Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Agree it depends on the context.
If just to more finely describe then it's no different than saying someone is short, fat, tall, has red hair, wears glasses, had a weird hat, tattoo of Popeye, walked with a limp, .....
tattoo of Popeye
lol
Anonymous wrote:Depends on the story and the context. I'm black though, so unless race is essential to the story, whites don't volunteer that information to me.
Anonymous wrote:It bothers me. I'm white. The reason it bothers me is that you never hear someone mention that someone was white, only black or Latino.
Anonymous wrote:Agree it depends on the context.
If just to more finely describe then it's no different than saying someone is short, fat, tall, has red hair, wears glasses, had a weird hat, tattoo of Popeye, walked with a limp, .....
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It does when it adds nothing to the conversation. Example: my former co-worker would frequently say things like "My korean friend came over to my house on Saturday." In my head I'm thinking...."and you made Korean food" but nope my co-worker is just giving me a fun fact. It's odd.
or maybe he is just letting you know which friend came over. If you don't know his friend's names then he is just describing the friend that came over.
Anonymous wrote:It does when it adds nothing to the conversation. Example: my former co-worker would frequently say things like "My korean friend came over to my house on Saturday." In my head I'm thinking...."and you made Korean food" but nope my co-worker is just giving me a fun fact. It's odd.