by Truman45 October 6, 2015

Basically the equivallent to the n word except white people are honkys.
Remember only white people can call each other the h word just like only black people can call each other the n word. It is racist if a white person uses the n word and it is racist if a black person uses the h word.
Remember only white people can call each other the h word just like only black people can call each other the n word. It is racist if a white person uses the n word and it is racist if a black person uses the h word.
"What up honky." said Emeneim. "What up honky." said Harry Potter. "So are you from the ghetto too?" asked Harry Potter. "Yeah I think." said Emeneim.
by Very cool band kid named Jimmy January 11, 2021

Singer: "If you people at the bar don''t shut up, I will go all fucking honky tonk man on your ass!"
by TheFleeceMan September 20, 2019

What’s up my honky
by Popular guy69 March 7, 2020

by Tunky lala March 5, 2021

Honkies is a term used for Mechanics
And can be referenced to be a Middle Eastern Asian who sucks cock
And can be referenced to be a Middle Eastern Asian who sucks cock
by Smash Ash March 12, 2020

Disrespectful term for a white person, typically used by Black Americans in the late 1960s and early 1970s, at the height of the Black Power movement, as a conscious retort to the n-word. There is no general agreement on the derivation of the term. The term 'hunky', once used as a slur against Hungarian and other Central European immigrants, may have served as a model: or it may have been adapted from 'honky-tonk', a type of country music favoured by whites, to signify whiteness in general.
Unlike the n-word, 'honky' achieved little cultural traction in its original usage, and never seems to have been reappropriated by those at who it was aimed (there are no 'proud honkies'). It is mainly encountered now in popular literature and movies of the period, and otherwise sounds very much of its time.
Unlike the n-word, 'honky' achieved little cultural traction in its original usage, and never seems to have been reappropriated by those at who it was aimed (there are no 'proud honkies'). It is mainly encountered now in popular literature and movies of the period, and otherwise sounds very much of its time.
by Paul Bee March 14, 2021
