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Topic: The term "yank" - how do you feel about it?  (Read 5472 times)

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  • Jewlz
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Re: The term "yank" - how do you feel about it?
« Reply #45 on: June 14, 2010, 01:20:39 PM »
That depends who says it.  ;) And more importantly, who has control of the pie!  :P

 ;D ;D ;D


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Re: The term "yank" - how do you feel about it?
« Reply #46 on: June 15, 2010, 01:20:25 AM »
Really?  How long have you lived in the UK? I have a friend whose English mom has lived in the US for 40 ish years and no one would mistake her accent for American.

Well, since I was about eight months old, actually! :D

Learnt to talk here, so I developed a British accent. Which was awkward when I moved back to the US when I was 10.
"As I write, highly civilized human beings are flying overhead, trying to kill me.

They do not feel any enmity against me as an individual, nor I against them. They are ‘only doing their duty’, as the saying goes. Most of them, I have no doubt, are kind-hearted law-abiding men who would never dream of committing murder in private life."

- George Orwell


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Re: The term "yank" - how do you feel about it?
« Reply #47 on: June 15, 2010, 01:32:41 AM »
I hate it!  When I've been called that, I've felt as though the person is trying to insult me.  Of course, there are plenty of names you can call people based on where they are from, and to me that's just like a derogatory term based on something like their race.  I don't know why this one is considered 'ok' because to me, it's just the same ...but hey, times always change.  Lots of terms become derogatory over time, so we'll see where this one goes.


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Re: The term "yank" - how do you feel about it?
« Reply #48 on: June 15, 2010, 02:55:47 PM »
Coming from Boston, I would detest being called a "Yankee"  ;D
>^.^<
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Re: The term "yank" - how do you feel about it?
« Reply #49 on: June 15, 2010, 05:31:04 PM »
I lived in the UK for 5 months last summer and trying to get back.  I was called a Yank all the time by my husband's friends.  It never bothered me.  To be honest, I wear the label a bit proudly.  I like being "different" in that way.  I'm proud of being an American despite some things I might not like about my country.  We've all got them.  But, I think it is fine.  However, if someone delivers it in the context of bashing my country, that's a whole other matter. 

I don't mind being called a Yank but DON'T CALL ME A YANKEE!!!  I'm a Philadelphia Phillies fan through and through so any team from NY needs to never be associated with me.  lol

I'm an American chick no matter where I roam...


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Re: The term "yank" - how do you feel about it?
« Reply #50 on: July 07, 2010, 11:05:24 PM »
I have never used the term in an insulting way myself personally, always in a friendly way  :)

For a little bit of interesting history lesson in the term Yankee, it actually originated in New Amsterdam, the Dutch were called Jan Kees which means John Cheese, by the British, Yank-kees is a Dutch pronunciation , after the Dutch were defeated and New Amsterdam became New York, the term stuck, which is why the New York baseball team used Yankee in their name.

so its not New Englander, Northerner or American, its calling somebody a Dutch person !!  ;D


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Re: The term "yank" - how do you feel about it?
« Reply #51 on: July 08, 2010, 01:14:09 PM »


For a little bit of interesting history lesson in the term Yankee, it actually originated in New Amsterdam, the Dutch were called Jan Kees which means John Cheese, by the British, Yank-kees is a Dutch pronunciation , after the Dutch were defeated and New Amsterdam became New York, the term stuck, which is why the New York baseball team used Yankee in their name.

But John Cheese changed his name to "Cleese"!!   ;)
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Re: The term "yank" - how do you feel about it?
« Reply #52 on: July 15, 2010, 12:24:41 AM »
I don't particularly like being called a Yank, but I'm from Texas and I don't believe it makes sense to call me a Yank.  [smiley=cowboy.gif] When I first got called a Yank, I informed them that it is usually meant New Englanders, not Texans. Kind of ruined it for them  ;D

Same here! My response is always, "I'm not a Yank - I've never even been to New England!"

It was funny, the first random British person to strike up a conversation with me was an elderly gentleman who asked if I'd seen the bus go past (I hadn't) and then "Oh, you're a Yankee!" which I rolled my eyes at but let pass and he walked me into town while telling me all the racist views on immigration that Men of a Certain Age* seem compelled to share with me** and The Great War and how he knew a lot of good Yanks then - but they kept calling him a Limey and that referred to people from the limestone coast*** and he was from York and how could they have such a lousy grasp of geography. And all I said was: o_O

* I haven't met any Women of a Certain Age
** I related this encounter to my BF's best friend and his response was "I didn't know my father was visiting"
***yes I've heard the limey=limes to fight scurvy but he obviously disagreed


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Re: The term "yank" - how do you feel about it?
« Reply #53 on: July 15, 2010, 10:11:00 AM »

Californians are yankees



American by birth, southern by the grace of God...
I just hope that more people will ignore the fatalism of the argument that we are beyond repair. We are not beyond repair. We are never beyond repair. - AOC


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Re: The term "yank" - how do you feel about it?
« Reply #54 on: July 16, 2010, 02:24:07 PM »
I think "yank" has a different connotation to "yankee". "Yank" is what the indigenous inhabitants of the British Isles called the GI arriving on their shores ("Oversexed, overpaid and over here") "Yankee" could refer to those of the damned variety or to anyone reading the magazine of that name.
>^.^<
Married and moved to UK 1974
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Irish citizenship June 2009
    Irish passport September 2009 
Retirement July 2012
Leeds in 2013!
ILR (Long Residence) 22 March 2016


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