piccaninny การใช้
- The term piccaninny was used affectionately, never offensively in my experience.
- The term piccaninny was used in colonial Australia for an Indigenous Kriol languages.
- One can barely see piccaninny daylight in urban areas.
- Piccaninnies were their toddlers, so piccaninny daylight is the infant stage of day.
- Piccaninnies were their toddlers, so piccaninny daylight is the infant stage of day.
- She is the princess of the Piccaninny tribe of " Indians " ( Wendy and Tinker Bell.
- Previous portrayals of the Piccaninny tribe in " Peter Pan " have been criticized as racist.
- Piccaninny daylight is a term still used by my extended family and friends around Sydney, Australia, but perhaps they are outdoors people.
- Also in 1935 the Shirley Temple film " The Little Colonel " features the grandfather Colonel barking " piccaninny " at two young children.
- Throughout his 1935 travel book " Journey Without Maps ", British author Graham Greene uses " piccaninny " as a general term for African children.
- The word " pickaninnies " appears in the 1887 lyrics of Newfoundland folk song Kelligrew's Soiree : " There was boiled guineas, cold guineas, bullock's heads and piccaninnies ."
- :: : " Piccaninny " is understood as a reference to a young indigenous Australian, but I can tell you it is never used these days ( at least not in the circles I move in ).
- On 31 October, Gibb produced the two Samantha Sang songs and on November, Gibb produced P . P . Arnold songs " Piccaninny ", " High and Windy Mountain " and a cover version of " Turning Tide ".
- Critics of the casting in " Pan " suggested that Warner Bros . may have wanted to avoid repeating the alleged racism of previous " Peter Pan " stories, by altering the ethnicity of the Piccaninnies, rather than using a stereotypical portrayal of the source material.
- It is probably dervived from the defintion of piccaninny " very young " thus " very young light " The OED does not list this term as obsolete so it is believable that you will find newer works with the term being used . talk ) 16 : 51, 18 July 2008 ( UTC)
- The word was used by Australian country music performer Slim Dusty in the lyrics of his 1987 " nursery-rhyme-style " song " Boomerang " : " Every picaninny knows, that's where the goes . " Within Australia, it is also a common name used for landscape features, including Piccaninny crater, Picanniny Point and Piccaninnie Ponds Conservation Park.
- A reviewer in " The Australasian " had a high opinion of Stephens's work : " . . . he is one of the, as yet, few Australian singers to whom the word'poet'may be applied without any impropriety-poet in feeling and poet in expression; various in word and versatile in method; combining the essential gifts of imagination with that qualifying and restraining sense of the humorous which asserts itself with such happy effect in compositions like " My Chinee Cook, " the address to a black gin, " A Piccaninny, " and " Big Ben . ""