plural ghettos also ghettoes
1
history
: a quarter of a city especially in Europe in which Jews were formerly required to live
2
sometimes offensive; see usage paragraph below
: an underprivileged district of a city or town in which members of a minority group live especially because of social, legal, or economic pressure
3
disparaging + sometimes offensive; see usage paragraph below
a
: an isolated group
We are secluding ourselves in ideological ghettos. We don't have to debate rationally or even be exposed to ideas that contradict ours. We have our own news sources. We exchange ideas mostly or exclusively with people who agree with us, and troll those who don't.—John McCain and Mark Salter
b
: a situation that resembles a ghetto especially in conferring inferior status or limiting opportunity
In the 30's and into the 40's, I was a comic-book cartoonist and nothing more, laboring in what would soon become a kind of artistic ghetto in which people with authentic, if offbeat talents had to suffer the disdain of the mainstream.—Will Eisner
Usage of Ghetto
The noun ghetto in senses 2 and 3 is sometimes considered offensive in U.S. English due to its association with racist attitudes towards underprivileged city districts and the people who live in them.
disparaging + usually offensive; see usage paragraph below
: of, relating to, being, or characteristic of an underprivileged district of a city or town or the people who live there who are often members of minority groups
especially, disparaging + offensive
: characteristic of such people or such a district in a way that is suggestive of low social class
Usage of Ghetto
In the U.S., the adjective ghetto is strongly associated with racist attitudes towards the people who live in underprivileged city districts. Although the use of ghetto by and among residents of such districts may be considered neutral, its use by outsiders—particularly to disparage someone or something as being typical of such a city resident or district—is understood to be offensive.
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Merriam-Webster unabridged
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