different between wigga vs wilga

wigga

English

Noun

wigga (plural wiggas or wiggaz)

  1. Alternative spelling of wigger
    • 2000, Padgett Powell, Mrs. Hollingsworth's Men [1], ?ISBN, page 83:
      Forrest they say hard on the nigga, so he ain't gone cut no wigga no slack either, ...
    • 2003, Norman Kelley, A Phat Death: A Nina Halligan Mystery [2], ?ISBN, page 26:
      However, it hadn't sold well with the wiggas -- white suburban kids who dressed "black" and purchased most of the hardcore gangsta madness -- and that "caused" Sugar Dick to go G101, gangster mean.
    • 2007, Amy L. Best, Representing Youth [3], ?ISBN, page 4:
      The use of the term "American youth culture" may invoke images of urban hipsters, suburban wiggas, cheerleaders, graffiti writers, skater kids, youth of the African Diaspora with oversized pants slung low on the hips, or lesbian zine writers, but rarely does such a term invoke images of girls donning burkas, even if they are also in sequined prom dresses.

wigga From the web:

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wilga

English

Noun

wilga (plural wilgas)

  1. Geijera parviflora, a small tree or bush found in inland parts of eastern Australia, and grown elsewhere for its drought tolerance and its graceful willow-like weeping form.

Synonyms

  • dogwood
  • sheepbush

Polish

Etymology

From Proto-Slavic *j?v?lga.

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /?v?il.?a/

Noun

wilga f

  1. Any oriole of the genus Oriolus, especially the golden oriole (Oriolus oriolus).

Declension

Further reading

  • wilga in Wielki s?ownik j?zyka polskiego, Instytut J?zyka Polskiego PAN
  • wilga in Polish dictionaries at PWN

wilga From the web:

  • what does a wilga mean
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