Why Are Americans Known As Yanks/Yankees?

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  • Опубликовано: 22 окт 2024

Комментарии • 1,9 тыс.

  • @NameExplain
    @NameExplain  3 года назад +244

    How geographically close are you to being a yank? Any pie eating Vermonters watching!?

    • @shakingh4nd
      @shakingh4nd 3 года назад +13

      I'm canadian, but still pretty close

    • @joy_gantic
      @joy_gantic 3 года назад +17

      Iowa fought on the Union side in the civil war so I think we qualify

    • @autumnwuffyentertainment4954
      @autumnwuffyentertainment4954 3 года назад +8

      Do you see a lot of people calling Yankees to the early American's especially when talking in the context of the revolutionary war at least that's how it used in New England/Massachusetts where I'm from. I have never heard of it used in a pie eating form now! I have been calling it by southerners a lot however! Especially in the deep south they refer to people that are more liberal as Yankees

    • @GoatTheGoat
      @GoatTheGoat 3 года назад +28

      I'm a native breakfast pie eating Vermonter.
      I lived in Australia for a year when I was eleven. I everybody called me a 'Yankee'. For the first few months, I didn't understand how they knew I was from Vermont. Then I realized they thought everybody from the USA was a Yankee.

    • @ll00ll38
      @ll00ll38 3 года назад +7

      Welp Pakistan is close enough fam

  • @dracofeb8859
    @dracofeb8859 3 года назад +1204

    For me (growing up in Texas), I grew up associating "Yankee" is anyone from up north, mainly around the New England area.

    • @clonecommanderrex8542
      @clonecommanderrex8542 3 года назад +38

      Same

    • @Snqwy
      @Snqwy 3 года назад +14

      @@nigelmarvin1387 Same here, more or less

    • @kknives36
      @kknives36 3 года назад +52

      Also from Texas, the Southern Part. My dad even calls people from Dallas Yankee heh.

    • @ArsonRaboot
      @ArsonRaboot 3 года назад +4

      same

    • @aaaacarolina
      @aaaacarolina 3 года назад +7

      Same, but that's because I watched Gone With the Wind when I was learning english hahah

  • @ADMusic1999
    @ADMusic1999 3 года назад +466

    All I know is that yankee-doodle went to town riding on a pony; stuck a feather in his hat and called it macaroni.

    • @williambrown1095
      @williambrown1095 3 года назад +20

      Did you know that "macaroni" was slang for Italian about 1770? So when the YD called it, he was saying "Cool! Italian style!"

    • @williambrown1095
      @williambrown1095 3 года назад +6

      @@pawsindmeinlieblingsfach3518 typo. "Be handy." but you have it right. also there are 4 more verses. each more nasty than the next. {It was a British anti American song after all}

    • @jacquesvoris456
      @jacquesvoris456 3 года назад +5

      The origins of the song of allegedly that when the militia levies arrived from New England they were poorly dressed, and only had a small white feather stuck in their hats as a "uniform". "Macaroni" was, and to some extent, used to cover all pasta. Being uncommon, and Italian, it was seen as "fancy". Thus the song is a jab at the New England troops rough hewn appearance but them thinking they looked fancy.

    • @williambrown1095
      @williambrown1095 3 года назад +1

      Macaroni as a slang word predates 1776 [but probably not by much] I believe YDD is most likely a artifact from 1765 to 1776. The fact that it makes fun of Americans is a clue. {i love all these history bits} {if you get some solid evidence give me a shout. Thanks!}@@jacquesvoris456

    • @williambrown1095
      @williambrown1095 3 года назад

      @@jacquesvoris456 Whoops! I just thought of something. Militia levies would include post French and Indian War up to revolution. so, we may be saying the same thing. {Thanks again, you gave an old man something to consider!}

  • @tampazeke4587
    @tampazeke4587 3 года назад +185

    As a person from Mississippi, in the American South, I had never EVER been called a "Yankee" until I went to Europe. I wasn't offended as an American, but I was very much offended as a Southerner.

    • @7lvnblue464
      @7lvnblue464 Год назад +5

      Loooool

    • @sandeepgill9975
      @sandeepgill9975 Год назад +2

      The most Southern Southerner from Mississippi would probably be Davis.

