dago

英 ['deɪgəʊ] 美
  • n. 外国佬(对意大利人、西班牙人、葡萄牙人的蔑称)
  • n. (Dago)人名;(法、西、不丹)达戈
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dago 拉丁佬

来自西班牙语Diego,即James. 西班牙常用人名,用来代指西班牙人,后延伸至意大利人,最后指所有拉丁语人。

dago
dago: [18] Dago originated in the USA as a contemptuous term for a Spanish-speaking person. It is an alteration of Diego (the Spanish version of James), a common Spanish forename, which itself was used in English in the 17th century for ‘Spaniard’: ‘Next follows one whose lines aloft do raise Don Coriat, chief Diego of our days’. By the late 19th century the application of dago had broadened out to include anyone of Spanish, Portuguese, or Italian descent.
=> james
dago (n.)
1823, from Spanish Diego "James." Originally used of Spanish or Portuguese sailors on English or American ships; by 1900 it had broadened to include non-sailors and shifted to mean chiefly "Italian." James the Greater is the patron saint of Spain, and Diego as generic for "a Spaniard" is attested from 1610s.