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单词 yankee
释义

Yankeen.adj.

Brit. /ˈjaŋki/, U.S. /ˈjæŋki/
Forms: Also 1700s–1800s Yankey, Yanky, plural Yankies.
Etymology: Source unascertained.The two earliest statements as to its origin were published in 1789: Thomas Anburey, a British officer who served under Burgoyne in the War of Independence, in his Travels II. 50 derives Yankee from Cherokee eankke slave, coward, which he says was applied to the inhabitants of New England by the Virginians for not assisting them in a war with the Cherokees; William Gordon in Hist. Amer. War states that it was a favourite word with farmer Jonathan Hastings of Cambridge, Massachusetts, c1713, who used it in the sense of ‘excellent’. Appearing next in order of date (1822) is the statement which has been most widely accepted, viz. that the word has been evolved from North American Indian corruptions of the word English through Yengees to Yankees (Heckewelder, Indian Nations iii. ed. 1876, p. 77); compare Yengees n. Perhaps the most plausible conjecture is that it comes from Dutch Janke , diminutive of Jan John, applied as a derisive nickname by either Dutch or English in the New England states (J. N. A. Thierry, 1838, in Life of Ticknor, 1876, II. vii. 124). The existence of Yank(e)y , Yankee , as a surname or nickname (often with Dutch associations) is vouched for by the following references:1683 Cal. State Papers, Colon. Ser. (1898) 457 They [sc. pirates] sailed from Bonaco..; chief commanders, Vanhorn, Laurens, and Yankey Duch.1684 Cal. State Papers, Colon. Ser. (1898) 733 A sloop..unlawfully seized by Captain Yankey.1687 Cal. State Papers, Colon. Ser. (1899) 456 Captains John Williams (Yankey) and Jacob Everson (Jacob).1687–8 MSS. Earl of Dartmouth in 11th Rep. Royal Comm. Hist. MSS (1887) App. v. 136 The pirates Yanky and Jacobs.1697 W. Dampier New Voy. around World iii. 38 Here we met with Captain Yanky.1725 Inventory of W. Marr of Carolina in Notes & Queries 5th Ser. X. 467 Item one negroe man named Yankee to be sold. Compare also ‘Dutch yanky’ s.v. yanky n.
A. n.
1.
a. U.S. A nickname for a native or inhabitant of New England, or, more widely, of the northern States generally; during the War of Secession applied by the Confederates to the soldiers of the Federal army.
ΘΚΠ
the world > people > nations > native or inhabitant of America > native or inhabitant of North America > native or inhabitant of U.S.A. > [noun] > parts of
New Englander1637
bayman1641
New English1647
Novangle1650
Novanglian1752
Yankee1765
cracker1766
Yank?1778
bushwhacker1809
tuckahoe1816
southerner1817
Yengees1819
muskrat1823
blue belly1827
half horse and half alligator1828
Southron1828
northerner1831
westerner1835
Northman1836
Easterner1838
Far-Wester1843
southwesterner1845
western1846
sand-hiller1848
Vineyarder1851
mountain boomer1859
Far Westerner1862
blue-nosed Yankee1866
Appalachian1888
sloper1892
Ozarkian1893
rebel1895
reb1897
Middle Westerner1899
hillbilly1900
Midwesterner1916
Ozarker1920
Geechee1926
Middle American1944
upstater1944
Mid-American1959
1765 Oppression, a Poem by an American (with notes by a North Briton) 17 From meanness first this Portsmouth Yankey rose. Note, ‘Portsmouth Yankey’, It seems, our hero being a New-Englander by birth, has a right to the epithet of Yankey; a name of derision, I have been informed, given by the Southern people on the Continent, to those of New-England: what meaning there is in the word, I never could learn.
1775 J. Trumbull MʽFingal 1 When Yankies, skill'd in martial rule, First put the British troops to school.
1775 Penna Gaz. 10 May in Notes & Queries 1st Ser. VI. 57/1 They [sc. the British troops] were roughly handled by the Yankees, a term of reproach for the New Englanders, when applied by the regulars.
1778 Muse's Mirrour I. 220 O My Yankee, my Yankee, And O my Yankee, my sweet-ee, And was its nurse North asham'd Because such a bantling hath beat-ee?
