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Yankee

The term Yankee and its contracted form Yank have several interrelated meanings, all referring to people from the United States. Their various meanings depend on the context, and may refer to New Englanders, the Northeastern United States, the Northern United States, or to people from the US in general.[2][3][4]

Yankees
Yankee Americans
Regions with significant populations
United States, Northern States, New England
Languages
English
Religion
Majority:
Christianity (Protestantism) [1]

Outside the United States, Yank is used informally to refer to an American person or thing. It has been especially popular in the United Kingdom, Ireland, South Africa, Australia, and New Zealand where it may be used variously, either with an uncomplimentary overtone, endearingly, or cordially.[5][6] In the Southern United States, Yankee is a derisive term which refers to all Northerners, and during the American Civil War it was applied by Confederates to soldiers of the Union army in general. Elsewhere in the United States, it largely refers to people from the Northeastern states, but especially those with New England cultural ties, such as descendants of colonial New England settlers, wherever they live.[7] Its sense is sometimes more cultural than geographical, emphasizing the Calvinist Puritan Christian beliefs and traditions of the Congregationalists who brought their culture when they settled outside New England. The speech dialect of Eastern New England English is called "Yankee" or "Yankee dialect".[8]

Etymology and historical usage of the term edit

New Netherland origin edit

 
The New Netherland colony in America

Most linguists look to Dutch language sources, noting the extensive interaction between the Dutch colonists in New Netherland (parts of New York, New Jersey, and Delaware) and the English colonists in New England (Massachusetts, Rhode Island, and Connecticut).[9] The exact application, however, is uncertain; some scholars suggest that it was a term used in derision of the Dutch colonists, others that it was derisive of the English colonists.

Michael Quinion and Patrick Hanks argue that the term comes from the Dutch Janneke, a diminutive form of the given name Jan[10] which would be Anglicized by New Englanders as "Yankee" due to the Dutch pronunciation of J being the same as the English Y. Quinion and Hanks posit that it was "used as a nickname for a Dutch-speaking American in colonial times" and could have grown to include non-Dutch colonists, as well.[10] The Oxford English Dictionary calls this theory "perhaps the most plausible".

Alternatively, the Dutch given names Jan (Dutch: [jɑn]) and Kees (Dutch: [keːs]) have long been common, and the two are sometimes combined into a single name (Jan Kees). Its Anglicized spelling Yankee could, in this way, have been used to mock Dutch colonists. The chosen name Jan Kees may have been partly inspired by a dialectal rendition of Jan Kaas ("John Cheese"), the generic nickname that Southern Dutch used for Dutch people living in the North.[11]

The Online Etymology Dictionary gives its origin as around 1683, attributing it to English colonists insultingly referring to Dutch colonists. English privateer William Dampier relates his dealings in 1681 with Dutch privateer Captain Yanky or Yanke. Linguist Jan de Vries notes that there was mention of a pirate named Dutch Yanky in the 17th century.[12] The Life and Adventures of Sir Launcelot Greaves (1760) contains the passage, "Haul forward thy chair again, take thy berth, and proceed with thy story in a direct course, without yawing like a Dutch yanky."[13] According to this theory, Dutch settlers of New Amsterdam started using the term against the English colonists of neighboring Connecticut.[11]

New England use edit

British General James Wolfe made the earliest recorded use of the word "Yankee" in 1758 when he referred to the New England soldiers under his command. "I can afford you two companies of Yankees, and the more, because they are better for ranging and scouting than either work or vigilance".[14] Later British use of the word was in a derogatory manner, as seen in a cartoon published in 1775 ridiculing "Yankee" soldiers.[14] New Englanders themselves employed the word in a neutral sense; the "Pennamite–Yankee War", for example, was a series of clashes in 1769 over land titles in Pennsylvania between settlers from Connecticut Colony and "Pennamite" settlers from Pennsylvania.

The meaning of Yankee has varied over time. In the 18th century, it referred to residents of New England descended from the original English settlers of the region. Mark Twain used the word in this sense the following century in his 1889 novel A Connecticut Yankee in King Arthur's Court. As early as the 1770s, British people applied the term to any person from the United States. In the 19th century, Americans in the southern United States employed the word in reference to Americans from the northern United States, though not to recent immigrants from Europe. Thus, a visitor to Richmond, Virginia, commented in 1818, "The enterprising people are mostly strangers; Scots, Irish, and especially New England men, or Yankees, as they are called".[15]

Historically, it has also been used to distinguish American-born Protestants from later immigrants, such as Catholics of Irish descent.[16][17]

Rejected etymologies edit

Many etymologies have been suggested for the word Yankee, but modern linguists generally reject theories that suggest it originated in any Indian languages.[9] This includes a theory put forth by a British officer in 1789, who said that it was derived from the Cherokee word eankke meaning "coward"—despite the fact that no such word existed in the Cherokee language.[9] Another theory surmised that the word was borrowed from the Wyandot[18] pronunciation of the French l'anglais, meaning "the Englishman" or "the English language", which was sounded as Y'an-gee.[9][19]

American musicologist Oscar Sonneck debunked a romanticized false etymology in his 1909 work Report on "The Star-Spangled Banner", "Hail Columbia", "America", "Yankee Doodle". He cited a popular theory that claimed the word came from a tribe who called themselves Yankoos, said to mean "invincible". The story claimed that New Englanders had defeated this tribe after a bloody battle, and the remaining Yankoo Indians transferred their name to the victors—who were "agreeable to the Indian custom". Sonneck notes that multiple American writers since 1775 had repeated this story as if it were fact, despite what he perceived to be holes in it. It had never been the tradition of any Indian tribe to transfer their name to other peoples, according to Sonneck, nor had any settlers ever adopted an Indian name to describe themselves.[20] Sonneck concludes by pointing out that there was never a tribe called the Yankoos.[21]

Yankee nationality edit

Yankee settlement in the United States edit

 
Manifest Destiny, settlement of the United States
 
Yankee settlers

The original Yankees diffused widely across the northern United States, leaving their imprints in New York, the Upper Midwest, many taking advantage of water routes by the Great Lakes, and places as far away as Seattle, San Francisco, and Honolulu.[22]

Yankees settled other states in various ways: some joined highly organized colonization companies, others purchased groups of land together; some joined volunteer land settlement groups, and self-reliant individual families also migrated.[23] Yankees typically lived in villages consisting of clusters of separate farms. Often they were merchants, bankers, teachers, or professionals.[24][25]

Village life fostered local democracy, best exemplified by the open town meeting form of government that still exists today in New England. Village life also stimulated mutual oversight of moral behavior and emphasized civic virtue. The Yankees built international trade routes stretching to China by 1800 from the New England seaports of Boston, Salem, Providence, Newport, and New London, among others. Much of the profit from trading was reinvested in the textile and machine tools industries.[26]

Yankeeism is the general character of the Union. Yankee manners are as migratory as Yankee men. The latter are found everywhere and the former prevail wherever the latter are found. Although the genuine Yankee belongs to New England, the term "Yankee" is now as appropriate to the natives of the Union at large.[23]

Yankee politics edit

After 1800, Yankees spearheaded most American reform movements, including those for the abolition of slavery, temperance in use of alcohol, increase in women's political rights, and improvement in women's education. Emma Willard and Mary Lyon pioneered in the higher education of women, while Yankees comprised most of the reformers who went South during Reconstruction in the late 1860s to educate the Freedmen.[27]

Historian John Buenker has examined the worldview of the Yankee settlers in the Midwest:

