:
732:
729:
695:98.223.131.118
685:
684:
653:
652:
642:
641:
618:
615:
525:71.178.124.221
515:
513:
512:
511:
510:
485:
473:218.209.45.244
462:
461:
460:
459:
442:
427:
415:
398:
394:
352:
351:
334:First of all,
331:
328:
300:
297:
295:
292:
240:
237:
236:
235:
204:
201:
176:
113:
110:
81:
78:
75:
74:
67:
62:
52:
51:
34:
23:
15:
14:
13:
10:
9:
6:
4:
3:
2:
5141:
5128:
5126:
5119:
5116:
5113:
5112:
5108:
5104:
5095:
5091:
5087:
5083:
5079:
5075:
5072:
5070:
5066:
5062:
5058:
5055:
5054:
5053:
5048:
5044:
5040:
5036:
5033:
5032:
5023:
5019:
5015:
5011:
5008:claim, it is
5007:
5003:
4999:
4998:
4997:
4994:
4992:
4985:
4984:
4983:
4979:
4975:
4970:
4969:
4968:
4965:
4963:
4956:
4952:
4948:
4945:
4944:
4941:
4937:
4933:
4929:
4925:
4921:
4917:
4913:
4910:
4906:
4902:
4898:
4893:
4890:
4889:
4888:
4887:
4884:
4879:
4871:
4867:
4862:
4857:
4856:
4843:
4839:
4835:
4831:
4830:
4829:
4825:
4821:
4817:
4813:
4809:
4808:
4807:
4803:
4799:
4795:
4794:
4793:
4789:
4788:
4784:
4777:
4773:
4772:
4771:
4767:
4763:
4759:
4757:
4753:
4749:
4745:
4740:
4739:
4738:
4737:
4734:
4730:
4729:
4725:
4718:
4715:
4714:
4711:
4707:
4703:
4699:
4695:
4691:
4687:
4683:
4679:
4676:
4675:
4672:
4668:
4664:
4660:
4655:
4652:
4651:
4650:
4649:
4645:
4641:
4637:
4633:
4629:
4628:
4624:
4620:
4616:
4608:
4596:
4592:
4588:
4584:
4583:
4582:
4578:
4574:
4569:
4567:
4563:
4559:
4555:
4551:
4548:
4545:
4541:
4540:
4539:
4538:
4537:
4536:
4535:
4534:
4519:
4515:
4511:
4507:
4503:
4499:
4498:
4497:
4493:
4489:
4485:
4481:
4477:
4476:
4475:
4471:
4467:
4464:
4459:
4457:
4451:
4450:
4448:
4447:
4446:
4442:
4438:
4434:
4430:
4426:
4422:
4418:
4414:
4409:
4405:
4402:
4398:
4394:
4391:
4390:
4385:
4382:is offensive
4381:
4377:
4371:
4366:
4365:
4364:
4360:
4356:
4351:
4348:
4344:
4340:
4336:
4332:
4329:
4328:
4327:
4323:
4319:
4316:
4312:
4307:
4306:
4305:
4302:
4299:
4293:
4284:
4250:
4246:
4242:
4239:Anglosphere.
4237:
4236:
4235:
4231:
4230:
4226:
4219:
4215:
4214:
4213:
4212:
4211:
4210:
4209:
4208:
4207:
4206:
4205:
4204:
4203:
4202:
4201:
4200:
4199:
4198:
4197:
4196:
4195:
4194:
4193:
4192:
4191:
4190:
4189:
4188:
4187:
4186:
4185:
4184:
4183:
4182:
4178:
4174:
4170:
4164:
4127:
4123:
4119:
4115:
4114:
4113:
4109:
4105:
4101:
4096:
4095:
4094:
4090:
4086:
4081:
4080:
4079:
4075:
4071:
4067:
4066:
4065:
4061:
4057:
4053:
4050:
4045:
4040:
4039:
4038:
4034:
4030:
4026:
4025:
4024:
4020:
4016:
4012:
4008:
4003:
4002:
4001:
3997:
3993:
3988:
3987:
3986:
3982:
3978:
3973:
3972:
3971:
3967:
3963:
3958:
3957:
3956:
3952:
3948:
3943:
3940:
3937:
3936:
3935:
3931:
3927:
3922:
3918:
3917:
3916:
3915:
3914:
3913:
3912:
3911:
3902:interactions.
