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Reyes, Felipe (24 March 2022). " "Nos echaron de Chile": profesor y youtuber "gringo" se va tras años sin residencia para su esposa". BioBioChile.cl . Retrieved 26 August 2023. This derivation requires two steps: griego> grigo, and grigo> gringo. Corominas notes that while the first change is common in Spanish (e.g. priesa to prisa), there is no perfect analogy for the second, save in Old French ( Gregoire to Grigoire to Gringoire). [15] However, there are other Spanish words whose colloquial form contains an epenthetic n, such as gordiflón and gordinflón ('chubby'), and Cochinchina and Conchinchina ('South Vietnam'). It is also possible that the final form was influenced by the word jeringonza, a game like Pig Latin also used to mean "gibberish". [11]

Another theory involves locals yelling "Green, go home!" at invading American soldiers (sometimes in conflicts other than the Mexican–American War), in reference to their supposedly green uniforms. [18] Croom, Adam M. (2014-11-01). "Spanish slurs and stereotypes for Mexican-Americans in the USA: A context-sensitive account of derogation and appropriation: Peyorativos y estereotipos para los Mexicano-Americanos en EE. UU.: Una consideración contextual del uso despectivo y de apropiación". Pragmática Sociocultural / Sociocultural Pragmatics. 2 (2): 145–179. doi: 10.1515/soprag-2014-0007. ISSN 2194-8313. S2CID 27718979. ...and the slur gringo by Anglo-Americans, explaining that "The act of re-appropriating or re-contextualizing, the process by which a group reclaims a term or artifact that disparages that group and then uses it in a different context, is not something new" The term is deeply rooted in Mexican culture and art; for example, in the novel The Old Gringo by Carlos Fuentes or in the songs Frijolero by Molotov and Somos Más Americanos by Los Tigres del Norte. [2] United States [ edit ]

Antonio de Capmany y de Montpalau; Imprenta de Sancha (Madrid) (1817). Nuevo diccionario francés-español: en este van enmendados, corregidos, mejorados, y enriquecidos considerablemente los de Gattel, y Cormon. Under Hebreu and Parler: Imprenta de Sancha. pp.448, 628. Expanded "gringo" limit in Brazilian Championship". 2014-07-28. Archived from the original on 2014-07-30 . Retrieved 10 February 2015. The word being used by a fan as a synonym of "foreigner" in the Brazilian Championship. gringo, ga". SM Diccionarios. Archived from the original on 6 December 2013 . Retrieved 17 November 2021. desp.: Persona nacida en los Estados Unidos de América (país americano) Esteban Terreros y Pando (S.I.) (1787). Diccionario castellano con las voces de ciencias y artes y sus correspondientes en las tres lenguas francesa, latina é italiana: E-O. en la imprenta de la Viuda de Ibarra, Hijos y Compañia. p.240. a b c d Shepard, Alicia C. (2011-01-24). "Is The Word "Gringo" Offensive Or Just Distracting?". NPR . Retrieved 2021-09-29.

Thompson, Nicole Akoukou (2013-11-11). "John Leguizamo & Kanye West Use Re-appropriation to Change Perceptions". Latin Post - Latin news, immigration, politics, culture . Retrieved 2021-10-14. In Brazil, the word gringo means "foreigner" and has no connection to physical characteristics or specific countries. For example, foreign football players in the Brazilian Championship that come from other Latin American countries are referred to as "gringos" by the sports media [23] [24] and by sports fans. [25] Tourists are called gringos regardless of their ethnic origins (i.e. Latin Americans or people from other regions, like Europe). [26] Jeria, Diego (11 November 2021). "Danilo Díaz vuelto loco y en éxtasis con Ben Brereton frente a Paraguay: destaca "el partidazo del gringo" de la Roja". Redgol . Retrieved 26 August 2023. Alternatively, it has been suggested that gringo could derive from the Caló language, the language of the Romani people of Spain, as a variant of the hypothetical * peregringo, 'peregrine', 'wayfarer', 'stranger'. [16] [17] Folk etymologies [ edit ] gringo - Definición - WordReference.com". www.wordreference.com (in Spanish) . Retrieved 1 December 2018. Persona nacida en Estados Unidos, en especial la de habla inglesa.Sometimes, it is used for people from some English-speaking countries, like Great Britain [35] or Canada. [36] Mexico [ edit ] A woman reading the English-language Gringo Gazette in Baja California Sur, Mexico Gustavo Arellano said that the term is "technically a slur", but "its power to offend nowadays is minimal". He compared the ban on the term as an attempt to cancel aspects of Mexican culture. [41] Other uses [ edit ] Food [ edit ]

a b Arellano, Gustavo (2022-02-11). "Column: The last lament of the California gringo". Los Angeles Times . Retrieved 2023-06-24. Johann Jakob von Tschudi (1847). Travels in Peru, During the Years 1838-1842: On the Coast, in the Sierra, Across the Cordilleras and the Andes, Into the Primeval Forests. D. Bogue. p. 122. Cómo sobrevivir en "gringolandia" según una chilena". Emol.com. 1 August 2014 . Retrieved 26 August 2023.

In the United States, gringo is often used by Latino Americans to refer to Anglo Americans. [5] Sometimes it is also used by Americans to refer to themselves. [41] It is considered to be a racial slur targeted towards non-Hispanic white people but it may also refer to any person that is not Latino. [42] [43] Among the US Latino communities it may also disparagingly refer to another Latino person perceived to not be culturally Latino, e.g. inability to speak Spanish. [44]

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