1817 M. Birkbeck Notes Journey Amer. (1818) 19 The enterprising people [at Richmond, Virginia] are mostly strangers; Scotch, Irish, and especially New England men, or Yankees, as they are called.
1825 J. Neal Brother Jonathan I. i. 13 He was a Yankee, the very character of whom is, that he can ‘turn his hand’, as he says, ‘to any thing’.
1891 S. J. Duncan Amer. Girl in London 23 The Yankees are the New Englanders,..the name would once have been taken as an insult by a Southerner.
b. By English writers and speakers commonly applied to a native or inhabitant of the United States generally; an American.Applied occasionally to a ship (cf. Frenchman n. 2, etc.).
ΘΚΠ
the world > people > nations > native or inhabitant of America > native or inhabitant of North America > native or inhabitant of U.S.A. > [noun]
long knife1784
Yankeec1784
Yankee Doodle1787
Columbian1789
Brother Jonathan1816
norteamericano1839
United Statesian1845
Joe1947
Yanqui1969
c1784 Nelson Let. to Locker in A. Duncan Life (1806) 321 I..am determined not to suffer the Yankies to come where the ship is.
1796 T. Twining Trav. Amer. (1894) 68 Their wit was particularly directed against a ‘Yankee’ who was one of the company. We apply this designation as a term of ridicule or reproach to the inhabitants of all parts of the United States indiscriminately; but the Americans confine its application to their countrymen of the Northern or New England States.
1798 C. Smith Young Philosopher III. 11 If thou marriedst the heiress, thou must give up thy little American, thy fascinating yankey.
1836 T. C. Haliburton Clockmaker 1st Ser. ix I'll be d——d, said he, if ever I saw a Yankee that didn't bolt his food whole like a Boa Constrictor.
1851 Blackwood's Mag. 69 409/2 When we next saw the Yankee [sc. a frigate], there we were coming right down upon him over the breast of the sea.
1887 ‘E. Lyall’ Knight-errant II. ii. 42 I really am Italian, though Signor Sardoni will call me a little Yankee.
2. [elliptical use of the adjective.] The Yankee language, the dialect of New England; loosely, American English generally.
ΘΚΠ
the mind > language > languages of the world > Indo-Hittite > [noun] > Indo-European > Germanic > English > American English
American1787
American English1806
Yankee1824
Americanese1863
United States1871
Yankeese1883
Amerenglish1923
General American1925
northern1947
Standard American English1951
1824 J. Gilchrist Etymol. Interpreter 8 The naked savages of Indiana already speak a corrupt English (or Yankee).
1836 T. C. Haliburton Clockmaker 1st Ser. i You did not come form Halifax, I presume, sir, did you? in a dialect too rich to be mistaken as genuine Yankee.
1840 T. C. Haliburton Let. Bag Great Western (U.K. ed.) iii. 34 Coarse jokes in English, German, French, and Yankee.
3. Whisky sweetened with molasses. U.S. regional colloquial.
ΘΚΠ
the world > food and drink > drink > intoxicating liquor > distilled drink > whisky > [noun] > drinks made with whisky
Yankee1804
Athole brose1818
whisky-and-soda1898
stengah1899
whisky-soda1915
whisky-water1919
1804 T. G. Fessenden Orig. Poems 97 Call on me, when you come this way, And take a dram of Yankee.
4. plural. Stock Market slang. American stocks or securities.
ΘΚΠ
society > trade and finance > stocks and shares > stocks, shares, or bonds > [noun] > types of > specific foreign
Peruvians1863
American1886
Yankees1887
cedula1919
1887 Pall Mall Gaz. 6 Sept. 12/1 There was great excitement in the American market yesterday, and the bulls are cherishing the hope that there is to be a sustained boom in ‘Yankees’.
1908 Daily Chron. 13 Mar. 1/7 Yankees finished higher on the lead from Wall Street.
5. A name for various special tools of American origin, or of ingenious design. (Cf. Yankee notions n. at Compounds b.)
ΚΠ
1909 Cent. Dict. Suppl.
6. = Yankee jib n. at Compounds b.