3900:
3895:
3892:
3891:
3890:
3889:
3888:
3887:
3886:
3885:
3884:
3883:
3879:
3875:
3870:
3863:
3851:
3847:
3843:
3838:
3837:
3836:
3832:
3828:
3824:
3820:
3816:
3812:
3811:
3810:
3809:
3803:
3796:
3791:
3790:
3789:
3788:
3787:
3786:
3782:
3778:
3770:
3769:
3768:
3762:
3759:
3756:
3755:
3754:
3753:
3749:
3745:
3741:
3734:
3719:
3716:
3713:
3707:
3699:
3698:
3697:
3693:
3689:
3686:
3681:
3680:
3679:
3675:
3671:
3667:
3663:
3659:
3655:
3651:
3647:
3643:
3641:
3637:
3633:
3628:
3627:
3626:
3622:
3618:
3613:
3612:
3611:
3608:
3605:
3599:
3590:
3589:
3588:
3587:
3583:
3579:
3575:
3573:
3569:
3560:
3558:
3557:
3553:
3549:
3541:
3537:
3533:
3529:
3524:
3523:
3522:
3521:
3517:
3513:
3507:
3503:
3499:
3494:
3493:
3489:
3485:
3476:
3474:
3473:
3469:
3465:
3457:
3449:
3445:
3441:
3438:
3429:
3426:And lastly, @
3425:
3421:
3417:
3413:
3410:
3407:
3404:
3400:
3396:
3392:
3388:
3384:
3383:
3382:
3381:
3380:
3379:
3378:
3377:
3376:
3372:
3368:
3364:
3361:
3360:
3359:
3356:
3353:
3347:
3339:
3338:
3337:
3335:
3331:
3327:
3323:
3313:
3305:
3301:
3297:
3292:
3291:
3290:
3289:
3288:
3287:
3278:
3277:
3276:
3275:
3274:
3273:
3265:
3261:
3260:
3259:
3258:
3257:
3256:
3251:
3248:
3244:
3242:
3239:
3236:
3232:
3229:doesn't mean
3228:
3224:
3220:
3217:doesn't mean
3216:
3212:
3208:
3205:doesn't mean
3204:
3200:
3196:
3192:
3189:
3188:
3187:
3186:
3185:
3183:
3179:
3175:
3174:212.163.26.99
3171:
3160:
3158:
3155:
3151:
3147:
3136:
3134:
3133:
3129:
3125:
3121:
3117:
3109:
3105:
3102:
3098:
3096:
3093:
3090:
3086:
3082:
3081:
3080:
3078:
3074:
3070:
3069:141.138.57.97
3066:
3055:
3053:
3052:
3049:
3045:
3043:
3040:
3033:
3029:
3026:
3022:
3018:
3014:
3010:
3006:
3002:
2999:
2995:
2991:
2990:
2989:
2987:
2982:
2979:
2977:
2970:
2961:
2951:
2947:
2943:
2939:
2938:
2937:
2936:
2935:
2934:
2933:
2932:
2925:
2921:
2917:
2913:
2908:
2907:
2906:
2905:
2904:
2903:
2896:
2892:
2888:
2884:
2879:
2878:
2877:
2876:
2875:
2874:
2869:
2865:
2861:
2857:
2852:
2848:
2847:
2846:
2845:
2842:
2838:
2834:
2829:
2821:
2817:
2813:
2810:
2809:
2808:
2807:
2805:
2804:
2803:
2802:
2801:
2800:
2797:
2793:
2791:
2788:
2784:
2779:
2775:
2771:
2766:
2761:Barack Obama?