 
Boston, New England capital

Because they arrived first and had a strong sense of community and mission, Yankees were able to transplant New England institutions, values, and mores, altered only by the conditions of frontier life. They established a public culture that emphasized the work ethic, the sanctity of private property, individual responsibility, faith in residential and social mobility, practicality, piety, public order and decorum, reverence for public education, activists, honest, and frugal government, town meeting democracy, and he believed that there was a public interest that transcends particular and stock ambitions. Regarding themselves as the elect and just in a world rife with sin and corruption, they felt a strong moral obligation to define and enforce standards of community and personal behavior…. This pietistic worldview was substantially shared by British, Scandinavian, Swiss, English-Canadian and Dutch Reformed immigrants, as well as by German Protestants and many of the Forty-Eighters.[28]

Yankees dominated New England, much of upstate New York, and much of the upper Midwest, and were the strongest supporters of the new Republican party in the 1860s. This was especially true for the Congregationalists, Presbyterians, and Methodists among them. A study of 65 predominantly Yankee counties showed that they voted only 40 percent for the Whigs in 1848 and 1852, but became 61–65 percent Republican in presidential elections of 1856 through 1864.[29]

Ivy League universities remained bastions of old Yankee culture until well after World War II, particularly Harvard and Yale.

Yankee stereotypes edit

 
President Calvin Coolidge of New England

President Calvin Coolidge exemplified the modern Yankee stereotype. Coolidge moved from rural Vermont to urban Massachusetts and was educated at elite Amherst College. Yet his flint-faced, unprepossessing ways and terse rural speech proved politically attractive. "That Yankee twang will be worth a hundred thousand votes", explained one Republican leader.[30] Coolidge's laconic ways and dry humor were characteristic of stereotypical rural "Yankee humor" at the turn of the 20th century.[31]

Yankee ingenuity was a worldwide stereotype of inventiveness, technical solutions to practical problems, "know-how," self-reliance, and individual enterprise.[32] The stereotype first appeared in the 19th century. As Mitchell Wilson notes, "Yankee ingenuity and Yankee git-up-and-go did not exist in colonial days."[33] The great majority of Yankees gravitated toward the burgeoning cities of the northeast, while wealthy New Englanders also sent ambassadors to frontier communities where they became influential bankers and newspaper printers. They introduced the term "Universal Yankee Nation" to proselytize their hopes for national and global influence.[34]

Religion edit

New England Yankees originally followed the Puritan tradition, as expressed in Congregational and Baptist churches. Beginning in the late colonial period, many became Presbyterians, Episcopalians, Methodists, or, later, Unitarians. Strait-laced 17th-century moralism as derided by novelist Nathaniel Hawthorne faded in the 18th century. The First Great Awakening under Jonathan Edwards and others in the mid-18th century, and the Second Great Awakening in the early 19th century under Charles Grandison Finney and others emphasized personal piety, revivals, and devotion to civic duty.

Historic uses edit

Yankee Doodle edit

 
Loyalist newspaper cartoon from Boston ridicules "Yankie Doodles" militia who have encircled the British forces inside the city.

A pervasive influence on the use of the term throughout the years has been the song "Yankee Doodle" which was popular during the American Revolutionary War (1775–1783). The song originated among the British troops during the French and Indian or Seven Years' War, creating a stereotype of the Yankee simpleton who stuck a feather in his cap and thought that he was stylish,[35] but it was rapidly re-appropriated by American patriots after the battles of Lexington and Concord. Today, "Yankee Doodle" is the official state song of Connecticut.[36]

Canadian usage edit

An early use of the term outside the United States was in the creation of Sam Slick the "Yankee Clockmaker" in a newspaper column in Halifax, Nova Scotia in 1835. The character was a plain-speaking American who becomes an example for Nova Scotians to follow in his industry and practicality; his uncouth manners and vanity were qualities that his creator detested. The character was developed by Thomas Chandler Haliburton, and it grew between 1836 and 1844 in a series of publications.[37]

Damn Yankee edit

 
A Yankee cavalry raid
 
American Civil War map, Federal Union and Southern States

The damned Yankee usage dates from 1812.[14] Confederates popularized it as a derogatory term for their Northern enemies during and after the American Civil War (1861–1865). Rhode Island Governor Bruce Sundlun had been a pilot in World War II, and he named his B-17F bomber Damn Yankee because a crewman from North Carolina nicknamed him with that epithet.[38][39]

Contemporary uses edit

In the United States edit

The term Yankee can have many different meanings within the United States that are contextually and geographically dependent. Traditionally, Yankee was most often used to refer to a New Englander descended from the settlers of the region, thus often suggesting Puritanism and thrifty values.[40] By the mid-20th century, some speakers applied the word to any American inhabiting the area north of the Mason–Dixon Line, though usually with a specific focus still on New England. New England Yankee might be used to differentiate.[41] However, within New England itself, the term still refers more specifically to old-stock New Englanders of English descent. For example:

Certainly the Irish have for years complained of Yankee discrimination against them.

— William F. Whyte[42]

There were no civil rights groups then. Even the Federal Government was controlled by bigoted Yankees and Irish who banded together against the Italian immigrant.

— Fred Langone[43]

The one anomaly of this era was the election of Yankee Republican Leverett Saltonstall as governor in 1938, and even then Saltonstall jokingly attributed his high vote totals in Irish districts to his 'South Boston face'.

— Stephen Puleo[44]

In the Southern United States, the term is used in derisive reference to any Northerner, especially one who has migrated to the South and maintains derisive attitudes towards Southerners and the Southern way of life. Alabama lawyer and author Daniel Robinson Hundley describes the Yankee as such in Social Relations in Our Southern States:

Yankee with all these is looked upon usually as a term of reproach --signifying a shrewd, sharp, chaffering, oily-tongued, soft-sawdering, inquisitive, money-making, money-saving, and money-worshipping individual, who hails from Down East, and who is presumed to have no where else on the Globe a permanent local habitation, however ubiquitous he may be in his travels and pursuits.[45]

Senator J. William Fulbright of Arkansas pointed out as late as 1966, "The very word 'Yankee' still wakens in Southern minds historical memories of defeat and humiliation, of the burning of Atlanta and Sherman's March to the Sea, or of an ancestral farmhouse burned by Quantrill's Raiders".[46] Ambrose Bierce defines the term in The Devil's Dictionary as: "In Europe, an American. In the Northern States of our Union, a New Englander. In the Southern States the word is unknown. (See DAMNYANK.)"

E. B. White humorously draws his own distinctions:

To foreigners, a Yankee is an American.
To Americans, a Yankee is a Northerner.
To Northerners, a Yankee is an Easterner.
To Easterners, a Yankee is a New Englander.
To New Englanders, a Yankee is a Vermonter.
And in Vermont, a Yankee is somebody who eats pie for breakfast.[47]

Major League Baseball's New York Yankees acquired the name from journalists after the team moved from Baltimore in 1903, though they were officially known as the Highlanders until 1913. The regional Yankees–Red Sox rivalry can make the utterance of the term "Yankee" unwelcome to some fans in New England, especially to the most dedicated Red Sox fans living in the northeastern United States.[48]

The term Swamp Yankee is sometimes used in rural Rhode Island, Connecticut, and southeastern Massachusetts to refer to Protestant farmers of moderate means and their descendants, although it is often regarded as a derogatory term.[7] Scholars note that the famous Yankee "twang" survives mainly in the hill towns of interior New England, though it is disappearing even there.[49]

Mark Twain's 1889 novel A Connecticut Yankee in King Arthur's Court popularized the word as a nickname for residents of Connecticut, and Connecticut Air National Guard unit 103d Airlift Wing is nicknamed "The Flying Yankees."