ΘΚΠ
society > travel > travel by water > vessel, ship, or boat > equipment of vessel > masts, rigging, or sails > sail > [noun] > sail set on a stay > jib or sail set on forestay > types of
marabut1622
flying jib1711
storm-jiba1827
spitfire-jib1858
jib topsail1866
reaching foresail1901
reacher1903
jumbo1912
Yankee1912
Yankee jib1912
Genoa1932
Genoa jib1932
slave1934
quad1937
slave jib1948
masthead genoa1958
1912 B. Heckstall-Smith & E. Du Boulay Compl. Yachtsman vi. 152 The ‘Yankee’ is a strong pulling sail.
1953 Yachting June 48 We handed the yankee in favor of the working jib and forestops'l.
1967 J. L. Anderson Vinland Voy. 211 Peter decided to use the No. 2 yankee, leaving the big No. 1 to its proper job of pulling forward.
1974 Islander (Victoria, Brit. Columbia) 11 Aug. 11/1 We were lost without the mizzen. With motor and yankee we inched our way..forward.
7. Horse Racing. A composite bet on four or more horses, composed of doubles, trebles, and one or more accumulators.
ΘΚΠ
society > leisure > entertainment > pastimes > betting > [noun] > type of bet
swoopstake1599
by-beta1627
levant1714
even money1732
play or pay bet1738
side bet1769
long shot1796
sweep1849
pay-or-play1853
sweepstake1861
pari-mutuel1868
to go a raker1869
flutter1874
skinner1874
by-wager1886
plunge1888
accumulator1889
saver1891
mutuel1893
quinella1902
parlay1904
Sydney or the bush1924
treble1924
daily double1930
all-up1933
round robin1944
double1951
twin double1960
perfecta1961
pool1963
lose bet1964
tiercé1964
Yankee bet1964
Yankee1967
nap1971
superfecta1971
tricast1972
triple1972
trixie1973
telebetting1974
trifecta1974
over-and-under1975
over-under1981
spread bet1981
1967 C. Cockburn I, Claud xxxiii. 404 I stepped into the betting-shop and placed the type of bet known as a ‘Yankee’ on four of the races... I was able to collect..over £72 for the twenty-two shillings I had bet.
1970 Guardian 17 Apr. 12/3 I have..won in 4-, 5- and 6-horse yankees sums of up to £200.
1981 B. Hines Looks & Smiles 184 I won it on the horses. Me and Phil had a Yankee up.
B. adj.
a. That is a Yankee; pertaining to or characteristic of Yankees (often with the connotation of cleverness, cunning, or cold calculation); loosely, belonging to the United States, American.
ΘΚΠ
the world > people > nations > native or inhabitant of America > native or inhabitant of North America > native or inhabitant of U.S.A. > [adjective]
American1775
Yankee1781
Native American1793
Yankeeish1818
Americanized1840
Yankeefied1846
all-American1909
Yanqui1929
norteamericano1979
1781 A. Bell in R. Southey Life (1844) I. 37 The whole coast infested with Yanky privateers.
1784 A. Adams Lett. (1848) 161 We have curtains, it is true, and we only in part undress, about as much as the Yankee bundlers.
1822 Cobbett's Weekly Polit. Reg. 9 Mar. 633 I was on board a little Yankee sloop in the Bay of Funday.
1828 (title) The Yankee and Boston Literary Gazette.
1829 F. Marryat Naval Officer III. i. 24 I will show you a Yankee trick.
1886 J. A. Froude Oceana 357 California with its gold and its cornfields,..its ‘heathen Chinese’ and its Yankee millionaires, was a land of romance.
b. Used of or in reference to the language or dialect: cf. A. 2.
ΘΚΠ
the mind > language > languages of the world > Indo-Hittite > [adjective] > Indo-European > Germanic > English > of varieties of English > American English
American1650
Anglo-American1810
salt river1828
Yankeea1854
Midland1873
New Yorkese1889
American English1892
Yinglish1953
Valley Girl1982
Yat1985
a1854 J. G. Whittier Charms & Fairy Faith in Prose Wks. (1880) II. 239 A sort of Yankee-Irish dialect.
1867 J. R. Lowell Biglow Papers 2nd Ser. (new ed.) Introd. p. xxi Of Yankee preterites I find risse and rize for rose in Middleton and Dryden.

Compounds

a. gen., as Yankee-like, Yankee-looking adjs.
