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Definition of Antiblack
1. Adjective. Discriminatory especially on the basis of race or religion.
Similar to: Discriminatory, Prejudiced
Derivative terms: Anti-semite
Definition of Antiblack
1. Adjective. Unfavorable to black people, often specifically African Americans ¹
¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Antiblack
1. [adj]
Lexicographical Neighbors of Antiblack
Literary usage of Antiblack
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Jacques Loeb: His Science and Social Activism and Their Philosophical by Charles Rasmussen, Rick Tilman (1998)
"He was fearful not only that black scientists might be offended by it, but that
antiblack fanatics might seize upon it to justify their bigotry and ..."
2. Racial and Ethnic Tensions in American Communities: Poverty, Inequality edited by Mary Frances Berry (2000)
"These are, of course, tied together as a context to the antiblack bias that's
supposed to take place prior to their arrival. Now, I'm aware of that. ..."
3. Junius: Including Letters by the Same Writer, Under Other Signatures, (now by Junius (1814)
"•sin, ONCE more, Mr. JUNIUS, and but once, let me address a few words to you on
the subject of your antiblack- ..."
4. Teaching Reading to Black Adolescent Males: Closing the Achievement Gapby Alfred W. Tatum by Alfred W. Tatum (2005)
"Overidentification with the antiblack hostility in the dominant white American
culture. 3. Acts of self-destruction that result from faulty attempts to cope ..."
5. Leon Abbett's New Jersey: The Emergence of the Modern Governor by Richard A. Hogarty (2001)
"This was especially true in Hudson County, where the Irish were intensely antiwar
and antiblack. Fearing the worst, the Irish did not want to sacrifice ..."
6. Leon Abbett's New Jersey: The Emergence of the Modern Governor by Richard A. Hogarty (2001)
"This was especially true in Hudson County, where the Irish were intensely antiwar
and antiblack. Fearing the worst, the Irish did not want to sacrifice ..."
7. A Melancholy Scene of Devastation: The Public Response to the 1793 by J. Worth Estes, Billy G. Smith (1997)
"And Frank Johnson, an infant in 1793, survived to become the first nationally
renowned African American musician.43 As antiblack sentiment mounted in ..."
8. Mobilizing U. S. Industry in World War II by Alan L. Gropman (1997)
"Blum is critical of the West Coast Japanese-American internment, because he
believes it was racially based, and is even more critical of the antiblack ..."