In other countries edit

 
"Yankee, go home", anti-American banner in Liverpool, United Kingdom

The shortened form Yank is used as a derogatory, pejorative, playful, or colloquial term for Americans in Britain,[50] Australia,[51] Canada,[52] South Africa,[53] Ireland,[54] and New Zealand.[55] The full Yankee may be considered mildly derogatory, depending on the country.[56] The Spanish variation yanqui is used in Latin American Spanish,[57] often derogatorily.[58] Venezuelan Spanish has the word pitiyanqui derived around 1940 from petty yankee or petit yanqui,[59] a derogatory term for those who profess an exaggerated and often ridiculous admiration for anything from the United States.

In the United Kingdom, Ireland, and Australia, the term seppo, shortened from traditional rhyming slang yank ==> septic tank, is sometimes used as a pejorative reference to Americans.[60]

In Finland, the word jenkki is sometimes used to refer to any American citizen, and Jenkkilä refers to the United States itself. It is not considered offensive or anti-American, but rather a colloquial expression. In Sweden, the word jänkare is a derivative of Yankee that is used to refer to both American citizens and classic American cars from the 1950s that are popular in rural Sweden.[61]

Japan edit

 
A man dressed as a 1990s Japanese yankī (2015)

In the late 19th century, the Japanese were called "the Yankees of the East" in praise of their industriousness and drive to modernization.[62] In Japan, the term yankī (ヤンキー) has been used since the late 1970s to refer to a type of delinquent youth associated with motorcycle gangs and frequently sporting dyed blond hair.[63][64][65][66]

South Korea edit

Around the American occupation of Korea and the Korean War periods, Korean black markets that sold smuggled American goods from military bases were called "yankee markets" (Korean양키시장).[67] The term "yankee" is now generally viewed as an anti-American slur in South Korea,[68] and is often used in the exclamation "Yankee go home!" (『양키 고 홈!』).[69]

See also edit

References edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ Luis Lug; Sandra Stencel; John Green; Gregory Smith; Dan Cox; Allison Pond; Tracy Miller; Elixabeth Podrebarac; Michelle Ralston (February 2008). "U.S. Religious Landscape Survey" (PDF). Pew Forum on Religion & Public Life. Pew Research Center. Retrieved February 12, 2012.
  2. ^ Aristide R. Zolberg (2006). A Nation by Design: Immigration Policy in the Fashioning of America. Harvard University Press. p. 520.
  3. ^ Barbara Handy-Marchello (2005). Women of the Northern Plains: Gender and Settlement on the Homestead Frontier, 1870-1930. Minnesota Historical Society. p. 205.
  4. ^ Francesco Cordasco; David Nelson Alloway (1981). American Ethnic Groups, the European Heritage: A Bibliography of Doctoral Dissertations Completed at American Universities. Scarecrow Press. p. 119.
  5. ^ "Cambridge Advanced Learner's Dictionary Online". Cambridge University Press.
  6. ^ Bird, Kim (2012). "250, 100, 280 class railcars of the South Australian Railways". Proceedings of the 2012 Convention. Modelling the Railways of South Australia. Adelaide. p. 3‑390. One of the drawing office staff relates how they spent months reading "Yankee magazines and extracting all the articles on Budd Rail Diesel Cars".
  7. ^ a b Ruth Schell (1963). "Swamp Yankee". American Speech. 38 (2): 121–123. doi:10.2307/453288. JSTOR 453288.
  8. ^ Robert Hendrickson (2000). The Facts on File Dictionary of American Regionalisms. Infobase. p. 326. ISBN 9781438129921.
  9. ^ a b c d The Merriam-Webster new book of word histories (1991) pp. 516–517.
  10. ^ a b "World Wide Words: Port Out, Starboard Home". World Wide Words.
  11. ^ a b Harper, Douglas. Online Etymology Dictionary: "Yankee". 2013. Accessed 13 Jul 2013.
  12. ^ de Vries, Jan (1971). Nederlands Etymologisch Woordenboek (in Dutch). Headword: yankee.
  13. ^ The Life and Adventures of Sir Launcelot Greaves, Tobias Smollett, chapter 3
  14. ^ a b c Mathews (1951) p 1896
  15. ^ See Mathews, (1951) pp. 1896–98 and Oxford English Dictionary, quoting M. Birkbeck
  16. ^ Tager, Jack (2001). Boston Riots: Three Centuries of Social Violence. Northeastern University Press. pp. 107, 120–22. ISBN 1555534600.
  17. ^ Harkins, Edward Francis (1903). The Schemers: A Tale of Modern Life. L.C. Page & Company. p. 243.
  18. ^ The Wyandot people were called Hurons by the French.
  19. ^ Mathews (1951) p. 1896.
  20. ^ This is not to be confused with adopting an Indian name for a geographical location.
  21. ^ Sonneck, O. G. (2001). Report on "The star-spangled banner", "Hail Columbia", "America", "Yankee Doodle. Honolulu, Hawaii: University Press of the Pacific. p. 83. ISBN 0898755328.
  22. ^ Mathews (1909), Holbrook (1950)
  23. ^ a b Thomas Colley Grattan (1859). Civilized America ... Second edition, Volume 1. Bradbury&Evans. p. 7.
  24. ^ Kenneth J. Winkle (2001). The Young Eagle: The Rise of Abraham Lincoln. Taylor. p. 78. ISBN 9781461734369.
  25. ^ Susan E. Gray (1996). The Yankee West: Community Life on the Michigan Frontier. Univ of North Carolina Press. p. 11.
  26. ^ Knights (1991)
  27. ^ Taylor (1979)
  28. ^ Buenker, John (1988). "Wisconsin". In Madison, James H. (ed.). Heartland: Comparative Histories of the Midwestern States. Indiana University Press. pp. 72–73. ISBN 0253314232.
  29. ^ Kleppner p 55
  30. ^ William Allen White, A Puritan in Babylon: The Story of Calvin Coolidge (1938) p. 122.
  31. ^ Arthur George Crandall, New England Joke Lore: The Tonic of Yankee Humor, (F.A. Davis Company, 1922).
  32. ^ Eugene S. Ferguson, "On the Origin and Development of American Mechanical 'know-how'", American Studies 3.2 (1962): 3–16. online
  33. ^ quoted in Reynold M. Wik, "Some interpretations of the mechanization of agriculture in the Far West." Agricultural History (1975): 73–83. in JSTOR
  34. ^ Susan E. Gray, The Yankee West: community life on the Michigan frontier (1996) p. 3
  35. ^ Mooney, Mark (14 July 2014). "'Yankee Doodle Dandy' Explained and Other Revolutionary Facts". ABC News. Retrieved 6 May 2016.
  36. ^ See Connecticut State Library, "Yankee Doodle, the State Song of the State of Connecticut" 2007-12-26 at the Wayback Machine
  37. ^ Cogswell, F. (2000).Haliburton, Thomas Chandler. Dictionary of Canadian Biography Online, Volume IX 1861–1870. University of Toronto/Université Laval. Retrieved on: 2011-08-15.
  38. ^ "41-24557 B-17 FLYING FORTRESS". American Air Museum in Britain. Retrieved 21 Feb 2019.
  39. ^ Johann Willaert (December 2011). "My 68th Anniversary Tribute to B17-F Damn Yankee". The US Militaria Forum. Retrieved 21 Feb 2019.
  40. ^ Bushman, (1967)
  41. ^ David Lauderdale . islandpacket.com (2010-12-23)
  42. ^ Whyte, William F. (December 1939). "Race Conflicts in the North End of Boston". The New England Quarterly. 12 (4): 623–642. doi:10.2307/360446. JSTOR 360446.
  43. ^ Langone, Fred (1994). The North End: Where It All Began. Boston: Post-Gazette, American Independence Edition. p. 3.
  44. ^ Puleo, Stephen (2007). The Boston Italians. Boston: Beacon Press. p. 185. ISBN 9780807050361.
  45. ^ Hundley, Daniel (1860). Social Relations in Our Southern States. p. 130.
  46. ^ Fulbright's statement of March 7, 1966, quoted in Randall Bennett Woods, "Dixie's Dove: J. William Fulbright, The Vietnam War and the American South," The Journal of Southern History, vol. 60, no. 3 (Aug., 1994), p. 548.
  47. ^ "Yankee". National Geographic Society. 2012-11-19. Retrieved 2018-09-23.
  48. ^ Bodley, Hal (October 20, 2004). "Red Sox-Yankees is baseball's ultimate rivalry". USAToday.com.
  49. ^ Fisher, Albion's Seed p. 62; Edward Eggleston, The Transit of Civilization from England to the U.S. in the Seventeenth Century. (1901) p. 110; Fleser (1962)
  50. ^ David Reynolds, Rich relations: the American occupation of Britain, 1942-1945 (1995)
  51. ^ Eli Daniel Potts, and Annette Potts, Yanks Down Under, 1941-45: The American Impact on Australia (1985).
  52. ^ J. L. Granatstein, Yankee Go Home: Canadians and Anti-Americanism (1997)
  53. ^ "Hippies, Muslims and Yanks march against Bush". IOL News. South African Press Association. 9 July 2003.
  54. ^ Mary Pat Kelly, Home Away from Home: The Yanks in Ireland (1995)
  55. ^ Harry Bioletti, The Yanks are Coming: The American Invasion of New Zealand, 1942-1944 (1989)
  56. ^ John F. Turner and Edward F. Hale, eds. Yanks Are Coming: GIs in Britain in WWII (1983)
  57. ^ "Definition of YANQUI". merriam-webster.com. Retrieved 2019-12-22.
  58. ^ "Opinion — Why They Paint 'Yanqui Go Home'". The New York Times. 30 June 1985.
  59. ^ Romero, Simon (6 September 2008). "Venezuela's New Little Insult: 'Pitiyanqui'". The New York Times. from the original on 16 May 2023.
  60. ^ Burridge, Kate; Manns, Howard (25 January 2018). "Get yer hand off it, mate, Australian slang isn't dying". Lens. Monash University.
  61. ^ Comments on H-South by Seppo K J Tamminen. h-net.msu.edu
  62. ^ Curtis, William Eleroy (1896). The Yankees of the East, Sketches of Modern Japan. New York: Stone & Kimball.
  63. ^ Asahi, Yoshiyuki; Usami, Mayumi; Inoue, Fumio (4 April 2022). Handbook of Japanese Sociolinguistics. Walter de Gruyter GmbH & Co KG. p. 443. ISBN 978-1-5015-0147-0.
  64. ^ Maynard, Senko K. (17 January 2022). Exploring the Self, Subjectivity, and Character across Japanese and Translation Texts. BRILL. p. 205. ISBN 978-90-04-50586-5.
  65. ^ Buck, Stephanie (2016-10-13). "Meet the 'yankii,' the Japanese subculture that embraces American trashiness". Medium. Retrieved 2023-06-16.
  66. ^ Daijirin dictionary, Yahoo! Dictionary 2009-08-04 at the Wayback Machine
  67. ^ Cho, Grace M. (22 August 2014). "Eating military base stew". Contexts. from the original on 23 June 2017. Retrieved 29 May 2017.
  68. ^ "Controversy over Psy's anti-American lyrics might be based on shoddy translation". Washington Post. 2021-12-01. ISSN 0190-8286. Retrieved 2023-08-20.
  69. ^ "문재인 정부로 바뀌자 등장한 "양키 고홈" 종미몰이". 데일리안 (in Korean). 2017-06-24. Retrieved 2023-08-20.

