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・ Douglas Argyll Robertson
・ Douglas Arizona Port of Entry
・ Douglas Armati
・ Douglas Armstrong
・ Douglas Arrowsmith
・ Douglas Arterial Road
・ Douglas Arthur Davies
・ Douglas Arthur Teed
・ Douglas Athletic F.C.
・ Douglas Augusto Mendes dos Santos
・ Douglas Avenue Alternative School
・ Douglas Aziz
・ Dougherty, Oklahoma
・ Dougherty, Rains County, Texas
・ Dougherty, Texas
Doughface
・ Doughiska
・ Doughnut
・ Doughnut (disambiguation)
・ Doughnut (driving)
・ Doughnut Formation
・ Doughnuts and Society
・ Doughoregan Manor
・ Doughton
・ Doughton Park
・ Doughty
・ Doughty Centre
・ Doughty Hanson & Co
・ Doughty House
・ Doughty House (Mount Pleasant, Michigan)


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Doughface : ウィキペディア英語版
Doughface
The term doughface originally referred to an actual mask made of dough, but came to be used in a disparaging context for someone, especially a politician, who is perceived to be pliable and moldable.〔Vintage Vocabulary, accessed 22 April 2007 at http://www.vintage-vocabulary.com/19th/doughface.html〕 In the 1847 Webster's dictionary ''doughfacism'' was defined as "the willingness to be led about by one of stronger mind and will."〔Richards p. 86〕 In the years leading up to the American Civil War, "doughface" was used to describe Northerners who favored the Southern position in political disputes. Typically it was applied to a Northern Democrat who was more often allied with the Southern Democrats than with the majority of Northern Democrats.〔Richards pp. 85–86〕
==Origin of the term==
The expression was coined by John Randolph, a , during the Missouri Compromise debates. Randolph had no respect for northerners who voted with the South, considering them, in historian Leonard Richards' words, "weak men, timid men, half-baked men." Randolph said of them:
John Randolph may actually have said "doe faces" instead of "dough faces": the pronunciation would have been identical, and Randolph was a hunter, sometimes bringing his hunting dog with him to Congress. Ascribing "doe faces" (or "doe's faces") to those he despised would have been Randolph's comment on the weakness of these men.〔
In 1820 seventeen doughfaces made the Missouri Compromise possible. In 1836 sixty northern congressmen voted with the South in the passage of a gag rule to prevent anti-slavery petitions from being formally received in the House of Representatives. In 1847 twenty-seven northerners joined with the South in opposing the Wilmot Proviso, and in 1850 thirty-five supported a stronger fugitive slave law. By 1854 the South had changed its position on the Missouri Compromise and fifty-eight northerners supported its repeal in the Kansas-Nebraska Act.〔Richards pp. 86–87〕

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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