BIPOC: difference between revisions

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→‎Phrase: Added coordinate term (using AjaxEdit)
→‎Etymology: (1) Changed "early 2010s" to {{circa|2013}}. Basis: A false impression is given that the NYT is saying that the word could have existed in 2010, 2011 or 2012. The NYT is not saying that. They are merely stating that the earliest use they could find was from 2013. Hence if Wiktionary wants to follow the NYT article, better to pin the word to this date than to say "somewhere between 2010 and 2015". (2) Repositioned "adaption" section. Basis: the quoted NYT text doesn't directly say
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===Etymology===
===Etymology===
Adaptation of {{m|en|POC}}, early 2010s.<ref>{{cite-web
{{circa|2013}}<ref>{{cite-web
|title=Where Did BIPOC Come From?
|title=Where Did BIPOC Come From?
|author=Sandra E. Garcia
|author=Sandra E. Garcia
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|date=2020-06-17
|date=2020-06-17
|url=https://www.nytimes.com/article/what-is-bipoc.html
|url=https://www.nytimes.com/article/what-is-bipoc.html
|passage=The acronym stands for “black, Indigenous and people of color.” Though it is now ubiquitous in some corners of Twitter and Instagram, the earliest reference The New York Times could find on social media was a 2013 tweet.}}</ref>
|passage=The acronym stands for “black, Indigenous and people of color.” Though it is now ubiquitous in some corners of Twitter and Instagram, the earliest reference The New York Times could find on social media was a 2013 tweet.}}</ref> adaptation of {{m|en|POC}}.


===Pronunciation===
===Pronunciation===

Revision as of 22:57, 7 June 2022

English

Alternative forms

Etymology

c. 2013[1] adaptation of POC.

Pronunciation

  • Lua error in Module:accent_qualifier at line 157: You must now specify a language code in 1=; alternatively, use the a= param of Template:IPA IPA(key): /ˈbaɪpɑk/

Phrase

(deprecated template usage) BIPOC

  1. Initialism of black, indigenous, and (other) people of color.
    Coordinate terms: BBIPOC, MOC, NBPOC, POC, QTBIPOC, WOC
    • 2015, Alyssa Teekah, This is What a Feminist Slut Looks Like[2], Demeter Press, →ISBN:
      While BIPOC come disproportionately from immigrant, lower income social experiences, this cannot account for all people. [] The idea that all BIPOC know “what whiteness is about” presumes that all of us go through institutions in the same way and are aware in the same way.
    • 2017, Libby Chamberlain, Pantsuit Nation[3], page 149:
      Keep yourself educated on the issues, follow BIPOC, LGBTQIA, and other marginalized groups' pages.
    • 2019, Maisie Hill, Period Power: Harness Your Hormones and Get Your Cycle Working For You, Bloomsbury Publishing (→ISBN), page 172:
      Tone policing is a tactic used by those with privilege to silence those who don't by focusing on the ‘tone’ of what is being said, rather than the actual content. It is when white people ask BIPOC to say what we're saying in a “nicer” way. []
    • For more quotations using this term, see Citations:BIPOC.

References

  1. ^ Sandra E. Garcia (2020 June 17) “Where Did BIPOC Come From?”, in New York Times[1]:The acronym stands for “black, Indigenous and people of color.” Though it is now ubiquitous in some corners of Twitter and Instagram, the earliest reference The New York Times could find on social media was a 2013 tweet.