Further reading edit

  • Beals, Carleton; Our Yankee Heritage: New England's Contribution to American Civilization (1955) online
  • Conforti, Joseph A. Imagining New England: Explorations of Regional Identity from the Pilgrims to the Mid-Twentieth Century (2001) online
  • Bushman, Richard L. From Puritan to Yankee: Character and the Social Order in Connecticut, 1690–1765 (1967)
  • Daniels, Bruce C. New England Nation: The Country the Puritans Built (Palgrave Macmillan, 2012) 237 pp. excerpt and text search
  • Ellis, David M. "The Yankee Invasion of New York 1783–1850". New York History (1951) 32:1–17.
  • Fischer, David Hackett. Albion's Seed: Four British Folkways in America (1989), Yankees comprise one of the four
  • Gjerde; Jon. The Minds of the West: Ethnocultural Evolution in the Rural Middle West, 1830–1917 (1999) online
  • Gray; Susan E. The Yankee West: Community Life on the Michigan Frontier (1996) online
  • Handlin, Oscar. "Yankees", in Harvard Encyclopedia of American Ethnic Groups, ed. by Stephan Thernstrom, (1980) pp 1028–1030.
  • Hill, Ralph Nading. Yankee Kingdom: Vermont and New Hampshire. (1960).
  • Holbrook, Stewart H. Yankee Exodus: An Account of Migration from New England (1950)
  • Holbrook, Stewart H.; Yankee Loggers: A Recollection of Woodsmen, Cooks, and River Drivers (1961)
  • Hudson, John C. "Yankeeland in the Middle West", Journal of Geography 85 (Sept 1986)
  • Jensen, Richard. "Yankees" in Encyclopedia of Chicago (2005).
  • Kleppner; Paul. The Third Electoral System 1853–1892: Parties, Voters, and Political Cultures University of North Carolina Press. 1979, on Yankee voting behavior
  • Knights, Peter R.; Yankee Destinies: The Lives of Ordinary Nineteenth-Century Bostonians (1991) online
  • Mathews, Lois K. The Expansion of New England (1909).
  • Piersen, William Dillon. Black Yankees: The Development of an Afro-American Subculture in Eighteenth-Century New England (1988)
  • Power, Richard Lyle. Planting Corn Belt Culture (1953), on Indiana
  • Rose, Gregory. "Yankees/Yorkers", in Richard Sisson ed, The American Midwest: An Interpretive Encyclopedia (2006) 193–95, 714–5, 1094, 1194,
  • Sedgwick, Ellery; The Atlantic Monthly, 1857–1909: Yankee Humanism at High Tide and Ebb (1994) online
  • Smith, Bradford. Yankees in Paradise: The New England Impact on Hawaii (1956)
  • Taylor, William R. Cavalier and Yankee: The Old South and American National Character (1979)
  • WPA. Massachusetts: A Guide to Its Places and People. Federal Writers' Project of the Works Progress Administration of Massachusetts (1937).