2760:
2750:
2746:
2742:
2738:
2737:WP:COMMONNAME
2734:
2733:
2732:
2728:
2724:
2719:
2718:
2717:
2714:
2710:
2708:
2705:
2702:
2697:
2696:
2695:
2694:
2691:
2687:
2683:
2678:
2677:
2676:
2675:
2672:
2668:
2666:
2663:
2660:
2656:
2652:
2651:fifi stahlman
2647:
2643:
2642:Fifi stahlman
2634:
2630:
2627:
2623:
2621:
2618:
2615:
2614:
2613:
2612:
2606:
2599:
2592:
2588:
2585:
2581:
2580:
2579:
2578:
2566:
2564:
2560:
2553:
2549:
2545:
2544:
2543:
2539:
2531:
2525:
2521:
2516:
2510:
2508:
2505:
2501:
2497:
2493:
2489:
2476:
2475:
2472:
2468:
2466:
2463:
2460:
2455:
2451:
2447:
2443:
2434:
2430:
2426:
2422:
2416:
2415:80.203.21.218
2411:
2410:
2409:
2407:
2403:
2399:
2398:80.203.21.218
2393:
2389:
2385:
2382:
2379:
2377:
2373:
2367:
2366:
2362:
2358:
2354:
2346:
2340:
2336:
2332:
2328:
2324:
2318:
2315:
2313:
2310:
2308:
2305:
2304:
2303:
2296:
2292:
2288:
2284:
2281:
2277:
2276:
2275:
2268:
2262:
2258:
2254:
2250:
2247:
2246:
2245:
2244:
2238:
2237:
2230:
2229:
2228:
2227:
2222:
2218:
2214:
2210:
2208:
2205:
2203:
2200:
2198:
2195:
2192:
2189:
2188:
2181:
2178:
2175:
2174:
2168:
2165:
2160:
2156:
2153:
2149:
2145:
2141:
2138:
2134:
2132:
2128:
2124:
2120:
2119:
2113:
2112:
2111:
2110:
2106:
2103:
2099:
2098:
2094:
2089:
2088:
2087:
2086:
2081:
2076:
2073:
2069:
2065:
2060:
2057:
2053:
2048:
2039:
2032:
2028:
2024:
2021:
2017:
2013:
2009:
2006:
2002:
1998:
1994:
1990:
1986:
1983:
1979:
1975:
1972:
1968:
1964:
1961:
1958:reverted the
1957:
1953:
1949:
1946:
1942:
1938:
1934:
1930:
1926:
1923:
1919:
1916:
1915:
1914:
1912:
1908:
1902:
1898:
1894:
1889:
1885:
1881:
1877:
1876:
1875:
1874:
1870:
1866:
1863:
1861:
1859:
1857:in WP:NPOV).
