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mulatto
[ muh-lat-oh, -lah-toh, myoo- ]
noun
- Anthropology. (not in technical use) the offspring of one white parent and one Black parent.
- Older Use: Offensive. a person who has both Black and white ancestors.
adjective
- of a light-brown color.
mulatto
/ mjuːˈlætəʊ /
noun
- a person having one Black and one White parent
adjective
- of a light brown colour
Word History and Origins
Word History and Origins
Origin of mulatto1
Compare Meanings
How does mulatto compare to similar and commonly confused words? Explore the most common comparisons:
Example Sentences
Ten years after, she has yet to finish her second book, which has bloomed into an elephantine “four-hundred-year history of mulatto people in fictional form” — what her husband Lenny calls a “mulatto ‘War and Peace.’”
Washington and other white people used the word mulatto for such mixed-race people.
Morton identified Voorhees as “mulatto,” which some historians say in the 19th century often meant a Black person with mixed ancestry, including Indigenous ancestry.
But in her conversation with her cousin, she learned that census records showed that one of their ancestors, Webster’s fourth great-grandmother, had shifted in the 1800s from identifying as “mulatto” to “White” and started passing.
“A Lot of Nothing” touches on microaggressions, colorism, class, gentrification, fertility, veganism and the sexual fantasies of a biracial Black woman who is this movie’s update on the tragic mulatto trope.
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