ΚΠ
1799 Aurora (Philadelphia) 30 Sept. in R. H. Thornton Amer. Gloss. (1912) Faith, 'twill be Yankee like, and plagued funny.
1836 T. C. Haliburton Clockmaker 1st Ser. xvii I heard him ax the groom who that are Yankee lookin feller was.
b. Special combinations and collocations.
Yankee bet n. Horse Racing = sense A. 7 above.
ΘΚΠ
society > leisure > entertainment > pastimes > betting > [noun] > type of bet
swoopstake1599
by-beta1627
levant1714
even money1732
play or pay bet1738
side bet1769
long shot1796
sweep1849
pay-or-play1853
sweepstake1861
pari-mutuel1868
to go a raker1869
flutter1874
skinner1874
by-wager1886
plunge1888
accumulator1889
saver1891
mutuel1893
quinella1902
parlay1904
Sydney or the bush1924
treble1924
daily double1930
all-up1933
round robin1944
double1951
twin double1960
perfecta1961
pool1963
lose bet1964
tiercé1964
Yankee bet1964
Yankee1967
nap1971
superfecta1971
tricast1972
triple1972
trixie1973
telebetting1974
trifecta1974
over-and-under1975
over-under1981
spread bet1981
1964 A. Wykes Gambling viii. 194 (caption) The ‘Yankee bet’ (a permutation bet covering four horses) that can be made with off-course bookmakers in Britain.
1976 Daily Record (Glasgow) 29 Nov. 23/5 Yankee bet: Six doubles, four trebles and an accumulator—Pikey (12.0 Windsor), Escapologist (1.45 Wolverhampton), Corrieghoil (2.15 Wolverhampton), Heidelberg (3.0 Windsor).
Yankee fiddle n. a kind of bow-drill.
ΘΚΠ
society > occupation and work > equipment > piercing or boring tools > [noun] > drill > drill worked by string or cord
bow-drill1865
cord-drill1865
pump drill1865
thong-drill1865
fiddle-drill1888
Yankee fiddle1892
1892 R. L. Stevenson & L. Osbourne Wrecker xv. Nares, sullenly but busily drilling sea-shells with the instrument called a Yankee fiddle.
Yankee gang n. name in Canada for a special arrangement of gang-saws (see quot. 1875).
ΘΚΠ
society > occupation and work > equipment > cutting tool > saw > [noun] > gang-saw
gang-saw1804
stock-gang1875
Yankee gang1875
timber-frame1877
1875 E. H. Knight Pract. Dict. Mech. Yankee Gang, an arrangement in a saw-mill (Canada)... It consists of two sets of gang-saws, having parallel ways... One is the slabbing-gang, and reduces the log to a balk and slab-boards. The balk is then shifted to the stock-gang, which rips it into lumber.
Yankee jib n. (also Yankee jib topsail) a large jib topsail used in light winds, set on the topmast stay.
ΘΚΠ
society > travel > travel by water > vessel, ship, or boat > equipment of vessel > masts, rigging, or sails > sail > [noun] > sail set on a stay > jib or sail set on forestay > types of
marabut1622
flying jib1711
storm-jiba1827
spitfire-jib1858
jib topsail1866
reaching foresail1901
reacher1903
jumbo1912
Yankee1912
Yankee jib1912
Genoa1932
Genoa jib1932
slave1934
quad1937
slave jib1948
masthead genoa1958
1904 B. Heckstall-Smith Dixon Kemp's Man. of Yacht & Boat Sailing (ed. 10) v. 94 The sheeting of a modern large jackyard topsail requires a master hand's attention, especially when it is fitted ‘Yankee fashion’, having three sheets, as very many now are—namely, the main topsail sheet, the outer and inner sheets on the ends of the jackyard.]
1912 B. Heckstall-Smith & E. Du Boulay Compl. Yachtsman vi. 152 A useful sail is the Yankee jib-topsail. This is the largest or balloon jib-topsail, and the modern and most efficient form of balloon jib-topsail is cut, like all modern head-sails should be, very high in the clew.
1928 Daily Mail 9 Aug. 19/6 There is a Yankee jib which, as one sail, covers more than the combined area of jib and foresail.
1939 U. Fox Crest of Wave 145 We had settled down with the large Yankee jib topsail set in the place of the double clewed jib.