1856:
1852:
1848:
1844:
1841:
1834:
1832:
1831:
1827:
1823:
1803:
1800:
1796:
1792:
1791:
1790:
1789:
1788:
1784:
1780:
1776:
1771:
1770:
1769:
1766:
1762:
1757:
1756:
1755:
1751:
1747:
1743:
1739:
1738:
1737:
1734:
1730:
1725:
1720:
1716:
1712:
1708:
1704:
1700:
1696:
1692:
1688:
1684:
1680:
1676:
1672:
1668:
1667:
1666:
1663:
1659:
1654:
1653:
1652:
1648:
1644:
1640:
1636:
1632:
1628:
1624:
1620:
1616:
1614:
1611:
1605:
1604:
1603:
1602:
1598:
1594:
1589:
1583:
1581:
1580:
1576:
1572:
1564:
1562:
1561:
1557:
1553:
1547:
1544:
1535:
1534:
1533:
1530:
1526:
1522:
1520:
1514:
1512:
1506:
1502:
1501:
1493:
1489:
1485:
1481:
1477:
1473:
1472:
1471:
1470:
1466:
1462:
1458:
1454:
1450:
1446:
1438:
1432:
1428:
1424:
1420:
1419:
1418:
1417:
1410:
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1408:
1407:
1402:
1401:
1400:
1396:
1392:
1387:
1383:
1376:
1372:
1368:
1364:
1360:
1359:
1358:
1357:
1353:
1349:
1348:209.6.238.201
1345:
1341:
1340:one drop rule
1337:
1333:
1328:
1322:
1320:
1318:
1314:
1310:
1306:
1296:
1295:
1291:
1285:
1281:
1277:
1276:72.228.150.44
1273:
1272:
1271:
1270:
1267:
1263:
1259:
1258:72.228.150.44
1255:
1254:
1253:
1252:
1248:
1244:
1243:72.228.150.44
1236:
1234:
1232:
1228:
1224:
1220:
1209:
1207:
1198:
1194:
1190:
1185:
1184:
1183:
1182:
1181:
1180:
1174:
1170:
1166:
1162:
1155:
1151:
1150:
1149:
1148:
1141:
1137:
1133:
1129:
1128:
1127:
1126:
1125:
1124:
1119:
1115:
1111:
1107:
1105:
1101:
1097:
1093:
1089:
1085:
1084:
1083:
1082:
1079:
1075:
1071:
1067:
1063:
1062:
1061:
1060:
1056:
1052:
1046:
1041:
1037:
1032:
1028:
1022:
1018:
1015:
1014:
1013:
1008:
1003:
1002:
1001:
996:
991:
990:
989:
984:
974:
970:
966:
962:
958:
956:
952:
948:
944:
943:
942:
941:
940:
939:
934:
930:
926:
922:
921:
920:
919:
918:
917:
913:
909:
902:
898:
894:
890:
889:
888:
887:
883:
879:
869:
865:
861:
856:
855:
854:
853:
850:
846:
842:
837:
836:
835:
834:
830:
826:
820:
817:
816:
815:
810:
805:
804:
803:
798:
793:
792:
791:
786:
783:
781:
777:
773:
769:
761:
757:
756:
750:Mulatto, Mule
749:
747:
746:
742:
738:
730:
728:
726:
722:
718:
717:68.188.215.67
714:
706:
704:
700:
696:
692:
682:
678:
674:
670:
664:
663:
662:
661:
658:
651:
648:
644:
643:
638:
637:
636:
635:
632:
628:
624:
616:
614:
611:
607:
603:
599:
595:
588:
584:
578:
575:
571:
568:
566:
562:
558:
556:
552:
548:
544:
536:
534:
530:
526:
522:
509:
506:
502:
498:
494:
490:
489:
486:
482:
478:
474:
470:
464:
463:
458:
455:
451:
447:
443:
440:
436:
432:
428:
424:
420:
416:
414:specifically.
