Ramśek: Difference between revisions

1 byte removed ,  26 June 2023
m
Text replacement - "Uroms" to "Urom"
m (Text replacement - "Aboriginal" to "Urom")
m (Text replacement - "Uroms" to "Urom")
Tags: Mobile edit Mobile web edit
 
Line 3: Line 3:
[[File:Ramśek.jpg|thumb|Couple a' ''ramśekya'' in [[Cities of Kiravia#Primóra|Primóra]].]]
[[File:Ramśek.jpg|thumb|Couple a' ''ramśekya'' in [[Cities of Kiravia#Primóra|Primóra]].]]


The ''ramśek'' is distinguished from upper- and upper-middle class Coscivian urbanites and residents of "Mainline Coscivian" ethno-social groups, who nowadays tend to live in more upscale mixed-use areas of the major cities or in older affluent neighbourhoods, such as Perlitren on Valēka's Tandhurin Island. Instead, ''ramśekya'' generally belong to Coscivian ethnosocial groups that migrated during the Great Crossing, or to lower-status subgroups such as [[Hoppers]] and Highlanders that began moving to the cities during industrialisation. Urban working-class Celtic-Kiravians are usually not considered ''ramśekya'', even though many embody similar stereotypes. Non-Coscivian immigrants and urban Uroms in cities like [[Escarda]] are similarly excluded.
The ''ramśek'' is distinguished from upper- and upper-middle class Coscivian urbanites and residents of "Mainline Coscivian" ethno-social groups, who nowadays tend to live in more upscale mixed-use areas of the major cities or in older affluent neighbourhoods, such as Perlitren on Valēka's Tandhurin Island. Instead, ''ramśekya'' generally belong to Coscivian ethnosocial groups that migrated during the Great Crossing, or to lower-status subgroups such as [[Hoppers]] and Highlanders that began moving to the cities during industrialisation. Urban working-class Celtic-Kiravians are usually not considered ''ramśekya'', even though many embody similar stereotypes. Non-Coscivian immigrants and urban Urom in cities like [[Escarda]] are similarly excluded.


Classic characteristics associated with the ''ramśek'' are wearing a wifebeater, being either a monolingual speaker of an ethnic vernacular language or speaking the regional language or Kiravic with a heavy local urban accent, day drinking, and being a hardcore homer for the local professional sports franchise.
Classic characteristics associated with the ''ramśek'' are wearing a wifebeater, being either a monolingual speaker of an ethnic vernacular language or speaking the regional language or Kiravic with a heavy local urban accent, day drinking, and being a hardcore homer for the local professional sports franchise.