1976 Yachts & Yachting 20 Aug. 339/3 At 30 knots across the deck she dropped her yankee jib and kept going under staysail and heavily reefed main.
Yankee-land n. the land of Yankees, New England; loosely, the United States.
ΘΚΠ
the world > the earth > named regions of earth > America > North America > [noun] > United States
states1776
United States1776
Yankee-land1803
God's own country1807
U.S.1834
Yankland1834
yankeedoodledom1845
Yankeedom1851
the land of the free1884
land of opportunity1948
U.S. of A.1973
1803 Spirit of Public Jrnls. 6 350 More wit from Yankee-land.
1837 N. Hawthorne Amer. Note-bks. 13 July (1883) 57 It sounds strangely to hear children bargaining in French on the borders of Yankee-land.
Yankee notions n. [notion n. 11b.] small wares or useful articles made in New England or the northern States.
ΘΚΠ
society > trade and finance > merchandise > [noun] > fancy goods
fancy goods1792
notions1796
Yankee notions1819
1819 Mass. Spy 8 Sept. in R. H. Thornton Amer. Gloss. (1912) I come here to retail My Yankee notions,—cheese, wit, verse, codfishes, Cider, et cetera.
1825 J. Neal Brother Jonathan II. xxii. 298 The tallow, corn, cotton, hams, hides, and so forths, which we had got, in exchange for a load of Yankee notions.
1889 Cent. Mag. May 82/1 I saw the American tin-ware, lanterns, and ‘Yankee notions’.
Yankee State n. a nickname for Ohio.
ΘΚΠ
the world > the earth > named regions of earth > America > North America > [noun] > United States > specific states > Ohio
Mother of Presidents1827
O1838
Yankee State1884
1884 Harper's Mag. June 125/1 Ohio was called ‘the Yankee State’.

Derivatives

ˈYankee v. rare transitive to deal cunningly with like a Yankee, to cheat.
ΘΚΠ
the mind > mental capacity > knowledge > conformity with what is known, truth > deceit, deception, trickery > cheating, fraud > treat fraudulently, cheat [verb (transitive)]
deceivec1330
defraud1362
falsec1374
abuse?a1439
fraud1563
visure1570
cozen1583
coney-catch1592
to fetch in1592
cheat1597
sell1607
mountebanka1616
dabc1616
nigglea1625
to put it on1625
shuffle1627
cuckold1644
to put a cheat on1649
tonya1652
fourbe1654
imposturea1659
impose1662
slur1664
knap1665
to pass upon (also on)1673
snub1694
ferret1699
nab1706
shool1745
humbug1750
gag1777
gudgeon1787
kid1811
bronze1817
honeyfuggle1829
Yankee1837
middle1863
fuck1866
fake1867
skunk1867
dead-beat1888
gold-brick1893
slicker1897
screw1900
to play it1901
to do in1906
game1907
gaff1934
scalp1939
sucker1939
sheg1943
swizz1961
butt-fuck1979
1837 Fraser's Mag. 16 683 [They] are considered capable of ‘Yankeeing’ the more simple-minded Canadians.
ˈYankeedom n. the realm or country of Yankees, the United States of America; Yankees as a body.
ΘΚΠ
the world > the earth > named regions of earth > America > North America > [noun] > United States
states1776
United States1776
Yankee-land1803
God's own country1807
U.S.1834
Yankland1834
yankeedoodledom1845
Yankeedom1851
the land of the free1884
land of opportunity1948
U.S. of A.1973
the world > people > nations > native or inhabitant of America > native or inhabitant of North America > native or inhabitant of U.S.A. > [noun] > collectively
Uncle Sam1810
Yankeedoodledodom1843
Yankeedom1851
1851 Blackwood's Edinb. Mag. Apr. 417/1 He ought to take steamer direct for Yankeedom;..they'd make him President at once!
1890 R. Broughton Alas! i. viii Yankeedom and Cockneydom, rushing hand in hand through all earth's sacredness.
ˈYankeyess n. a depreciatory term for an American woman.