412:
411:
410:
407:
403:
399:
395:
393:
389:
385:
380:
379:
378:
377:
374:
369:
365:
361:
357:
350:Professor Sam
349:
346:
342:
341:
340:
337:
329:
327:
325:
321:
317:
313:
309:
298:
293:
291:
290:
286:
282:
276:
275:
271:
267:
262:
260:
256:
252:
251:216.27.165.11
248:
238:
234:
230:
226:
222:
221:
220:
219:
215:
211:
202:
200:
198:
194:
190:
189:216.27.165.11
186:
179:
174:
170:
166:
162:
158:
151:
144:
137:
133:
130:
126:
122:
118:
115:
111:
108:
106:
102:
98:
95:
91:
87:
79:
72:
68:
66:
63:
61:
58:
57:
49:
45:
41:
40:
35:
28:
27:
19:
5125:mulatto flag
5124:
5118:
5099:
5077:
5073:
5056:
5051:
5034:
5009:
5005:
5001:
4987:
4958:
4954:
4950:
4946:
4915:
4911:
4891:
4869:
4865:
4811:
4786:
4743:
4727:
4716:
4697:
4693:
4686:worldly view
4685:
4681:
4677:
4653:
4631:
4630:
4614:
4612:
4553:
4505:
4501:
4455:
4452:
4407:
4400:
4396:
4388:
4387:
4383:
4379:
4375:
4346:
4342:
4339:homo sapiens
4338:
4287:
4228:
4168:
4158:
4043:
4010:
4006:
3920:
3858:
3774:
3766:
3729:
3701:
3593:
3578:93.15.241.95
3576:
3564:
3545:
3509:
3480:
3461:
3341:
3320:— Preceding
3317:
3240:
3230:
3226:
3223:Preservative
3219:preservative
3218:
3215:preservativo
3214:
3206:
3202:
3194:
3190:
3168:— Preceding
3164:
3144:— Preceding
3140:
3119:
3115:
3113:
3094:
3088:
3063:— Preceding
3059:
3041:
3037:
3020:"mulattoes".
3008:
2993:
2985:
2983:
2980:
2965:
2882:
2789:
2782:
2777:
2773:
2769:
2767:
2764:
2706:
2664:
2648:
2638:
2635:South Africa
2619:
2596:
2576:
2567:
2562:
2558:
2556:
2517:
2514:
2492:Creepyinfant
2486:— Preceding
2482:
2464:
2458:
2449:
2445:
2438:
2394:
2390:
2386:
2383:
2380:
2368:
2350:
2321:— Preceding
2300:
2272:
2234:
2232:
2185:
2183:
2172:
2170:
2159:undue weight
2116:
2080:Boracay Bill
2079:
2063:
2061:
2049:
2046:
2030:
2029:May 3 edit,
2019:
2015:
2014:May 3 edit,
2004:
2003:May 3 edit,
1992:
1981:
1970:
1959:
1955:
1944:
1932:
1921:
1910:
1905:
1888:undue weight
1838:
1818:
1723:
1686:
1682:
1678:
1670:
1619:undue weight
1590:
1587:
1571:Victor Engel
1568:
1550:
1531:
1527:
1523:
1519:Poly Styrene
1515:
1511:Boris Kodjoe
1507:
1503:
1497:
1452:
1444:
1442:
1397:
1393:
1388:
1384:
1380:
1329:
1326:
1300:
1240:
1213:
1205:
1153:
1103:
1099:
1095:
1091:
1087:
1065:
1047:
1038:
1029:
1019:
1016:
1010:
1009:
1004:
998:
997:
992:
986:
985:
981:
960:
954:
953:which means
950:
946:
905:
874:
821:
818:
812:
811:
806:
800:
799:
794:
788:
787:
784:
762:
758:
754:
753:
734:
707:
686:
654:
626:
622:
620:
579:
576:
572:
569:
559:
537:
514:
501:WAvegetarian
454:Media anthro
449:
445:
434:
422:
401:
397:descriptive.
373:Media anthro
367:
363:
359:
353:
345:66.32.13.121
335:
333:
302:
277:
263:
242:
206:
175:
138:
134:
131:
127:
123:
119:
116:
112:
109:
86:mulatto flag
85:
83:
80:Mulatto flag
70:
43:
37:
18:Talk:Mulatto
5103:Lifeinvegas
5039:Markbassett
4484:WP:STRAWMAN
3296:Savvyjack23
3262:I disagree
3124:Savvyjack23
3116:mulatto(es)
3012:extraction.
2998:Multiracial
2976:Multiracial
2860:Savvyjack23
2741:Iryna Harpy
2701:Multiracial
2152:BRD process
2068:this source
1922:Colonia Era
1835:Controversy
1404:negroids)!!
