blackfellow

English

Alternative forms

Etymology

From black + fellow.

Pronunciation

  • (UK) IPA(key): /ˈblakfɛləʊ/
  • (file)

Noun

blackfellow (plural blackfellows)

  1. (Australia, now usually considered offensive, ethnic slur) A (male) Australian Aborigine. [from 19th c.]
    Coordinate term: whitefellow
    • 1842 February 16, The Inquirer, Perth, page 5, column 2:
      "Me like my country — no much too hot, no much too cold. By and bye, white fellow come — soldier-man come. White fellow say, this our land, that our land — ALL country our land. Black fellow say no! my country no white fellow's country, and black fellow take spear.
    • 1985, Peter Carey, Illywhacker, Faber & Faber, published 2003, page 40:
      He was squatting on the ground like a blackfellow, quiet and still and cunning.
    • 2000, Daryl Tonkin, Carolyn Landon, Jackson's Track: Memoir of a Dreamtime Place, page 256:
      It was as if the blackfellas were their property, and the Board could do with them as they saw fit.
    • 2002, James Roberts, “At the Bar”, in Rebekah Clarkson, editor, Forked Tongues: A Delicious Anthology of Poetry and Prose, page 29:
      A blackfella and a whitefella are sitting at the bar. The whitefella says to the blackfella eh boss, whadya reckon?
      The blackfella says since you ask, I consider it a metaphor of the historic case of the Coorong massacre of 1840.
    • 2007, Noel Olive, Enough is Enough: A History of the Pilbara Mob, page 212:
      Most police officers had no blackfella cultural background, no knowledge of Aboriginal priorities in life, yet they were the power in the town.

Usage notes

  • The word has been reclaimed to some extent by Indigenous Australians to describe themselves, but its use by other groups is now usually considered racially offensive.
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