ΘΚΠ
the world > people > nations > native or inhabitant of America > native or inhabitant of North America > native or inhabitant of U.S.A. > [noun] > woman
Americaness1838
Yankeyess1852
1852 Q. Rev. Mar. 297 The Yankeyesses who urge the convenience of a manly garb.
ˈYankeefied adj. /-faɪd/ made or become like a Yankee; characteristic of a Yankee.
ΘΚΠ
the world > people > nations > native or inhabitant of America > native or inhabitant of North America > native or inhabitant of U.S.A. > [adjective]
American1775
Yankee1781
Native American1793
Yankeeish1818
Americanized1840
Yankeefied1846
all-American1909
Yanqui1929
norteamericano1979
1846 J. Taylor Upper Canada 47 Some of the Canadians indulge in the Yankeefied habit of bolting down their victuals.
1897 Voice (N.Y.) 14 Jan. 8 Japan is getting Yankeefied in more ways than one.
ˈYankeeish adj. resembling a Yankee.
ΘΚΠ
the world > people > nations > native or inhabitant of America > native or inhabitant of North America > native or inhabitant of U.S.A. > [adjective]
American1775
Yankee1781
Native American1793
Yankeeish1818
Americanized1840
Yankeefied1846
all-American1909
Yanqui1929
norteamericano1979
1818 H. C. Robinson Diary 30 Apr. (1967) 58 Allston has a mild manner, a soft voice, and a sentimental air with him, not at all Yankyish.
1830 Collegian (Cambridge, Mass.) Apr. 117 Comparisons are generally ‘odorous’, particularly Yankeeish, and decidedly condemned by Captain Basil Hall.
ˈYankeeishly adv. like a Yankee.
ΘΚΠ
the world > people > nations > native or inhabitant of America > native or inhabitant of North America > native or inhabitant of U.S.A. > [adverb]
Americanly1832
Yankeeishly1855
1855 T. De Quincey in ‘H. A. Page’ T. De Quincey: Life & Writings (1877) II. xviii. 112 Waal, now, to speak yankeeishly, I calculate your dander is rising.
ˈYankeeism n. Yankee character or style; a Yankee characteristic or idiom.
ΘΚΠ
the world > people > nations > native or inhabitant of America > native or inhabitant of North America > native or inhabitant of U.S.A. > [noun] > character or quality
Yankeeism1820
Americanism1833
Yankeedoodleism1836
Americanness1862
Yankeeness1909
the mind > language > languages of the world > Indo-Hittite > [noun] > Indo-European > Germanic > English > American English > idiom of
Americanism1781
Yankeeism1820
New Englandism1831
Westernism1836
Canadianism1838
Hoosierism1843
southernism1855
transatlanticism1858
frontierism1890
New Yorkerism1951
1820 Eclectic Rev. Apr. 359 The term unwell, when first brought up, was ridiculed as a Yankee-ism.
1836 Fraser's Mag. 13 653 Guilty of all those Yankeeisms which distinguish the lout from the gentleman.
1865 Visct. Milton & W. B. Cheadle N.-W. Passage by Land (1867) ii. 18 Irish or German Yankees;..out-Heroding Herod in Yankeeism.
ˈYankeeize v. (transitive) to make Yankeeish, give a Yankee character to.
ΘΚΠ
the world > people > nations > native or inhabitant of America > native or inhabitant of North America > native or inhabitant of U.S.A. > [verb (transitive)]
Americanize1686
Yankeeize1864
1864 Guardian 20 Apr. 386 We begin to fear that England is becoming Yankeeised.
1877 Sir F. Elliot in Dowden Corr. Sir H. Taylor 377 The most certain of political tendencies in England is what..I will call the Yankeeising tendency.
1882 H. E. Scudder Noah Webster viii. 289 Hawthorne, Yankeeizing the Greek myths, and finding all Rome but the background for his Puritan maiden, was asserting that new discovery of Europe by America.
ˈYankeeness n. Yankee character.
ΘΚΠ
the world > people > nations > native or inhabitant of America > native or inhabitant of North America > native or inhabitant of U.S.A. > [noun] > character or quality
Yankeeism1820
Americanism1833
Yankeedoodleism1836
Americanness1862
Yankeeness1909
1909 ‘O. Henry’ Roads of Destiny xxi. 352 Any Yankeeness I may have is geographical.
This entry has not yet been fully updated (first published 1921; most recently modified version published online December 2021).
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n.adj.1765
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