Linguistic

  • Davis, Harold. "On the Origin of Yankee Doodle", American Speech, Vol. 13, No. 2 (Apr., 1938), pp. 93–96 in JSTOR
  • Fleser, Arthur F. "Coolidge's Delivery: Everybody Liked It." Southern Speech Journal 1966 32(2): 98–104. ISSN 0038-4585
  • Kretzschmar, William A. Handbook of the Linguistic Atlas of the Middle and South Atlantic States (1994)
  • Lemay, J. A. Leo "The American Origins of Yankee Doodle", William and Mary Quarterly 33 (Jan 1976) 435–64 in JSTOR
  • Logemay, Butsee H. "The Etymology of 'Yankee'", Studies in English Philology in Honor of Frederick Klaeber, (1929) pp 403–13.
  • Mathews, Mitford M. A Dictionary of Americanisms on Historical Principles (1951) pp 1896 ff for elaborate detail
  • Mencken, H. L. The American Language (1919, 1921)
  • The Merriam-Webster new book of word histories (1991)
  • Oxford English Dictionary
  • Schell, Ruth. "Swamp Yankee", American Speech, 1963, Volume 38, No.2 pg. 121–123. in JSTOR
  • Sonneck, Oscar G. Report on "the Star-Spangled Banner" "Hail Columbia" "America" "Yankee Doodle" (1909) pp 83ff online
  • Stollznow, Karen. 2006. "Key Words in the Discourse of Discrimination: A Semantic Analysis. PhD Dissertation: University of New England., Chapter 5.

External links edit

  • Online Etymology Dictionary
  • Wordorigins.org 2017-12-06 at the Wayback Machine

