Thora Wrote:I see it as more an issue of ambiguity. "American" more commonly refers to the US, so using it to refer to the Americas combined or a person from one of the continents is unusual and potentially unclear.
That reminds me of another reason the now so-called American people (from the continent) who are against Americans (from the USA) using the term American only for themselves: they say that, because of that, the term became corrupted and now they can no longer use it as they would like, but they would if that was fixed. I'm not so sure about that; I believe
I wouldn't use it, but they say that's only because the term was corrupted.
Quote:I find it interesting that this is an issue in some South/Latin American countries. Do some people refer to themselves as "American" or is it more about criticizing America's use of the term?
There's much concerning the way the USA uses the term to refer to their country as
America, with the justification being that it sounds as if they don't care about anywhere else in the continent. Calling the country America is worse than the fact that they call themselves Americans. I think, at least in Portuguese, that's because it sounds really weird if you think about it (actually, calling the
country "America" sounds strange for me too, but the demonym "American" doesn't. We're used to calling the country "Estados Unidos" all the time, without America, and that's where the suggested term "estadunidense" comes from.)
Quote:"The Americas" and "people in the Americas", etc works for the entire region. Students here are taught that N&S America are 2 separate continents, so we wouldn't consider "America" a single continent which the OP claims is correct. It seems like different countries teach it differently.
Yes, in Brazil we are taught that America is a single continent; many of us know that in the USA they teach that they are two, North and South, and that's actually something that the "anti-incorrect-use-of-the-American-term" criticize too.
Quote:But using "native americans", "america" or "american" today is more likely to be interpreted as US only. Indigeneous people in Canada aren't called native americans, for eg.
In Portuguese, "native american" (nativo americano) is almost exclusively used to refer to the indians / indigenous only, this time from the entire American continent. There's no differentiation between the indigenous native americans from North or South America. This also somewhat influences our thinking regarding the use of the term.
Thora Wrote:Now I'm curious what terms are used in other languages. Anyone?
North & South America; the Americas 南北アメリカ
the Americas; (Org of the) American States 米州
the Americas; the American continents* アメリカ大陸 《北米・中米・南米を含む》
the USA; America アメリカ(合衆国)
米国
In Chinese:
国 guó = country
洲 zhōu = continent
美国 Měiguó - The United States of America
美洲 Měizhōu - America (the continent)
美国人 Měiguórén - American (from the USA, more common)
美洲人 Měizhōurén - American (from the American continent)
北美洲人 (North American)
南美洲人 (South American)
美洲人, that is, using the continent name as a demonym, is not as common, but it's there.
Edited: 2012-09-24, 1:57 am