| ÊËÊ 'Âëàäìèíåñ' |
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09 Ìàðò 2026, 02:57:14
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| Íîâîñòè: Æäåì âñåõ â íàøåì êàòàëîãå Ôåëèíîëîãè÷åñêèõ îðãàíèçàöèé. Âàñ åùå íåò â íàøåì êàòàëîãå? Òàê äîáàâüòå ñêîðåå!!! |
|  |  | Íà÷àëî |  | Ïîìîùü | Ïîèñê | Êàëåíäàðü |  |
It refers to a period of unseasonably warm, dry weather occurring in late autumn (typically October or November) after the first frost.
The short answer is: increasingly, yes, many people consider it problematic, though it has not been universally rejected. is indian summer a derogatory term
Is it as overtly hostile as a racial slur? No. But is it a ? For many Indigenous people and a growing number of others, yes —because it historically frames Native Americans as deceptive, unreliable, or dangerous. Using it today is not malicious for most people, but it relies on a colonial-era stereotype that many find disrespectful. It refers to a period of unseasonably warm,
As with any potentially dated term, the respectful choice is simply to use one of the many clear, non-stereotyped alternatives. Language changes; this is one change that costs very little and shows awareness of history. Using it today is not malicious for most
To understand why, we need to look at the term's murky origins and how language evolves.