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  2. Yankee - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yankee

    "Yankee, go home", anti-American banner in Liverpool, United Kingdom. The shortened form Yank is used as a derogatory, pejorative, playful, or colloquial term for Americans in Britain, [50] Australia, [51] Canada, [52] South Africa, [53] Ireland, [54] and New Zealand. [55] The full Yankee may be considered mildly derogatory, depending on the ...

  3. J. L. Granatstein - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/J._L._Granatstein

    Yankee Go Home?: Canadians and Anti-Americanism (1996) Granatstein maintains that what began as a justifiable fear of invasion eventually became a tool of the economic and political elites bent on preserving their power. At first, anti-Americanism was largely the Tory way of keeping pro-British attitudes uppermost in the minds of Canadians.

  4. Anti-Americanism - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anti-Americanism

    In the online Oxford Dictionaries, the term "anti-Americanism" is defined as "Hostility to the interests of the United States". [21]In the first edition of Webster's American Dictionary of the English Language (1828) the term "anti-American" was defined as "opposed to America, or to the true interests or government of the United States; opposed to the revolution in America".

  5. Yankee ingenuity - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yankee_ingenuity

    Yankee ingenuity is an American English idiom in reference to the inventiveness, rugged expertise, self-reliance and individual enterprise associated with the Yankees, who originated in New England and developed much of the industrial revolution in the United States after 1800. [1] The stereotype first appeared in the 19th century.

  6. Anti-American sentiment in Germany - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anti-American_sentiment_in...

    James Wakefield Burke: Ami go home. Ein Roman aus unseren Tagen (Ami go home. A Novel from our Days), Amsel, Berlin, 1954; Reinhard Federmann : Ami go home. Stück in 25 Szenen (Ami go home. Piece in 25 Scenes), Sessler, Pfarrkirchen, Munich o.J. [around 1983] Rolf Winter : Ami go home: Plädoyer für den Abschied von einem gewalttätigen Land ...

  7. White Anglo-Saxon Protestants - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/White_Anglo-Saxon_Protestants

    [2] [3] Historically or most consistently, WASPs are of British descent, though the definition of WASP varies in this respect. [4] It was seen to be in exclusionary contrast to Catholics, Jews, Irish, immigrants, southern or eastern Europeans, and the non-White.

  8. Talk:Yankee - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Talk:Yankee

    The term Yankee isn't ambiguous when describing the ethnic group; like the usage of Cajun, minor historical differences occurred based on time period; the original Yankees and their dispersal throughout the USA, a Civil War meaning, and the broadest definition- which is the Yankee American ethnic group.

  9. Depersonalization - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Depersonalization

    Depersonalization is a dissociative phenomenon characterized by a subjective feeling of detachment from oneself, manifesting as a sense of disconnection from one's thoughts, emotions, sensations, or actions, and often accompanied by a feeling of observing oneself from an external perspective.