Hood noun A distinctively coloured fold of material, representing a university degree. Ghetto noun An area in which people who are distinguished by sharing something other than ethnicity concentrate or are concentrated.
Hood noun An enclosure that protects something, especially from above. Ghetto noun An isolated, self-contained, segregated subsection, area or field of interest; often of minority or specialist interest.
Hood noun automotive A soft top of a convertible car or carriage. Ghetto adjective Of or relating to a ghetto or to ghettos in general. Hood noun The hinged cover over the engine of a motor vehicle: known as a bonnet in other countries. Ghetto adjective Unseemly and indecorous or of low quality; cheap; shabby, crude. Hood noun A metal covering that leads to a vent to suck away smoke or fumes. Ghetto adjective Characteristic of the style, speech, or behavior of residents of a predominantly black or other ghetto in the United States.
Hood noun slang gangster, thug. Ghetto adjective Having been raised in a ghetto in the United States. Hood noun slang neighborhood. Ghetto verb To confine a specified group of people to a ghetto. Hood noun UK person wearing a hoodie. Ghetto noun A quarter of a city where Jews live in greatest numbers. Hood verb To cover something with a hood. Ghetto noun Any section of a town inhabited predominantly by members of a specific ethnic, national or racial group, such segregation usually arising from social or economic pressure.
Ghetto noun Any isolated group of people. Hood noun State; condition. Ghetto noun Any group isolated by external pressures, with an implication of inferiority. Hood noun A covering or garment for the head or the head and shoulders, often attached to the body garment.
Hood noun Anything resembling a hood in form or use. Hood noun The endmost plank of a strake which reaches the stem or stern. Ghetto noun a poor densely populated city district occupied by a minority ethnic group linked together by economic hardship and social restrictions. Hood noun Same as hoodlum. Hood noun Same as neighborhood. Hood verb To cover with a hood; to furnish with a hood or hood-shaped appendage. Hood verb To cover; to hide; to blind. Hood noun an aggressive and violent young criminal.
Hood noun metal covering leading to a vent that exhausts smoke or fumes. Hood noun the folding roof of a carriage. Hood noun a headdress that protects the head and face. Hood noun a large hood-shaped piece of fabric, typically trimmed with fur or a similar material, worn over the shoulders of a university gown or a surplice to indicate the wearer's degree.
Hood noun a leather covering for a hawk's head. Hood noun a thing resembling a hood in shape or use. Hood noun a folding waterproof cover of a car, pram, etc. Beautifulstarr No vast diference. I believe that the ghetto terminology was originally used, describing the history of the Jews being isolated, and mistreated collectively in Europe, forced to live in the same living space.
Now the terminology today is used to describe a guttery state of mind as well as living in the poor slums, especially for African-Americans. The hood is a more modern terminology version of the ghetto.
I think 'hood' can be an abreviation of 'neighborhood'. Kind of cliquish in connotation. Not neccesarily negative, and in a lot of cases, a badge of honor. Yup, I would say it's pretty much a lock after this post! The hood is short for neighborhood, specifically in the suburbs where there is a crime rate. You ain't never lied, don't let sunset catch you!!
In the hood, least folks have the sense to not fuck with you. In the ghetto, you better not even come across it because people don't give a fuck and they'd probably steal your wallet before you can blink.
To me a hood is a place you grew up in as a child, especially if you were poor and lived in an inner city area. Usually the hood was a few blocks, may 10 or 20 in a square, but it was your area, where you knew most people, and they knew you. Uusally you all went to the same schools and your mothers went to the same shops. Hoods were usually in areas some people may call gehttos, but many more were in more respectable areas where we call them neighbourhoods.
Its ghetto that people knocked the neighbour part off for ease and because they want to be more lazy and illiterate. Its an area where one could feel safe and know that no one would harm.
Leaving your hood would make you vulnerable. A ghetto on the other hand was originally an area set aside in Venice during the Middle ages for the Jews to live in and practice their trades.
In contrast to the past, the word Ghetto is used to refer to the area or part of any city where the poor and deprived minority groups reside in modern times. Ghetto has many versions of it across the globe, and all of have different categories and community.
In the past, the ghettos were treated badly. They were not allowed to leave their walls in which they were enclosed. The Jews were kept away rest of the city population. Keeping the essence of the word from the historical times, the word now refers to the slums or any minority caste dwelling of any rural area. Just like the Jews were made to lead a low life ghetto in present times is used for poverty-stricken people and their residence area.
The word hood emerged from the nearby neighborhood that lay in the southern part of Chicago where black people lived. Thus, it was derived from the word neighborhood.
Hood is also sometimes used as an acronym for the neighborhood in modern times. Hood is not like ghetto as people confuse it with being another synonym for the ghetto, but there are quite a few differences between them both.
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