The word honky tonk was invented by Daniel Andrew and it it is referred as an insult that literally means nothing but his friends Lewis Sam Iobe and Euan all love the word to.
by Danny fanny 204 November 26, 2019

by countryboy9617 July 8, 2017

A residential lawn or area of extremely well maintained grass that only white people put the time and money into caring for. The effort in lawncare outweighs the effort they put into their own wife or children. Typically associated with a pair of green stained, white, New Balance shoes and a riding mower with a light beer.
by WhitePeopling November 6, 2024

look at that honky
by Niggaquan May 6, 2021

Known as Thee Gaylord John whitt true Albino gorilla , White Boy Ghetto hence EGO Honky Kong fine tuned all skills at WestVegas known as Westville prison .
That is a true ghetto White boy thinks he's light skin not white skin. "Albino gorilla ego Honky Kong"
They call me Honky Kong cause I'm hung like a honky not a donkey
They call me Honky Kong cause I'm hung like a honky not a donkey
by HKGaylord July 20, 2025

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

by CDClock December 5, 2021