yankee, yank, redirect, here, other, uses, yank, disambiguation, baseball, team, york, term, contracted, form, yank, have, several, interrelated, meanings, referring, people, from, united, states, their, various, meanings, depend, context, refer, englanders, n. Yank and Yankees redirect here For other uses see Yank disambiguation For the baseball team see New York Yankees The term Yankee and its contracted form Yank have several interrelated meanings all referring to people from the United States Their various meanings depend on the context and may refer to New Englanders the Northeastern United States the Northern United States or to people from the US in general 2 3 4 YankeesYankee AmericansFlag of the United StatesRegions with significant populationsUnited States Northern States New EnglandLanguagesEnglishReligionMajority Christianity Protestantism 1 Outside the United States Yank is used informally to refer to an American person or thing It has been especially popular in the United Kingdom Ireland South Africa Australia and New Zealand where it may be used variously either with an uncomplimentary overtone endearingly or cordially 5 6 In the Southern United States Yankee is a derisive term which refers to all Northerners and during the American Civil War it was applied by Confederates to soldiers of the Union army in general Elsewhere in the United States it largely refers to people from the Northeastern states but especially those with New England cultural ties such as descendants of colonial New England settlers wherever they live 7 Its sense is sometimes more cultural than geographical emphasizing the Calvinist Puritan Christian beliefs and traditions of the Congregationalists who brought their culture when they settled outside New England The speech dialect of Eastern New England English is called Yankee or Yankee dialect 8 Contents 1 Etymology and historical usage of the term 1 1 New Netherland origin 1 2 New England use 1 3 Rejected etymologies 2 Yankee nationality 2 1 Yankee settlement in the United States 2 2 Yankee politics 2 3 Yankee stereotypes 2 4 Religion 3 Historic uses 3 1 Yankee Doodle 3 2 Canadian usage 3 3 Damn Yankee 4 Contemporary uses 4 1 In the United States 4 2 In other countries 4 2 1 Japan 4 2 2 South Korea 5 See also 6 References 6 1 Notes 6 2 Further reading 7 External linksEtymology and historical usage of the term editNew Netherland origin edit nbsp New Netherland flag nbsp The New Netherland colony in America Most linguists look to Dutch language sources noting the extensive interaction between the Dutch colonists in New Netherland parts of New York New Jersey and Delaware and the English colonists in New England Massachusetts Rhode Island and Connecticut 9 The exact application however is uncertain some scholars suggest that it was a term used in derision of the Dutch colonists others that it was derisive of the English colonists Michael Quinion and Patrick Hanks argue that the term comes from the Dutch Janneke a diminutive form of the given name Jan 10 which would be Anglicized by New Englanders as Yankee due to the Dutch pronunciation of J being the same as the English Y Quinion and Hanks posit that it was used as a nickname for a Dutch speaking American in colonial times and could have grown to include non Dutch colonists as well 10 The Oxford English Dictionary calls this theory perhaps the most plausible Alternatively the Dutch given names Jan Dutch jɑn and Kees Dutch keːs have long been common and the two are sometimes combined into a single name Jan Kees Its Anglicized spelling Yankee could in this way have been used to mock Dutch colonists The chosen name Jan Kees may have been partly inspired by a dialectal rendition of Jan Kaas John Cheese the generic nickname that Southern Dutch used for Dutch people living in the North 11 The Online Etymology Dictionary gives its origin as around 1683 attributing it to English colonists insultingly referring to Dutch colonists English privateer William Dampier relates his dealings in 1681 with Dutch privateer Captain Yanky or Yanke Linguist Jan de Vries notes that there was mention of a pirate named Dutch Yanky in the 17th century 12 The Life and Adventures of Sir Launcelot Greaves 1760 contains the passage Haul forward thy chair again take thy berth and proceed with thy story in a direct course without yawing like a Dutch yanky 13 According to this theory Dutch settlers of New Amsterdam started using the term against the English colonists of neighboring Connecticut 11 New England use edit nbsp Flag of New England nbsp Map of New England British General James Wolfe made the earliest recorded use of the word Yankee in 1758 when he referred to the New England soldiers under his command I can afford you two companies of Yankees and the more because they are better for ranging and scouting than either work or vigilance 14 Later British use of the word was in a derogatory manner as seen in a cartoon published in 1775 ridiculing Yankee soldiers 14 New Englanders themselves employed the word in a neutral sense the Pennamite Yankee War for example was a series of clashes in 1769 over land titles in Pennsylvania between settlers from Connecticut Colony and Pennamite settlers from Pennsylvania The meaning of Yankee has varied over time In the 18th century it referred to residents of New England descended from the original English settlers of the region Mark Twain used the word in this sense the following century in his 1889 novel A Connecticut Yankee in King Arthur s Court As early as the 1770s British people applied the term to any person from the United States In the 19th century Americans in the southern United States employed the word in reference to Americans from the northern United States though not to recent immigrants from Europe Thus a visitor to Richmond Virginia commented in 1818 The enterprising people are mostly strangers Scots Irish and especially New England men or Yankees as they are called 15 Historically it has also been used to distinguish American born Protestants from later immigrants such as Catholics of Irish descent 16 17 Rejected etymologies edit Many etymologies have been suggested for the word Yankee but modern linguists generally reject theories that suggest it originated in any Indian languages 9 This includes a theory put forth by a British officer in 1789 who said that it was derived from the Cherokee word eankke meaning coward despite the fact that no such word existed in the Cherokee language 9 Another theory surmised that the word was borrowed from the Wyandot 18 pronunciation of the French l anglais meaning the Englishman or the English language which was sounded as Y an gee 9 19 American musicologist Oscar Sonneck debunked a romanticized false etymology in his 1909 work Report on The Star Spangled Banner Hail Columbia America Yankee Doodle He cited a popular theory that claimed the word came from a tribe who called themselves Yankoos said to mean invincible The story claimed that New Englanders had defeated this tribe after a bloody battle and the remaining Yankoo Indians transferred their name to the victors who were agreeable to the Indian custom Sonneck notes that multiple American writers since 1775 had repeated this story as if it were fact despite what he perceived to be holes in it It had never been the tradition of any Indian tribe to transfer their name to other peoples according to Sonneck nor had any settlers ever adopted an Indian name to describe themselves 20 Sonneck concludes by pointing out that there was never a tribe called the Yankoos 21 Yankee nationality editYankee settlement in the United States edit nbsp Manifest Destiny settlement of the United States nbsp Yankee settlers The original Yankees diffused widely across the northern United States leaving their imprints in New York the Upper Midwest many taking advantage of water routes by the Great Lakes and places as far away as Seattle San Francisco and Honolulu 22 Yankees settled other states in various ways some joined highly organized colonization companies others purchased groups of land together some joined volunteer land settlement groups and self reliant individual families also migrated 23 Yankees typically lived in villages consisting of clusters of separate farms Often they were merchants bankers teachers or professionals 24 25 Village life fostered local democracy best exemplified by the open town meeting form of government that still exists today in New England Village life also stimulated mutual oversight of moral behavior and emphasized civic virtue The Yankees built international trade routes stretching to China by 1800 from the New England seaports of Boston Salem Providence Newport and New London among others Much of the profit from trading was reinvested in the textile and machine tools industries 26 Yankeeism is the general character of the Union Yankee manners are as migratory as Yankee men The latter are found everywhere and the former prevail wherever the latter are found Although the genuine Yankee belongs to New England the term Yankee is now as appropriate to the natives of the Union at large 23 Yankee politics edit After 1800 Yankees spearheaded most American reform movements including those for the abolition of slavery temperance in use of alcohol increase in women s political rights and improvement in women s education Emma Willard and Mary Lyon pioneered in the higher education of women while Yankees comprised most of the reformers who went South during Reconstruction in the late 1860s to educate the Freedmen 27 Historian John Buenker has examined the worldview of the Yankee settlers in the Midwest nbsp Boston New England capitalBecause they arrived first and had a strong sense of community and mission Yankees were able to transplant New England institutions values and mores altered only by the conditions of frontier life They established a public culture that emphasized the work ethic the sanctity of private property individual responsibility faith in residential and social mobility practicality piety public order and decorum reverence for public education activists honest and frugal government town meeting democracy and he believed that there was a public interest that transcends particular and stock ambitions Regarding themselves as the elect and just in a world rife with sin and corruption they felt a strong moral obligation to define and enforce standards of community and personal behavior This pietistic