Gentile is a reference to 'goy' or 'goyim'. For her to be referring to other white races as such, is highly racist, classiest, and anti-christian. That is a chick right? Wouldn't want to be anti-trans.
From Strong’s Concordance the only source you should use on pilpul -
GOYIM - Gentile, heathen, nation, people
Rarely (shortened) goy {go'-ee}; apparently from the same root as gevah (in the sense of massing); a foreign nation; hence, a Gentile; also (figuratively) a troop of animals, or a flight of locusts --
Gentile is not a “reference” to goy. The latter could conceivably be used as a pejorative, whereas the formal could not. It’s not being used as a slur in the tweet, which is the disingenuous “point” you’re trying (and failing) to make.
I suppose you are correct, it is not a 'reference' when both words mean the same thing. Now did you click the link, or are you just replying on autopilot?
Gentile is a reference to 'goy' or 'goyim'. For her to be referring to other white races as such, is highly racist, classiest, and anti-christian. That is a chick right? Wouldn't want to be anti-trans.
They are highly related words, you’re right:
From Strong’s Concordance the only source you should use on pilpul -
Gentile isn't a slur, idiot. It's not a "reference to goy or goyim." It's simply a word that means non-Jewish.
Oh, OK. here's the page you will need to edit to prove yourself right.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gentile
Gentile is not a “reference” to goy. The latter could conceivably be used as a pejorative, whereas the formal could not. It’s not being used as a slur in the tweet, which is the disingenuous “point” you’re trying (and failing) to make.
I suppose you are correct, it is not a 'reference' when both words mean the same thing. Now did you click the link, or are you just replying on autopilot?