Paki
English
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /ˈpæki/
Audio (Southern England) (file)
- Rhymes: -æki
Noun
Paki (plural Pakis) (offensive, ethnic slur)
- (UK, Canada, India) A Pakistani.
- (UK, Canada) Anyone whose origins are perceived to be from South Asia/the Indian subcontinent.
- Paragraph 2, DPP v Collins ([2006] 1 WLR 2223)
- In these telephone calls and recorded messages the respondent, who held strong views on immigration and asylum policy and the provision of public support to immigrants and applicants for asylum, ranted and shouted and made reference to "Wogs", "Pakis", "Black bastards" and […] "Niggers".
- (UK) Ellipsis of Paki shop.
Usage notes
Paki acquired offensive connotations in the 1960s when used by British tabloids to refer to subjects of former colony states in a derogatory and racist manner. In modern British usage "Paki" is typically a derogatory label referring to South Asians beyond Pakistan, including those from India, Afghanistan and elsewhere. To a lesser extent, it has also been applied to Arabs and others perceived to resemble South Asians. During the 1960s many emigrants were also dubbed as "black" to further segregate them from the white community. Some would say such a division still exists in parts of England.
In recent times there has been a trend by second and third-generation British Pakistanis to reclaim the word, so that it can be used between young British Pakistanis, but not by outsiders, even Indians and Bangladeshis.
Descendants
- English: akhi (“British Asian”)
Translations
Adjective
Paki (not comparable)
Derived terms
Translations
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French
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /pa.ki/
Audio (file)