Quote (ACIDY_REACHES @ Sep 25 2010 12:44am)
what does hboy stand for
H
Hajji, Hadji, Haji
(US) Used by some U.S. servicemembers to describe Iraqis or Arabs. Refers to Hadji, boy-adventurer Johnny Quest's swarthy, white-turban clad, vaguely Southwest-Asian sidekick[citation needed]. Not to be confused with the honorific Al-Hajji, the title given to a Muslim who has completed the Hajj (pilgrimage to Mecca).[92][93]
Half-breed
A derogatory term used to describe anyone who is mixed Native American (especially North American) and white European parentage. Métis is a French term for half-breed.
Half Caste
(UK) Derogatory term against people who are born of mixed race.[94]
Haole
(US, Hawaiian) A non-native, used by Hawaiians mainly to refer to whites (less commonly to refer to non-Hawaiians). Can be used neutrally, dependent on context.[95]
Heeb, Hebe
(U.S.) offensive term for a Jewish person, derived from the word "Hebrew".[96][97]
Hindoo
(AUS) 19th century, Hindu. Often not offensive.[98]
Honky also spelled "honkey" or "honkie"
(1) (U.S.) An offensive term for a white person. Derived from an African-American pronunciation of "hunky", the disparaging term for a Hungarian laborer. The first record of its use as an insulting term for a white person dates from the 1950s.[99]
House Nigger
(U.S.) A derogatory term for affluent or highly-educated African-Americans. Derived from the fact that African slaves who worked in the homes of their masters gained their favor, and were able to advance socially by reporting suspicious slaves and or activity.[100]
Hun
(U.S. and U.K.) 1) A derogatory term for Germans, especially German soldiers; popular during World War I.[101] Derived from a speech given by Kaiser Wilhelm of Germany to the German contingent sent to China during the Boxer Rebellion in which exhorted them to "be like Huns" (i.e., savage and ruthless) to their Chinese enemy. 2) An offensive term for a Protestant in Northern Ireland.[102][103]
Hymie
(U.S.) offensive term for a Jewish person, derived from the personal name Hyman (from the Hebrew name Chayyim). Jesse Jackson provoked controversy by referring to New York City as "Hymietown" in 1984.[104]
H-Boy.