worldview was substantially shared by British Scandinavian Swiss English Canadian and Dutch Reformed immigrants as well as by German Protestants and many of the Forty Eighters 28 Yankees dominated New England much of upstate New York and much of the upper Midwest and were the strongest supporters of the new Republican party in the 1860s This was especially true for the Congregationalists Presbyterians and Methodists among them A study of 65 predominantly Yankee counties showed that they voted only 40 percent for the Whigs in 1848 and 1852 but became 61 65 percent Republican in presidential elections of 1856 through 1864 29 Ivy League universities remained bastions of old Yankee culture until well after World War II particularly Harvard and Yale Yankee stereotypes edit nbsp President Calvin Coolidge of New EnglandPresident Calvin Coolidge exemplified the modern Yankee stereotype Coolidge moved from rural Vermont to urban Massachusetts and was educated at elite Amherst College Yet his flint faced unprepossessing ways and terse rural speech proved politically attractive That Yankee twang will be worth a hundred thousand votes explained one Republican leader 30 Coolidge s laconic ways and dry humor were characteristic of stereotypical rural Yankee humor at the turn of the 20th century 31 Yankee ingenuity was a worldwide stereotype of inventiveness technical solutions to practical problems know how self reliance and individual enterprise 32 The stereotype first appeared in the 19th century As Mitchell Wilson notes Yankee ingenuity and Yankee git up and go did not exist in colonial days 33 The great majority of Yankees gravitated toward the burgeoning cities of the northeast while wealthy New Englanders also sent ambassadors to frontier communities where they became influential bankers and newspaper printers They introduced the term Universal Yankee Nation to proselytize their hopes for national and global influence 34 Religion edit New England Yankees originally followed the Puritan tradition as expressed in Congregational and Baptist churches Beginning in the late colonial period many became Presbyterians Episcopalians Methodists or later Unitarians Strait laced 17th century moralism as derided by novelist Nathaniel Hawthorne faded in the 18th century The First Great Awakening under Jonathan Edwards and others in the mid 18th century and the Second Great Awakening in the early 19th century under Charles Grandison Finney and others emphasized personal piety revivals and devotion to civic duty Historic uses editYankee Doodle edit Main article Yankee Doodle nbsp Loyalist newspaper cartoon from Boston ridicules Yankie Doodles militia who have encircled the British forces inside the city A pervasive influence on the use of the term throughout the years has been the song Yankee Doodle which was popular during the American Revolutionary War 1775 1783 The song originated among the British troops during the French and Indian or Seven Years War creating a stereotype of the Yankee simpleton who stuck a feather in his cap and thought that he was stylish 35 but it was rapidly re appropriated by American patriots after the battles of Lexington and Concord Today Yankee Doodle is the official state song of Connecticut 36 Canadian usage edit An early use of the term outside the United States was in the creation of Sam Slick the Yankee Clockmaker in a newspaper column in Halifax Nova Scotia in 1835 The character was a plain speaking American who becomes an example for Nova Scotians to follow in his industry and practicality his uncouth manners and vanity were qualities that his creator detested The character was developed by Thomas Chandler Haliburton and it grew between 1836 and 1844 in a series of publications 37 Damn Yankee edit nbsp A Yankee cavalry raid nbsp American Civil War map Federal Union and Southern States The damned Yankee usage dates from 1812 14 Confederates popularized it as a derogatory term for their Northern enemies during and after the American Civil War 1861 1865 Rhode Island Governor Bruce Sundlun had been a pilot in World War II and he named his B 17F bomber Damn Yankee because a crewman from North Carolina nicknamed him with that epithet 38 39 Contemporary uses editIn the United States edit The term Yankee can have many different meanings within the United States that are contextually and geographically dependent Traditionally Yankee was most often used to refer to a New Englander descended from the settlers of the region thus often suggesting Puritanism and thrifty values 40 By the mid 20th century some speakers applied the word to any American inhabiting the area north of the Mason Dixon Line though usually with a specific focus still on New England New England Yankee might be used to differentiate 41 However within New England itself the term still refers more specifically to old stock New Englanders of English descent For example Certainly the Irish have for years complained of Yankee discrimination against them William F Whyte 42 There were no civil rights groups then Even the Federal Government was controlled by bigoted Yankees and Irish who banded together against the Italian immigrant Fred Langone 43 The one anomaly of this era was the election of Yankee Republican Leverett Saltonstall as governor in 1938 and even then Saltonstall jokingly attributed his high vote totals in Irish districts to his South Boston face Stephen Puleo 44 In the Southern United States the term is used in derisive reference to any Northerner especially one who has migrated to the South and maintains derisive attitudes towards Southerners and the Southern way of life Alabama lawyer and author Daniel Robinson Hundley describes the Yankee as such in Social Relations in Our Southern States Yankee with all these is looked upon usually as a term of reproach signifying a shrewd sharp chaffering oily tongued soft sawdering inquisitive money making money saving and money worshipping individual who hails from Down East and who is presumed to have no where else on the Globe a permanent local habitation however ubiquitous he may be in his travels and pursuits 45 Senator J William Fulbright of Arkansas pointed out as late as 1966 The very word Yankee still wakens in Southern minds historical memories of defeat and humiliation of the burning of Atlanta and Sherman s March to the Sea or of an ancestral farmhouse burned by Quantrill s Raiders 46 Ambrose Bierce defines the term in The Devil s Dictionary as In Europe an American In the Northern States of our Union a New Englander In the Southern States the word is unknown See DAMNYANK E B White humorously draws his own distinctions To foreigners a Yankee is an American To Americans a Yankee is a Northerner To Northerners a Yankee is an Easterner To Easterners a Yankee is a New Englander To New Englanders a Yankee is a Vermonter And in Vermont a Yankee is somebody who eats pie for breakfast 47 Major League Baseball s New York Yankees acquired the name from journalists after the team moved from Baltimore in 1903 though they were officially known as the Highlanders until 1913 The regional Yankees Red Sox rivalry can make the utterance of the term Yankee unwelcome to some fans in New England especially to the most dedicated Red Sox fans living in the northeastern United States 48 The term Swamp Yankee is sometimes used in rural Rhode Island Connecticut and southeastern Massachusetts to refer to Protestant farmers of moderate means and their descendants although it is often regarded as a derogatory term 7 Scholars note that the famous Yankee twang survives mainly in the hill towns of interior New England though it is disappearing even there 49 Mark Twain s 1889 novel A Connecticut Yankee in King Arthur s Court popularized the word as a nickname for residents of Connecticut and Connecticut Air National Guard unit 103d Airlift Wing is nicknamed The Flying Yankees In other countries edit nbsp Yankee go home anti American banner in Liverpool United KingdomThe shortened form Yank is used as a derogatory pejorative playful or colloquial term for Americans in Britain 50 Australia 51 Canada 52 South Africa 53 Ireland 54 and New Zealand 55 The full Yankee may be considered mildly derogatory depending on the country 56 The Spanish variation yanqui is used in Latin American Spanish 57 often derogatorily 58 Venezuelan Spanish has the word pitiyanqui derived around 1940 from petty yankee or petit yanqui 59 a derogatory term for those who profess an exaggerated and often ridiculous admiration for anything from the United States In the United Kingdom Ireland and Australia the term seppo shortened from traditional rhyming slang yank gt septic tank is sometimes used as a pejorative reference to Americans 60 In Finland the word jenkki is sometimes used to refer to any American citizen and Jenkkila refers to the United States itself It is not considered offensive or anti American but rather a colloquial expression In Sweden the word jankare is a derivative of Yankee that is used to refer to both American citizens and classic American cars from the 1950s that are popular in rural Sweden 61 Japan edit nbsp A man dressed as a 1990s Japanese yanki 2015 In the late 19th century the Japanese were called the Yankees of the East in praise of their industriousness and drive to modernization 62 In Japan the term yanki ヤンキー has been used since the late 1970s to refer to a type of delinquent youth associated with motorcycle gangs and frequently sporting dyed blond hair 63 64 65 66 South Korea edit Around the American occupation of Korea and the Korean War periods Korean black markets that sold smuggled American goods from military bases were called yankee markets Korean 양키시장 67 The term yankee is now generally viewed as an anti American slur in South Korea 68 and is often used in the exclamation Yankee go home 양키 고 홈 69 See also edit nbsp United States portalDixie a term used to refer to the Southern United States Brother Jonathan Carpetbagger Northerners in the South during Reconstruction 26th Maneuver Enhancement Brigade Yankee Division Jonkheer Anti Americanism Yankee Doodle Dandy Yankee ingenuity Yanks Go Home British sitcom Brit Canuck Aussie Kiwi Boer WASPReferences editNotes edit Luis Lug Sandra Stencel John Green Gregory Smith Dan Cox Allison Pond Tracy Miller Elixabeth Podrebarac Michelle Ralston February 2008 U S Religious Landscape Survey PDF Pew Forum on Religion amp Public Life Pew Research Center Retrieved February 