Yes, "black" is politically correct, provided you are not referring to African-Americans. "African-American" would be wrong when referring to someone from, say, Jamaica. "Black" might be the preferred term for an individual whose nationality is unknown.
Arab is a politically correct term.
Yes Samuel Prescott was of African descent. His family was originally taken to America as slaves. It is not politically correct to say black.
person from Poland
Politically Correct??? Personal Computer???
It depends on your country.In the UK and the majority of Europe, the terms:BlackAfricanBritish-AfricanEuro-AfricanIn other countries such as the United States, it varies. For example, some states in the US consider "coloured" to be politically correct, while other states consider it to be a racist insult.So, there is no 100% politically correct term. Why do you need to describe someone by colour anyway? You don't refer to Caucasian friends as "white" - so why refer to non-Caucasians by the colour of their skin?Most people these days refer to them by their nationality. For example, someone of African decent born and living in the UK is British.
It is politically correct to say that black people are african-american. And white people are just white.
Arab is a politically correct term.
No such thing as politically correct lemonade.
Principled athletics Politically Correct Terms Database | Political Correctness | Politically Incorrect.PoliticallyCorrectTerm.com
Yes Samuel Prescott was of African descent. His family was originally taken to America as slaves. It is not politically correct to say black.
I think it would be
He's correct.
salesgirl
Politically correct
plumber
businessman
yes, you