    • @SYR314Allen
      @SYR314Allen Год назад +2

      But you never say northerners

    • @HarrisonBirdBrown
      @HarrisonBirdBrown Год назад +2

      As a Louisianian, we call the North of the state Yankees as a jab for not being in the south. It's also easier than bringing the religions into it. South louisiana being catholic and north being protestants. It's a different way of life.

    • @chadst.pierre5257
      @chadst.pierre5257 Год назад +1

      ​@@HarrisonBirdBrown maybe that's because much of the French who settled into Louisiana were mainly Catholics. Like the Acadians who were forced there after the French and Indian War of the 1750s. I bet the Huguenots of France settled down in the Louisiana area to or by the other parts of the United States of America that had a large French pioneering in the rest of the country or in the British colonies. Since the French didn't allow the Huguenots to settle in any of the other French colonies since those settlers had to be Catholic. Since the French nation was a majority Catholic nation and the King of France was Catholic to. Since the French king persecuted the French Huguenots who were Protestant Christians in France during the wars of religion in the 16th century.

  • @caseygibson7266
    @caseygibson7266 3 года назад +526

    As a Southerner, I'd just be confused if someone called me a "Yankee"

    • @tomp6685
      @tomp6685 3 года назад +10

      @gearoid quirke Lots of Irish settled the south along with British and Scots. Im from Tennessee and my wife is mostly British and Irish in her DNA results. She's wants to visit Ireland one day I would love to go with her.

    • @tomp6685
      @tomp6685 3 года назад +7

      @Noah Pritchett Yeah we understand that. We are Americans that's our nationality but our ancestors came from Europe. People here in America when they talk about their heritage they will say they are German mixed with Irish etc. It's a way to connect back to the old country.

    • @Alfred_Leonhart
      @Alfred_Leonhart 3 года назад

      @Noah Pritchett god I love etymology my name Avery is an old French pronunciation of Alfred, which means elf king/counsel.

    • @mcfarofinha134
      @mcfarofinha134 3 года назад +14

      Silence yank

    • @robjenkinson1487
      @robjenkinson1487 3 года назад

      @gearoid quirke Technically True however Saxon,Norman Dna is no actually that common outside of Anglia, Southerners will probably be descended from Scots and Native British descendents, there is actually very little Dna and archeological evidence to support the Saxon invasion. I watched a Tv program years ago called the face of britain, it's seems to a case of adopting saxon customs through trade for most of britain. The idea that the English and Germans are genetically identical isn't scientific, certain portions of britain like east Anglia and the home counties show signs of a Saxon majority, however the Midland's and West coast trend norman and celtic respectively. England was basically a melting pot of Norman, Saxon and mostly celtic during the American colonisation.

  • @josue.ortega
    @josue.ortega 3 года назад +185

    In Mexico, people refer to Americans more as "americanos", "estadounidenses", or "gringos". Whenever you hear the word "yankee" they're usually referring to the baseball team.

    • @josue.ortega
      @josue.ortega 3 года назад +3

      @R. Schowiada71 yeah, but that name is just a product of a very recent reform that just changed the official name of the country in order to be more congruent with the federal nature of our system. On the other hand, for the past two centuries we have been living next to a culturally, economically, and politically omniscient neighbor whose name is Estados Unidos - the name has stuck, and habits die hard haha

    • @josue.ortega
      @josue.ortega 3 года назад +1

      @Alex Winterborn Chill friend, I know that the official nsme includes the word America, but in my country people don't usually refer to our neighbor in the north by its full name, we only say Estados Unidos - just as you may know that the full name of your neighbor is Thomas Joseph Miller Jr, but you will usually just call Him Tom

    • @nach1113
      @nach1113 3 года назад +1

      @@josue.ortega americanos XD

    • @KaelVidos20
      @KaelVidos20 3 года назад +8

      yankee is more common in south america.
      saludos desde argentina

    • @TacticalReaper56
      @TacticalReaper56 2 года назад +2

      I love gringo/a. I know it can come from a bad light but its unique. Rolls of the tongue nicely.

  • @akabga
    @akabga 3 года назад +43

    Arizona native here. When I studied in Italy in high school, I fully embraced being called a Yank. It was like a term of endearment, and I was proud to be identified by my American-ness.

