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1879, George Ripley, Charles Anderson Dana, The New American Cyclopædia: A Popular Dictionary of General Knowledge, volume , page 89:
In the production of the ladino the white element has almost always been represented by the father […]
2006, Charles R. Hale, More Than an Indian, School for Advanced Research on the, →ISBN:
Yolanda's fluctuation between mestizo and ladino is symptomatic of this analytical dilemma. Her inclination to embrace mestizaje signals a deep process of social change underway, in which critical ladino / mestizo self-making has played [a part...]
2011, David Theo Goldberg, The Threat of Race: Reflections on Racial Neoliberalism, John Wiley & Sons, →ISBN:
Differentiated from both mulat(t)o and ladino, mestizo/mestico references specifically the mixing of white and Indian, whether phenotypically (simply in terms of the offspring of mixed intercourse) or culturally, and even linguistically.
Inherited from Old Spanishladino, variant of latino. In mediaeval Spain, both ladino and latino could refer to either Spanish or Latin,[1] since most early Romance speakers thought that their languages were simply Latin. A similar tendency persisted in Judezmo (see for example the Ferrara Bible); many Sephardim thought that their language was simply Castilian or Spanish.
Oy el ladino tiene una vistimienta respektable sigun konviene a una lengua ke es eskrita desde mas de 500 anyos
Today Ladino has respectable apparel: it fits a language that has been written for more than five centuries.
References
^ Max Weinreich (2008) Shlomo Noble, Joshua A. Fishman, transl., Paul Glasser, editor, History of the Yiddish Language, volume I, New Haven: Yale University Press, →ISBN, page A110
^ “ladino”, in Trezoro de la Lengua Djudeoespanyola [Treasure of the Judeo-Spanish Language] (in Ladino, Hebrew, and English), Instituto Maale Adumim
Inherited from Latinlatīnus; compare latín, latino, doublets which were borrowed later. Compare also Portugueseladino(“learned, cultured”). The sense of "astute" or "crafty" developed from medieval times, when the word was used to describe scholars and learned people, who were familiar with Latin and were involved in a process of "Latinization", i.e. using and incorporating learned terms. It was also used as a general designation for Romance speakers in the Middle Ages, as opposed to others speaking different kinds of languages, especially Arabic in the context of Spain/Iberia (compare the name of Ladino, the Sephardic Jewish language of Spain, descended from a form of Old Spanish, as well as the Ladin of northern Italy). The sense of "mestizo" developed in colonial Central America when the term was originally applied to those indigenous people who came to speak only Spanish.[1]