English

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Etymology

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From white +‎ skin.

Noun

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whiteskin (plural whiteskins)

  1. (chiefly ethnic slur) A white person.
    • 1895, The Inland Educator: A Journal for the Progressive Teacher[1], volumes 1-2, →OCLC, page 84:
      Did the force or combination of forces, which made a group of white-skinned people, also break up that group into diverse Hamitic, Semitic, and Aryan whiteskins ― if so, how?
    • 2001 November 1, S. L. Viehl, Shockball: A Stardoc Novel (Stardoc)‎[2], Penguin, →ISBN, →OCLC:
      Hok introduced me and Reever as whiteskin friends of the tribe.
      The bride's mother, who had the rather menacing name Veda Wolfkiller, gave me the once-over. “You don't look much whiteskin to me.”
      “I'm only half-white,” I said, []
    • 2012 April 23, rebcar...@gmail.com, “Here Is How It Works”, in soc.culture.israel[3] (Usenet):
      After that, we round up the whiteskin degenerates who helped the kikes set up this foul System, and weed the African animals they used to terrorize our communities.

Derived terms

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  NODES
Note 1