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Negro
1[nee-groh]
noun
plural
NegroesAnthropology., (no longer in technical use) a member of the peoples traditionally classified as the Negro race, especially those who originate in sub-Saharan Africa.
Older Use: Often Offensive., a Black person.
adjective
Anthropology., (no longer in technical use) of, relating to, or characteristic of one of the traditional racial divisions of humankind, generally marked by brown to black skin pigmentation, dark eyes, and tightly curled hair and including especially the Indigenous peoples of Africa south of the Sahara.
Older Use., of or relating to Black people, often African Americans: the Negro leagues in baseball.
a Negro spiritual;
the Negro leagues in baseball.
Negro
2[ney-groh, ne-g
noun
a river in NW South America, flowing SE from E Colombia through N Brazil into the Amazon. 1,400 miles (2,255 km) long.
a river in S Argentina, flowing E from the Andes to the Atlantic. 700 miles (1,125 km) long.
a river in SE South America, flowing S from Brazil and W through Uruguay, to the Uruguay River. About 500 miles (800 km) long.
Negro
1/ ˈnɛɡ-, ˈneɪɡrəʊ /
noun
a river in NW South America, rising in E Colombia (as the Guainía) and flowing east, then south as part of the border between Colombia and Venezuela, entering Brazil and continuing southeast to join the Amazon at Manáus. Length: about 2250 km (1400 miles)
a river in S central Argentina, formed by the confluence of the Neuquén and Limay Rivers and flowing east and southeast to the Atlantic. Length: about 1014 km (630 miles)
a river in central Uruguay, rising in S Brazil and flowing southwest into the Uruguay River. Length: about 467 km (290 miles)
Negro
2/ ˈniːɡrəʊ /
noun
a member of any of the dark-skinned indigenous peoples of Africa and their descendants elsewhere
adjective
relating to or characteristic of Negroes
Sensitive Note
Other Word Forms
- Negroism noun
Word History and Origins
Origin of Negro1
Word History and Origins
Origin of Negro1
Example Sentences
Jason Negro, St. John Bosco: The Braves have established themselves as the No. 1 team in California, if not the nation, while relying on an improving sophomore quarterback and four receivers headed to college success.
The film also relates how, even after World War II ended, Japanese Americans were often unwelcome in their old neighborhoods, and Japanese baseball leagues sprung up like the Negro Leagues.
To his taste, they were all fatally compromised by politics, overly willing to forge compromises with labor unions, “Negro agitators,” student radicals and other Communistic forces.
The Braves were called for 20 penalties, a record under coach Jason Negro.
A celebration of the players who led the way in the Negro Leagues—and the black stars who shone in the modern era.
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