12 2012 Aristide R Zolberg 2006 A Nation by Design Immigration Policy in the Fashioning of America Harvard University Press p 520 Barbara Handy Marchello 2005 Women of the Northern Plains Gender and Settlement on the Homestead Frontier 1870 1930 Minnesota Historical Society p 205 Francesco Cordasco David Nelson Alloway 1981 American Ethnic Groups the European Heritage A Bibliography of Doctoral Dissertations Completed at American Universities Scarecrow Press p 119 Cambridge Advanced Learner s Dictionary Online Cambridge University Press Bird Kim 2012 250 100 280 class railcars of the South Australian Railways Proceedings of the 2012 Convention Modelling the Railways of South Australia Adelaide p 3 390 One of the drawing office staff relates how they spent months reading Yankee magazines and extracting all the articles on Budd Rail Diesel Cars a b Ruth Schell 1963 Swamp Yankee American Speech 38 2 121 123 doi 10 2307 453288 JSTOR 453288 Robert Hendrickson 2000 The Facts on File Dictionary of American Regionalisms Infobase p 326 ISBN 9781438129921 a b c d The Merriam Webster new book of word histories 1991 pp 516 517 a b World Wide Words Port Out Starboard Home World Wide Words a b Harper Douglas Online Etymology Dictionary Yankee 2013 Accessed 13 Jul 2013 de Vries Jan 1971 Nederlands Etymologisch Woordenboek in Dutch Headword yankee The Life and Adventures of Sir Launcelot Greaves Tobias Smollett chapter 3 a b c Mathews 1951 p 1896 See Mathews 1951 pp 1896 98 and Oxford English Dictionary quoting M Birkbeck Tager Jack 2001 Boston Riots Three Centuries of Social Violence Northeastern University Press pp 107 120 22 ISBN 1555534600 Harkins Edward Francis 1903 The Schemers A Tale of Modern Life L C Page amp Company p 243 The Wyandot people were called Hurons by the French Mathews 1951 p 1896 This is not to be confused with adopting an Indian name for a geographical location Sonneck O G 2001 Report on The star spangled banner Hail Columbia America Yankee Doodle Honolulu Hawaii University Press of the Pacific p 83 ISBN 0898755328 Mathews 1909 Holbrook 1950 a b Thomas Colley Grattan 1859 Civilized America Second edition Volume 1 Bradbury amp Evans p 7 Kenneth J Winkle 2001 The Young Eagle The Rise of Abraham Lincoln Taylor p 78 ISBN 9781461734369 Susan E Gray 1996 The Yankee West Community Life on the Michigan Frontier Univ of North Carolina Press p 11 Knights 1991 Taylor 1979 Buenker John 1988 Wisconsin In Madison James H ed Heartland Comparative Histories of the Midwestern States Indiana University Press pp 72 73 ISBN 0253314232 Kleppner p 55 William Allen White A Puritan in Babylon The Story of Calvin Coolidge 1938 p 122 Arthur George Crandall New England Joke Lore The Tonic of Yankee Humor F A Davis Company 1922 Eugene S Ferguson On the Origin and Development of American Mechanical know how American Studies 3 2 1962 3 16 online quoted in Reynold M Wik Some interpretations of the mechanization of agriculture in the Far West Agricultural History 1975 73 83 in JSTOR Susan E Gray The Yankee West community life on the Michigan frontier 1996 p 3 Mooney Mark 14 July 2014 Yankee Doodle Dandy Explained and Other Revolutionary Facts ABC News Retrieved 6 May 2016 See Connecticut State Library Yankee Doodle the State Song of the State of Connecticut Archived 2007 12 26 at the Wayback Machine Cogswell F 2000 Haliburton Thomas Chandler Dictionary of Canadian Biography Online Volume IX 1861 1870 University of Toronto Universite Laval Retrieved on 2011 08 15 41 24557 B 17 FLYING FORTRESS American Air Museum in Britain Retrieved 21 Feb 2019 Johann Willaert December 2011 My 68th Anniversary Tribute to B17 F Damn Yankee The US Militaria Forum Retrieved 21 Feb 2019 Bushman 1967 David Lauderdale A white Christmas so close but yet so far islandpacket com 2010 12 23 Whyte William F December 1939 Race Conflicts in the North End of Boston The New England Quarterly 12 4 623 642 doi 10 2307 360446 JSTOR 360446 Langone Fred 1994 The North End Where It All Began Boston Post Gazette American Independence Edition p 3 Puleo Stephen 2007 The Boston Italians Boston Beacon Press p 185 ISBN 9780807050361 Hundley Daniel 1860 Social Relations in Our Southern States p 130 Fulbright s statement of March 7 1966 quoted in Randall Bennett Woods Dixie s Dove J William Fulbright The Vietnam War and the American South The Journal of Southern History vol 60 no 3 Aug 1994 p 548 Yankee National Geographic Society 2012 11 19 Retrieved 2018 09 23 Bodley Hal October 20 2004 Red Sox Yankees is baseball s ultimate rivalry USAToday com Fisher Albion s Seed p 62 Edward Eggleston The Transit of Civilization from England to the U S in the Seventeenth Century 1901 p 110 Fleser 1962 David Reynolds Rich relations the American occupation of Britain 1942 1945 1995 Eli Daniel Potts and Annette Potts Yanks Down Under 1941 45 The American Impact on Australia 1985 J L Granatstein Yankee Go Home Canadians and Anti Americanism 1997 Hippies Muslims and Yanks march against Bush IOL News South African Press Association 9 July 2003 Mary Pat Kelly Home Away from Home The Yanks in Ireland 1995 Harry Bioletti The Yanks are Coming The American Invasion of New Zealand 1942 1944 1989 John F Turner and Edward F Hale eds Yanks Are Coming GIs in Britain in WWII 1983 Definition of YANQUI merriam webster com Retrieved 2019 12 22 Opinion Why They Paint Yanqui Go Home The New York Times 30 June 1985 Romero Simon 6 September 2008 Venezuela s New Little Insult Pitiyanqui The New York Times Archived from the original on 16 May 2023 Burridge Kate Manns Howard 25 January 2018 Get yer hand off it mate Australian slang isn t dying Lens Monash University Comments on H South by Seppo K J Tamminen h net msu edu Curtis William Eleroy 1896 The Yankees of the East Sketches of Modern Japan New York Stone amp Kimball Asahi Yoshiyuki Usami Mayumi Inoue Fumio 4 April 2022 Handbook of Japanese Sociolinguistics Walter de Gruyter GmbH amp Co KG p 443 ISBN 978 1 5015 0147 0 Maynard Senko K 17 January 2022 Exploring the Self Subjectivity and Character across Japanese and Translation Texts BRILL p 205 ISBN 978 90 04 50586 5 Buck Stephanie 2016 10 13 Meet the yankii the Japanese subculture that embraces American trashiness Medium Retrieved 2023 06 16 Daijirin dictionary Yahoo Dictionary Archived 2009 08 04 at the Wayback Machine Cho Grace M 22 August 2014 Eating military base stew Contexts Archived from the original on 23 June 2017 Retrieved 29 May 2017 Controversy over Psy s anti American lyrics might be based on shoddy translation Washington Post 2021 12 01 ISSN 0190 8286 Retrieved 2023 08 20 문재인 정부로 바뀌자 등장한 양키 고홈 종미몰이 데일리안 in Korean 2017 06 24 Retrieved 2023 08 20 Further reading edit Beals Carleton Our Yankee Heritage New England s Contribution to American Civilization 1955 online Conforti Joseph A Imagining New England Explorations of Regional Identity from the Pilgrims to the Mid Twentieth Century 2001 online Bushman Richard L From Puritan to Yankee Character and the Social Order in Connecticut 1690 1765 1967 Daniels Bruce C New England Nation The Country the Puritans Built Palgrave Macmillan 2012 237 pp excerpt and text search Ellis David M The Yankee Invasion of New York 1783 1850 New York History 1951 32 1 17 Fischer David Hackett Albion s Seed Four British Folkways in America 1989 Yankees comprise one of the four Gjerde Jon The Minds of the West Ethnocultural Evolution in the Rural Middle West 1830 1917 1999 online Gray Susan E The Yankee West Community Life on the Michigan Frontier 1996 online Handlin Oscar Yankees in Harvard Encyclopedia of American Ethnic Groups ed by Stephan Thernstrom 1980 pp 1028 1030 Hill Ralph Nading Yankee Kingdom Vermont and New Hampshire 1960 Holbrook Stewart H Yankee Exodus An Account of Migration from New England 1950 Holbrook Stewart H Yankee Loggers A Recollection of Woodsmen Cooks and River Drivers 1961 Hudson John C Yankeeland in the Middle West Journal of Geography 85 Sept 1986 Jensen Richard Yankees in Encyclopedia of Chicago 2005 Kleppner Paul The Third Electoral System 1853 1892 Parties Voters and Political Cultures University of North Carolina Press 1979 on Yankee voting behavior Knights Peter R Yankee Destinies The Lives of Ordinary Nineteenth Century Bostonians 1991 online Mathews Lois K The Expansion of New England 1909 Piersen William Dillon Black Yankees The Development of an Afro American Subculture in Eighteenth Century New England 1988 Power Richard Lyle Planting Corn Belt Culture 1953 on Indiana Rose Gregory Yankees Yorkers in Richard Sisson ed The American Midwest An Interpretive Encyclopedia 2006 193 95 714 5 1094 1194 Sedgwick Ellery The Atlantic Monthly 1857 1909 Yankee Humanism at High Tide and Ebb 1994 online Smith Bradford Yankees in Paradise The New England Impact on Hawaii 1956 Taylor William R Cavalier and Yankee The Old South and American National Character 1979 WPA Massachusetts A Guide to Its Places and People Federal Writers Project of the Works Progress Administration of Massachusetts 1937 Linguistic Davis Harold On the Origin of Yankee Doodle American Speech Vol 13 No 2 Apr 1938 pp 93 96 in JSTOR Fleser Arthur F Coolidge s Delivery Everybody Liked It Southern Speech Journal 1966 32 2 98 104 ISSN 0038 4585 Kretzschmar William A Handbook of the Linguistic Atlas of the Middle and South Atlantic States 1994 Lemay J A Leo The American Origins of Yankee Doodle William and Mary Quarterly 33 Jan 1976 435 64 in JSTOR Logemay Butsee H The Etymology of Yankee Studies in English Philology in Honor of Frederick Klaeber 1929 pp 403 13 Mathews Mitford M A Dictionary of Americanisms on Historical Principles 1951 pp 1896 ff for elaborate detail Mencken H L The American Language 1919 1921 The Merriam Webster new book of word histories 1991 Oxford English Dictionary Schell Ruth Swamp Yankee American Speech 1963 Volume 38 No 2 pg 121 123 in JSTOR Sonneck Oscar G Report on the Star Spangled Banner Hail Columbia America Yankee Doodle 1909 pp 83ff online Stollznow Karen 2006 Key Words in the Discourse of Discrimination A Semantic Analysis PhD Dissertation University of New England Chapter 5 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Yankee nbsp Wikisource has the text of the 1911 Encyclopaedia Britannica article Yankee Online Etymology Dictionary Wordorigins org Archived 2017 12 06 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Yankee amp oldid 1207588838, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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