  • @Ragemuffn
    @Ragemuffn 3 года назад +248

    As a swede. The only time I really hear Yankee or Yanks is by Brits being deregatory toward Americans.

    • @Bengtssonsan
      @Bengtssonsan 3 года назад +19

      I'm also a swede, and the term yankees (or "jänkare") is not very common any more but my grandfather used it a lot back in the day

    • @BernardLS
      @BernardLS 3 года назад +7

      In the UK it may be further distorted into ‘septics’ a contraction of ‘septic tanks’ which rhymes with ‘yanks’. Septic tanks are were the toilet waste collects when the property is not connected to the municipal mains drainage waste system.

    • @MacStatic
      @MacStatic 3 года назад +6

      Only heard it from brits as well and not a single other nationality. Aside from baseball Lol

    • @allenjenkins7947
      @allenjenkins7947 3 года назад +6

      @@BernardLS Australians shorten it even further to Seppo.

    • @allenjenkins7947
      @allenjenkins7947 3 года назад +8

      Generally speaking, Yankee is used more in a derogatory sense while Yank is just a generic term for American. It's shorter. Aussies and Kiwis tend to use them in the same way. It's just like Pom is shorter than Englishman, but Pommy (or more often PommyBastard) is used derogatively.

  • @nebulan
    @nebulan 3 года назад +223

    I think i only hear yankee by southerners about northerners. Im from the mid Atlantic so we're kinda neither
    Lol jankee

    • @chrisd2051
      @chrisd2051 3 года назад +9

      I'm a New Yorker and I've only heard Yankee by the Southerners for anyone north of Virginia, and by my British friends for Americans and an ex gf whos family was German and I'd be referred to as "Der Yankee"

    • @DinoGaming-wz3jv
      @DinoGaming-wz3jv 3 года назад

      Laugh out loud hanker also

    • @DinoGaming-wz3jv
      @DinoGaming-wz3jv 3 года назад +1

      Jankee

    • @crystalwolcott4744
      @crystalwolcott4744 3 года назад

      If your family would have supported the union, then you count as the North. lol

    • @nebulan
      @nebulan 3 года назад +4

      @@crystalwolcott4744 which family? My current? Or take my ancestors that were alive during the war, add the up as pro or anti union or not even American and take the average?

  • @lucillefrancois150
    @lucillefrancois150 3 года назад +449

    As an american this is kinda confusing to me, cause to *us* “Yankee” specifically means northerners while the ex confederate states aka the south are “Dixies”

    • @Gala-yp8nx
      @Gala-yp8nx 3 года назад +18

      Eh... Yankees are specifically people from Connecticut and New England.

    • @gavinowens459
      @gavinowens459 3 года назад +30

      To me Yankee is just anyone from the north but the term Dixie is really only used by the confederate-flag-waving racists to describe the south/southerners

    • @tjpprojects7192
      @tjpprojects7192 3 года назад +41

      @@gavinowens459 Welp dang, I guess I've been living around racists half my life and have never even known it. Way to generalize a whole group of people...

    • @samiliasregina7670
      @samiliasregina7670 3 года назад +5

      @@tjpprojects7192 Well he did specify he thought it was only used by “lost causers” to describe themselves and other southerners

    • @carsonianthegreat4672
      @carsonianthegreat4672 3 года назад +7

      @@gavinowens459 that’s not true

  • @Otaku-gf7iq
    @Otaku-gf7iq 3 года назад +147

    Yankee actually means “delinquent” in Japan. Like school delinquents. I’m not sure about its origins but it’s pretty interesting how this word meant something totally different in japan.

    • @DamonNomad82
      @DamonNomad82 3 года назад +21

      Sort of like "Ohio" means a state in the US, but is Japanese for "Good morning!"