1344:WP:PRESERVE
1303:—Preceding
1223:24.79.77.71
1217:—Preceding
1189:LzqTAnFKVf7
1159:—Preceding
1132:Floridianed
1070:Floridianed
925:Floridianed
893:Floridianed
860:Floridianed
772:196.32.0.40
766:—Preceding
711:—Preceding
689:—Preceding
667:—Preceding
592:—Preceding
541:—Preceding
519:—Preceding
431:POV pushing
306:—Preceding
245:—Preceding
183:—Preceding
161:Mulattoking
155:—Preceding
90:ethnic flag
84:There is a
36:This is an
5065:¿question?
5002:in English
4972:language.
4916:in English
4782:The Banner
4744:in general
4723:The Banner
4615:in English
4506:in English
4502:in English
4291:Acroterion
4224:The Banner
4169:in English
4163:Acroterion
4100:WP:ANI/3RR
3705:Acroterion
3597:Acroterion
3548:JohnCastle
3345:Acroterion
3004:societies.
2994:in general
2655:verifiable
2450:consensual
2107:by DD2K) :
2102:repeatedly
2072:Wtmitchell
1936:offspring.
1727:democracy.
1593:Nicki44445
1110:Kman543210
965:Kman543210
841:Kman543210
225:Kman543210
210:Kman543210
5078:sometimes
4776:this link
4688:; as per
4554:currently
4353:was one.
4044:therefore
3821:, and on
3568:WP:Global
3498:Riverlisp
3211:Warehouse
3207:warehouse
3203:warenhuis
3031:ancestry.
2812:Wordsmith
2783:mulattoes
2723:Dave Dial
2682:Dave Dial
2597:Cheers. —
2591:this tool
2584:this tool
2459:of slaves
2421:Dave Dial
2357:Bab-a-lot
2213:Dave Dial
2144:copy-edit
2137:consensus
2078:(earlier
1893:Dave Dial
1847:WP:VERIFY
1843:Dave Dial
1822:Dave Dial
1779:Dave Dial
1777:article.
1746:Dave Dial
1707:Dave Dial
1643:Dave Dial
1627:Nicki4445
1552:Bab-a-lot
1480:Bab-a-lot
1439:Etymology
1051:KumarFilo
1025:century."
908:KumarFilo
878:KumarFilo
825:KumarFilo
426:evidence.
421:that. If
281:KumarFilo
266:KumarFilo
71:Archive 3
65:Archive 2
60:Archive 1
5082:Ortizesp
5014:Vlaemink
4897:Vlaemink
4892:Comment:
4820:Vlaemink
4748:Vlaemink
4702:Vlaemink
4659:MOS:LEAD
4510:Vlaemink
4480:Vlaemink
4466:Vlaemink
4437:Vlaemink
4118:Vlaemink
4085:Vlaemink
4056:Vlaemink
4015:Vlaemink
3962:Vlaemink
3926:Vlaemink
3862:Vlaemink
3688:Melange6
3632:Melange6
3528:Melange6
3482:article.
3464:Ampittis
3440:Grokante
3428:Melange6
3367:Melange6
3322:unsigned
3264:Jdcrutch
3199:cognates
3170:unsigned
3146:unsigned
3065:unsigned
2969:Dom Kaos
2942:Lycurgus
2916:Lycurgus
2887:Lycurgus
2833:Lycurgus
2530:cbignore
2500:contribs
2488:unsigned
2335:contribs
2327:Samhouch
2323:unsigned
2056:Edit war
2033:added a
1996:nature".
