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Dried orange peel
Hello, Graeme...in!
You wrote on Tue, 19 Dec 2006 15:58:11 -0000: GiL> > wrote in message GiL> ps.com... ??>>> ??>> Dang. I could have sworn that Brits called some other ??>> people "wogs". Tricky language. GiL> Remarkable as this may seem, the term "wog" is actually GiL> on-topic for this thread. GiL> The history of the word refers back to a Scottish preserve GiL> manufacturer, Robertson's, who had a little black faced GiL> golliwog as their company motif. A disparaging term, was GiL> to call black people golliwogs (as per Robertson's logo), GiL> which subsequently was shortened to "wogs". GiL> The PC folks at the beginning of the '70's lobbied GiL> Robertson's to change their logo, and they duly did. It's GiL> become an iconic piece of marketing/advertising folklore. I thought it was originally a wry (probably not totally disparaging) acronym for "Wiley oriental gentleman" and I won't go into the bad old days when English speculated on "Wogs begin at *various placenames*...." :-) James Silverton Potomac, Maryland E-mail, with obvious alterations: not.jim.silverton.at.comcast.not |
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