Colored People's Time
English edit
Etymology edit
Facetious treatment as a time zone.
Pronunciation edit
Audio (AU) (file)
Noun edit
Colored People's Time (uncountable)
- (US, dated derogatory slang, sometimes reclaimed) A notional system of time (or time zone) which others sometimes derogatorily ascribe to African Americans, and which they sometimes jocularly ascribe to themselves, to account for their supposed tendency to be tardy.
- 1967 January 27, Martin Luther King, Jr., quoted in Stephen B. Oates, Let the Trumpet Sound (1994), p. 338:
- “Colored People's Time,” King said with a grin. “It always takes us longer to get where we're going.”
- 1967 January 27, Martin Luther King, Jr., quoted in Stephen B. Oates, Let the Trumpet Sound (1994), p. 338: