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 Indiana University win 2004 University National Championship Moderations-Bereich
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 Betreff des Beitrags: Indiana University win 2004 University National Championship
BeitragVerfasst: 13.12.2004 04:02 
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Indiana University win 2004 University National Championship for the 7th time! Thats the NCAA in the USA!

Go Hoosiers! (a name originating from German - hence this post! What does it mean in German?).

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BeitragVerfasst: 13.12.2004 07:06 
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keith wrote
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Go Hoosiers! (a name originating from German - hence this post! What does it mean in German?).


don't know that- but for your information- The Anaheim Angels- not only my favorite baseball team- but 2002 champions, are located in a city founded by german immigrants... Anaheim. - i've been told what it means before but that escapes me. also anaheim home of the phoenix club- a german social club-(throws a great octoberfest...)


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BeitragVerfasst: 13.12.2004 14:54 
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Hoosiers is, as far as I know, not a german word (never heard it before). Maybe it's Dutch or Scandinavian...

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BeitragVerfasst: 13.12.2004 21:00 
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seems that nobody really sure where the term hoosier came from- article states some of it's possible origins... http://www.indiana.edu/~alumni/fun/hoosier.html#art


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BeitragVerfasst: 13.12.2004 22:13 
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Now here is a burning question. :wink:

yourdictionary.com hat geschrieben:
Word History: We know where Hoosiers come from: Indiana. But where does the name Hoosier come from? That is less easy to answer. The origins of Hoosier are rather obscure, but the most likely possibility is that the term is an alteration of hoozer, an English dialect word recorded in Cumberland, a former county of northwest England, in the late 19th century and used to refer to anything unusually large. The transition between hoozer and Hoosier is not clear. The first recorded instance of Hoosier meaning "Indiana resident" is dated 1826; however, it seems possible that senses of the word recorded later in the Dictionary of Americanisms, including "a big, burly, uncouth specimen or individual; a frontiersman, countryman, rustic," reflect the kind of use this word had before it settled down in Indiana. As a nickname, Hoosier was but one of a variety of disparaging terms for the inhabitants of particular states arising in the early 19th century. Texans were called Beetheads, for example; Alabamans were Lizards; Nebraskans were Bug-eaters; South Carolinians were Weasels, and Pennsylvanians were Leatherheads. People in Missouri might have had it worst of allthey were called Pukes. Originally, these names were probably taken up by people living in neighboring states, but belittled residents adopted them in a spirit of defiant pride, much as American colonists turned the derisive term Yankee into a moniker for their spirit of rebellion. Today, most of these frontier nicknames have disappeared from the landscape. A few like Okie still exist with much of their original animus. Others survive as nicknames for the sports teams of state universitiesthe North Carolina Tarheels, the Ohio Buckeyes, and so onfighting words only on the playing field or court.

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