An offensive and insulting term for any Black African.
Sinônimos
Examples for "kaffir"
Examples for "kaffir"
1He was on a kaffir path heading out to who knows where.
2I gave you your kaffir concert, now I want my brigadier concert!
3I admit I phoned Pretoria about the kaffir concert, I admit that.
4Always remember, when you hit a kaffir, stay away from his head.
5But Granpa Chook had done enough running for one old kaffir chicken.
1Your highness is just in your indignation-thekafir deserves to be impaled.
2And the king said, I have been foolish, I have been weak, to waste words on this kafir.
3One of his attendants here abruptly asked, what a Christian was "Why, a kafir," rejoined the governor.
4The Kafir thief had driven them off in the direction of Somerset.
5There is no difficulty in distinguishing at first sight Moslem from Kafir.
1The African buffalo (Syncerus caffer) has been implicated as the reservoir of several bovine infectious agents.
2But the most surprising plant of the Desert is the "Kengwe or Keme" ('Cucumis caffer'), the watermelon.
3The flesh that is the least adapted for drying is that of the buffalo (Bos Caffer), which is exceedingly tough and coarse.
1It was the caffre corn of Africa, and had every appearance of proving a useful grain.
2The ship was sent out at the time of the Caffre war.
3Mokanna, after using every exertion, accompanied the Caffre army in their flight.
4I forgot, in describing my journey, the regal-looking Caffre housemaid at Eerste River.
5Another and smaller bridles the fierce Caffre tribes of South Africa.
6Among the many eventful matters of 1846 was a Caffre war.
7We found the Cape Colony suffering from the long continuance of the Caffre war.
8These women's tracks may be seen at every Caffre village.
9The Matebele, or Makonkobi-theCaffre family living on the eastern side of the country; 2d.
10No; but there are many races to the northward which we consider as Caffre races.
11They consider the name Caffre as an insulting epithet.
12I have already said they were northern Caffre tribes, dispossessed of their territory by Chaka.
13Three young men, Davis, Caffre and McClure, pursued them.
14Fairburn continues his Story-Mokanna's Fate-Disturbances among the Caffre Tribes
15The Caffre obeyed, and Tom swallowed the potion.
16Here, Fred, give me that diabolical gourd; it is haunted by the soul of a Caffre medicine man.