Yângâ tî Angelë Sepe

Pandôo Sepe

highlander \haɪ.læn.dɚ\

  1. wahötö
    • Other essayists, however, detect significant distinctions between highlander and lowlander—differences in racial attitudes (abolitionist or rabid racist), in the types of work that African Americans performed, and in the extent to which perceptions of whiteness shaped how outsiders understood the region and acted toward it. — (John C. Inscoe, Appalachians and Race: “Introduction” , 10, 2001)