injun
See also: Injun
English
Alternative forms
Etymology
Variant of Indian. Compare Cajun. First attested in the 1805–15.
Pronunciation
Noun
injun (plural injuns)
- (US, slang, offensive) A Native American.
- 1995, Pocahontas, spoken by John Smith:
- We'll kill ourselves an injun, and maybe two or three!
- 1999, “What Do You Want Me to Say?”, in Emergency & I, performed by the Dismemberment Plan:
- You want a problem, well I guess we got one now / I really don't know how / There's injuns over every goddamn hill
- 2024 February 2, Ellen E. Jones, “Beyond the pale: where are all the films about ‘whiteness’?”, in Katharine Viner, editor, The Guardian[1], London: Guardian News & Media, →ISSN, →OCLC:
- Instead of grudgingly admitting the “Injuns” weren’t so bad after all, it actually explores the conflicted culpability of individual white Americans.
Derived terms
Translations
Native American — see Indian
Further reading
- Native American name controversy § injun on Wikipedia.Wikipedia