Citations:saditty


 * 1967, Jet Magazine, July 20, 1967
 * Not only was Eartha, who is considered "seditty" by many Negroes, an eloquent Capital Hill spokesman for those young Dee Cee "rebels with a cause," but the volatile singer-actress is now laying elaborate plans to build a huge trade school for Negroes and other minorities somewhere between Las Vegas and Los Angeles that will "train them for real jobs that are attainable."
 * 1971, National Office for Black Catholics, Freeing the Spirit, page 40:
 * I may be fluent in siditty "Standard English" and hold a high post in a big corporation, or I may be foreman over a white crew at a largely white manufacturing plant;
 * 1997, Wil Haygood, The Haygoods of Columbus, page 122:
 * "Seddity" was one of my mother's favorite words for her enemies. Once she had marked someone as seddity, that was pretty much it; it was their scarlet letter as far as she was concerned.
 * 2000, Mary Pattillo-McCoy, Black Picket Fences: Privilege and Peril Among the Black Middle Class
 * She described herself as “naïve” and “sheltered,” and said that her friends affectionately called her “sadity,” an old black vernacular term for snobbish.
 * 2004, Darrious D. Hilmon, Divalicious
 * That doesn’t mean she has to speak so sadity.
 * 2006, Teresa Seals, Taylor Made
 * A perfect word for her: Sadity. Most people perceive her as arrogant, but when she opens her mouth, you can tell the girl is straight from the hood.
 * She described herself as “naïve” and “sheltered,” and said that her friends affectionately called her “sadity,” an old black vernacular term for snobbish.
 * 2004, Darrious D. Hilmon, Divalicious
 * That doesn’t mean she has to speak so sadity.
 * 2006, Teresa Seals, Taylor Made
 * A perfect word for her: Sadity. Most people perceive her as arrogant, but when she opens her mouth, you can tell the girl is straight from the hood.