halalcore
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English
[edit]Etymology
[edit]Borrowed from Hindustani حَلال خور (halāl xor) / हलालख़ोर (halālxor), from Classical Persian حلال خور (halāl xor).
Noun
[edit]halalcore (plural halalcores)
- (British India) A sweeper or scavenger; a person of very low caste.
- 1822, [Robert Grenville Wallace], Fifteen Years in India; or, Sketches of a Soldier's Life[2], London, page 227:
- But the woman who does not burn herself in the pile with her husband is deprived of her rights. She becomes the halalcrore of the family, doomed to perform the vilest offices of an outcast from society.
Alternative forms
[edit]Related terms
[edit]See also
[edit]References
[edit]- Henry Yule, A[rthur] C[oke] Burnell (1903) “halalcore”, in William Crooke, editor, Hobson-Jobson […] , London: John Murray, […], page 409.