The noun Polack ( or ); in the contemporary English language, is an ethnic slur and a derogatory reference to a person of Polish descent. It is an Anglicisation of the Polish masculine noun Polak, which denotes a Polish male or a person of Polish ethnicity and unspecified gender. However, the English loanword "Polack" (note the spelling difference) is considered an ethnic slur in the United Kingdom and is therefore considered insulting in nearly all contemporary usages.
- Slang: Disparaging and Offensive (Random House Unabridged Dictionary)
- Offensive Slang used as a disparaging term for a person of Polish birth or descent (The American Heritage Dictionary)
In the United States, the term is likewise a slur whose offensiveness varies widely by context.
Video Polack
History
According to Online Etymology Dictionary by Douglas Harper, "Polack" meant as "Polish immigrant, person of Polish descent" was used in American English until the late 19th century (1879) to describe a "Polish person" in a non-offensive way (1574). Dictionary.com Unabridged (v 1.1) based on the Unabridged Dictionary by Random House claims that the word originated between 1590-1600. For example, Shakespeare uses the term Polacks in his tragedy Hamlet to refer to opponents of Hamlet's father. A quote is given below:
- Such was the very armour he had on
- When he the ambitious Norway combated:
- So frowned he once, when in an angry parle
- He smote the sledded Polacks on the ice
In an Irish-published edition of Hamlet by the Educational Company, Patrick Murray noted: "Some editors, however, argue that Polacks should read as pole-axe, and that Horatio is remembering an angry Old Hamlet striking the ice with his battle-axe".
On July 26, 2008, The Times newspaper from the United Kingdom featured a comment piece by restaurant reviewer and columnist Giles Coren (known for his profanity-strewn complaints), containing general anti-Polish sentiment. In a piece, entitled "Two waves of immigration, Poles apart" Coren used the racial slur 'Polack' to describe Polish immigrants who can "clear off". He went on to articulate his views about the role of Poles in the Holocaust in occupied Poland. The piece prompted a letter of complaint to The Times from the Polish ambassador to the UK, Barbara Tuge-Ereci?ska. She wrote that "the issue of Polish-Jewish relations has been unfairly and deeply falsified" by his "aggressive remarks" and "contempt". Coren's comments caused the Federation of Poles in Great Britain to demand a published apology from The Times under threat of an official complaint to the Press Complaints Commission, which has the power to force an apology.
Maps Polack
Ethnonyms
The neutral English language noun for a Polish person (male or female) today is Pole (see also: Naming Poland in foreign languages). In some other languages such as Swedish or Norwegian, polack or polakk are inoffensive terms for a person from Poland.
In Iberian languages, polaco is a mild slur for people from the Catalan-speaking countries, though it is a completely neutral way of referencing Polish people in all Ibero-American countries except Brazil, where, much like galego (Galician), alemão (German) and russo (Russian), it became a politically incorrect term, and the noun used for Polish people is polonês (such term is absent from Spanish and other Portuguese variants).
In Russian and Ukrainian the old exonym "???" (lyakh, lyakhy) is now considered offensive, and is replaced by the neutral "?????" (polyak). Another common Russian ethnic slur for Poles is "????" (pshek), an onomatopoeia derived from Polish phonology: prepositions prze- and przy- are quite common with 'rz' corresponding to the sound of "sh", and the sibilant-sounding speech (e.g., przepraszam ("excuse me") transcribed as "psheprasham") has been a target of mockery in Russian culture.
See also
- Anti-Polish sentiment
- Polish joke at times referred to as "Polack joke"
References
Source of article : Wikipedia