1635:Wanger90
1631:Greg neo
1539:·Maunus·
1423:Student7
1305:unsigned
1219:unsigned
1161:unsigned
768:unsigned
713:unsigned
691:unsigned
669:unsigned
647:Partheth
606:contribs
594:unsigned
543:unsigned
521:unsigned
497:blocking
493:civility
481:contribs
469:unsigned
452:means.--
320:contribs
308:unsigned
247:unsigned
185:unsigned
169:contribs
157:unsigned
88:. This
5074:Support
5061:Alaexis
5057:Support
5035:Support
4870:nothing
4690:WP:NPOV
4663:Rsk6400
4640:Rsk6400
4632:Comment
4619:Rsk6400
4587:Rsk6400
4488:Rsk6400
4370:Rsk6400
4355:Rsk6400
4343:mulatto
4173:Rsk6400
4104:Rsk6400
4070:Rsk6400
4029:Rsk6400
4007:mulatto
3992:Rsk6400
3947:Rsk6400
3921:mulatto
3874:Rsk6400
3827:Rsk6400
3819:WP:ONUS
3802:WP:PSTS
3744:Rsk6400
3617:Rsk6400
3235:Mulatto
3231:mulatto
3195:Mulatto
3089:mulatto
3024:latter.
3009:mulatto
2774:mulatto
2770:mulatto
2607::Online
2559:checked
2524:my edit
2520:Mulatto
2442:England
2253:Tobby72
2140:version
2123:Tobby72
2105:deleted
2064:Mulatto
2020:Tobby72
1971:Tobby72
1956:Tobby72
1865:Tobby72
1851:WP:NPOV
1799:snunɐw·
1795:·ʍaunus
1765:snunɐw·
1761:·ʍaunus
1733:snunɐw·
1729:·ʍaunus
1724:concept
1703:WP:SOCK
1691:Mulatto
1662:snunɐw·
1658:·ʍaunus
1537:enough.
1461:Popotão
1445:mulatto
1363:Jaydiem
1332:melanin
657:FilipeS
631:FilipeS
450:mulatto
435:mulatto
423:mulatto
360:mulatto
336:mulatto
39:archive
4947:Oppose
4928:gringo
4924:orient
4717:Oppose
4694:mulato
4654:Oppose
4347:mulato
4297:(talk)
4011:mulato
3899:WP:AGF
3893:Hello,
3869:WP:BRD
3815:WP:BRD
3711:(talk)
3603:(talk)
3390:level.
3351:(talk)
3227:mulato
3191:Mulato
2538:nobots
2075:(talk)
2052:WP:BRD
2031:Toby72
2005:Toby72
1933:Toby72
1911:Toby72
1855:WP:DUE
1742:Brazil
1699:WP:COI
1637:. Per
1453:mulato
1104:mulato
1096:mulato
1088:mulato
947:mulato
785:Note:
598:Angsax
583:Angsax
561:Angsax
505:(talk)
419:verify
406:Shakam
368:nigger
4920:negro
4812:mulat
4544:pardo
4335:Duden
3817:, on
3650:samba
3572:Negro
3484:Carlo
2883:Pardo
2657:, so
2387:: -->
623:least
384:Geira
364:Negro
105:white
101:black
92:is a
16:<
5107:talk
5086:talk
5043:talk
5018:talk
5006:that
4978:talk
4951:only
4936:talk
4901:talk
4838:talk
4824:talk
4802:talk
4787:talk
4766:talk
4752:talk
4728:talk
4706:talk
4667:talk
4644:talk
4623:talk
4591:talk
4577:talk
4562:talk
4514:talk
4492:talk
4470:talk
4441:talk
4359:talk
4322:talk
4245:talk
4229:talk
4177:talk
4122:talk
4108:talk
4089:talk
4074:talk
4060:talk
4033:talk
4019:talk
4009:and
3996:talk
3981:talk
3966:talk
3951:talk
3930:talk
3878:talk
3846:talk
3831:talk
3781:talk
3748:talk
3692:talk
3674:talk
3658:talk
3636:talk
3621:talk
3582:talk
3552:talk
3532:talk
3516:talk
3502:talk
3488:talk
3468:talk
3444:talk
3371:talk
3330:talk
3300:talk
3247:Talk
3178:talk
3154:talk
3128:talk
3101:Talk
3073:talk
3048:Talk
2946:talk
2920:talk
2912:here
2891:talk
2864:talk
2837:talk
2816:talk
2796:Talk
2745:talk
2727:talk
2713:Talk
2686:talk
2671:Talk
