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  1. Dictionary
    wog
    /wɒɡ/

    noun

    • 1. a person who is not white. offensive

    More definitions, origin and scrabble points

  2. May 11, 2011 · 0. 'Wog' is a word first applied to local inhabitants (Chinese) by British troops stationed in Hong Kong, B.C.C. The British High Commissioner issued a bulletin to all British troops to refrain from using racial slurs when referring to the Chinese and Indian inhabitants. Such slurs were 'babu', 'chink', etc.

  3. Woggy is the adjective formed from wog, an offensive term for non-white people which is commonly believed to be derived from golliwog. In Australian slang, wog means "a foreigner or immigrant, especially one from southern Europe," which accords with dago, "a Spanish, Portuguese, or Italian-speaking person." ODO on wog, golliwog and dago.

  4. Aug 9, 2015 · wog n {perh. short for golliwog} (ca. 1929) chiefly Brit, usu disparaging : a dark-skinned foreigner; esp : one from the Middle East or Far East. Consistent with Merriam-Webster's reading of golliwog, Ernest Weekley, An Etymological Dictionary of Modern English (1921) has this entry for golliwog: golliwog.

  5. Sep 25, 2023 · From 1923, in The Albury Banner and Wodonga Express:. The word 'pommy,' as applied to newcomers from the old-land, is still causing a mild sensation as to its origin, or derivation, in several papers.

  6. Mar 8, 2019 · Pom: British person): Australian from 1912. contraction of pomegranate, rhyming slang for immigrant (“imme-granate”). The older term of Jimmy Grant, meaning immigrant, became Pommy Grant as the Australian sun allegedly turned immigrants′ skin pomegranate red. An acronym for “Prisoner of Mother England”.

  7. Apr 15, 2023 · This expression is often used to describe situations where someone is given a small reward or token gesture to keep them content, while the larger, more significant prize or benefit is kept hidden or

  8. May 30, 2013 · Both "w/" and "w/o" were common, very informal, U.S. abbreviations in correspondence, and in tight spots on data tables, until recently.

  9. Nov 13, 2015 · Here's an oddity: in the British media, 'WAGs' is used for 'Wives And Girlfriends', as in "WAGs will not be permitted to accompany the team on the next tour". Since [apart from any two-timing that's going on] any individual from the WAGs is either a wife OR a girlfriend, logically the singular of WAGs should be WOG.

  10. Autological word. A word is autological or homological if it describes itself. The common term for this is a backronym, a back-formation acronym. Also known as recursive acronym / metacronym/ recursive initialism, this is a fun way to coin names for new programming languages and such.

  11. Jul 8, 2013 · To define is to delineate a specific meaning of a word. To describe is to provide useful attributes of something represented by that word. For example, it is hard to define "god" but easy to define "car."