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- 808a42e0ffb433853c52cd9e187c911380232563b4a06ab2b672e307a67a255d author "g Soh Chin".
- 808a42e0ffb433853c52cd9e187c911380232563b4a06ab2b672e307a67a255d date "2004-10-30".
- 808a42e0ffb433853c52cd9e187c911380232563b4a06ab2b672e307a67a255d isCitedBy Red_hair.
- 808a42e0ffb433853c52cd9e187c911380232563b4a06ab2b672e307a67a255d location "Singapore".
- 808a42e0ffb433853c52cd9e187c911380232563b4a06ab2b672e307a67a255d newspaper The_Straits_Times.
- 808a42e0ffb433853c52cd9e187c911380232563b4a06ab2b672e307a67a255d page "4".
- 808a42e0ffb433853c52cd9e187c911380232563b4a06ab2b672e307a67a255d quote "[M]any of my Singaporean friends felt the term 'ang moh' was definitely racist. Said one, with surprising finality: 'The original term was "ang moh gui" which means "red hair devil" in Hokkien. That's definitely racist.' However, the 'gui' bit has long been dropped from the term, defanging it considerably. … Both 'ang moh gui' and 'gwailo' – Cantonese for 'ghost guy' – originated from the initial Chinese suspicion of foreigners way back in those days when the country saw itself as the Middle Kingdom.".