2626:Talk
2563:true
2496:talk
2471:Talk
2425:talk
2402:talk
2376:talk
2361:talk
2331:talk
2257:talk
2233:::::
2217:talk
2184:::::
2179:And:
2171:::::
2127:talk
2038:Tone
2027:this
2016:DD2k
2012:this
2001:this
1993:DD2K
1989:this
1982:DD2K
1978:this
1967:this
1960:DD2K
1952:this
1945:DD2K
1941:this
1929:this
1918:This
1907:Here
1897:talk
1869:talk
1849:and
1826:talk
1783:talk
1750:talk
1711:talk
1647:talk
1597:talk
1575:talk
1556:talk
1484:talk
1465:talk
1427:talk
1367:talk
1352:talk
1336:pass
1313:talk
1280:talk
1262:talk
1247:talk
1227:talk
1193:talk
1169:talk
1136:talk
1114:talk
1100:mulo
1092:mule
1074:talk
1055:talk
969:talk
955:mule
951:mulo
929:talk
912:talk
897:talk
882:talk
864:talk
845:talk
829:talk
776:talk
741:talk
721:talk
699:talk
677:talk
602:talk
587:talk
565:talk
551:talk
529:talk
477:talk
402:your
388:talk
366:and
316:talk
285:talk
270:talk
255:talk
229:talk
214:talk
193:talk
165:talk
97:flag
5010:not
4955:not
4930:).
4881:\\
4698:not
4657:to
4617:."
4456:not
4401:you
4397:you
4389:you
4376:you
4333:by
3120:"s"
2778:any
2550:to
2251:.
2025:In
2010:In
1999:In
1987:In
1976:In
1965:In
1950:In
1939:In
1927:In
1884:POV
1705:).
1639:BRD
483:) .
5109:)
5088:)
5045:)
5020:)
4980:)
4938:)
4926:,
4922:,
4903:)
4840:)
4826:)
4804:)
4768:)
4754:)
4708:)
4669:)
4646:)
4638:.
4625:)
4593:)
4579:)
4564:)
4516:)
4494:)
4486:.
4472:)
4443:)
4431:,
4427:,
4423:,
4419:,
4415:,
4361:)
4324:)
4313:.
4247:)
4179:)
4124:)
4110:)
4102:.
4091:)
4076:)
4062:)
4035:)
4021:)
3998:)
3983:)
3968:)
3953:)
3932:)
3880:)
3848:)
3833:)
3783:)
3750:)
3694:)
3676:)
3660:)
3652:?
3638:)
3623:)
3584:)
3554:)
3534:)
3518:)
3504:)
3490:)
3470:)
3446:)
3408:,
3373:)
3332:)
3302:)
3245:|
3180:)
3156:)
3130:)
3099:|
3075:)
3046:|
2948:)
2922:)
2914:.
2893:)
2866:)
2839:)
2818:)
2794:|
2747:)
2729:)
2711:|
2688:)
2669:|
2624:|
2536:{{
2532:}}
2528:{{
2502:)
2498:•
2469:|
2427:)
2404:)
2378:)
2363:)
2337:)
2333:•
2259:)
2219:)
2129:)
2041:}}
2035:{{
1909:,
1899:)
1871:)
1828:)
1785:)
1752:)
1713:)
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1633:,
1629:,
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1577:)
1558:)
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1459:.
1429:)
1369:)
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1138:)
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866:)
858:--
847:)
831:)
778:)
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723:)
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608:)
604:•
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479:•
390:)
322:)
318:•
287:)
272:)
257:)
231:)
216:)
195:)
171:)
167:•
103:,
5127::
5105:(
5084:(
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5016:(
4993::
4976:(
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4863:)
4859:(
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4433:6
4429:5
4425:4
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