Hyphenated ethnicity: Difference between revisions

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{{short description|Term combining an ethnicity with a country of residence}}
A '''hyphenated ethnicity''' or '''hyphenated identity''' is a reference to an [[ethnicity]] or [[national origin]] combined with the name of the country of residence or citizenship.<ref name=visco>Visconti, L., Jafari, A., Batat, W., Broeckerhoff, A., Dedeoglu, A., Demangeot, C., ... Weinberger, M. F. (2014). "Consumer ethnicity three decades after: A TCR agenda", ''Journal of Marketing Management'', 30, 1882-1922. ([https://pure.strath.ac.uk/portal/files/36830777/Visconti_etal_JMM_consumer_ethnicity_three_decades_after.pdf online])</ref> The term is an extension of the term "[[hyphenated American]]". The term refers to the use of a [[hyphen]] between the name of an ethnicity and the name of the country in [[compound noun]]s: [[Irish-American]], etc., although modern English language style guides recommend dropping the hyphen: "Irish American".
 
The concept should not be confused with that of [[mixed ethnicity]] and [[multiracial]]ity, i.e., the ethnicity or race of a person whose parents have different ethnicities/races, which can also be written in a hyphenated way.