English edit

Etymology edit

white +‎ skin

Noun edit

whiteskin (plural whiteskins)

  1. (chiefly ethnic slur) A white person.
    • 1895, The Inland Educator: A Journal for the Progressive Teacher[1], volumes 1-2, →OCLC, page 84:
      Did the force or combination of forces, which made a group of white-skinned people, also break up that group into diverse Hamitic, Semitic, and Aryan whiteskins ― if so, how?
    • 2001 November 1, S. L. Viehl, Shockball: A Stardoc Novel (Stardoc)‎[2], Penguin, →ISBN, →OCLC:
      Hok introduced me and Reever as whiteskin friends of the tribe.
      The bride's mother, who had the rather menacing name Veda Wolfkiller, gave me the once-over. “You don't look much whiteskin to me.”
      “I'm only half-white,” I said, []
    • 2012 April 23, rebcar...@gmail.com, “Here Is How It Works”, in soc.culture.israel[3] (Usenet):
      After that, we round up the whiteskin degenerates who helped the kikes set up this foul System, and weed the African animals they used to terrorize our communities.

Derived terms edit