    • @neroquin
      @neroquin 3 года назад

      DamonNomad82 - definitely don't know that from the dr. stone op

    • @theseyi
      @theseyi 3 года назад +12

      @@DamonNomad82 no...just no. Not only do Americans say Ohio differently than ohayo is said in Japan, even the romanji is spelled differently (aka Ohio vs ohayo)

    • @laurencefraser
      @laurencefraser 3 года назад +24

      The term comes from the fact that, at least for a while, a certain type of Japanese delinquent (basically motorcycle gangs) were heavily influenced by the american pop culture of the day. They tended to certain types of ionically American hair and clothing styles and such as a sort of almost uniform, and were named accordingly. Such gangs still show up in manga and anime sometimes, and their styles are used as visual shorthand for "delinquent thug" even if no such gang appears.
      Or at least, such is my understanding.

    • @dr.velious5411
      @dr.velious5411 3 года назад +6

      @@theseyi Ohio Gozaimasu.

  • @lpburrows
    @lpburrows 3 года назад +166

    Southerner (of the US) here: The aphorism is that there are three kinds of Yankees: Yankees (who just happen to be from the North), Damn Yankees (who move to the South), and Goddamn Yankees (who move to the South, and constantly talk about how much better the North is). It's not a complimentary term, at all.

    • @rucerius4968
      @rucerius4968 3 года назад +8

      I've heard that aphorism except the Goddamn Yankee was one from the North who moved South and married a Southern woman.

    • @Pouzdraken
      @Pouzdraken 3 года назад +6

      What about a northerner who moves to the south and talks about how much better the south is

    • @rucerius4968
      @rucerius4968 3 года назад +12

      @@Pouzdraken Still a damn yankee.

    • @randlebrowne2048
      @randlebrowne2048 3 года назад +7

      @@Pouzdraken That would be a Yankee on parole ;o)

    • @jaushuagrahamthefloridaman1124
      @jaushuagrahamthefloridaman1124 3 года назад +12

      Your missing the 4th Floridian version we have:
      " *GODFORSAKEN YANKEE BASTARDS* "
      Aka tourists who come and make colonial yankee enclaves Like Amelia Island or fort Lauderdale

  • @onewholovesvenison5335
    @onewholovesvenison5335 3 года назад +350

    Anyone: (calls a southerner a Yankee)
    Southerner: *So you have chosen death*

    • @liam6nugget
      @liam6nugget 3 года назад +11

      But they are Yanks! I should know, I’m Australian.

    • @DamonNomad82
      @DamonNomad82 3 года назад +41

      Calling a non-New England American a "Yank/Yankee" = calling a Scot "English". In other words, you'd better be ready for a fight!

    • @gavinowens459
      @gavinowens459 3 года назад +7

      I'm from Texas and honestly if someone called me a Yankee I wouldn't really be offended, just kinda weirded out. Especially if it was an American

    • @darkithnamgedrf9495
      @darkithnamgedrf9495 3 года назад +1

      @@DamonNomad82 not “non New England” no one cares unless your from the former confederate states basically

    • @MrTruehoustonian
      @MrTruehoustonian 3 года назад +7

      I'm a Houstonian, and I fucking approve this message. Don't mess with Texas, and you don't dare call me "yank".

  • @Ben_Hard
    @Ben_Hard 3 года назад +110

    I have to disagree: cookie is the best word we the dutch brought to america. It's a great word when you don't want to decide what's a biscuit and what's a cake

    • @blakedavis2447
      @blakedavis2447 3 года назад +7

      How would you confuse a cake with a biscuit

    • @Ben_Hard
      @Ben_Hard 3 года назад +6

      @@blakedavis2447 well is a cookie a biscuit or a cake then?

    • @blakedavis2447
      @blakedavis2447 3 года назад +8

      @@Ben_Hard it’s a cookie

    • @Ben_Hard
      @Ben_Hard 3 года назад +6

      @@blakedavis2447 so what do you call a cookie if the word cookie didn't exist in english...

    • @blakedavis2447
      @blakedavis2447 3 года назад +6

      @@Ben_Hard sweet flatbread

  • @RAdaltonracer
    @RAdaltonracer 3 года назад +43

    As a Bostonian and New Englander in general I perceive the being called the term and by who:
    Foreigner: Thank you!
    Southerner: Really? -_-
    Westerner: Ok then...thanks?
    New Yorker: Screw off!

    • @racheljones1634
      @racheljones1634 3 года назад +2

      I'm from NH. That's accurate.

    • @jalicea1650
      @jalicea1650 3 года назад +8

      As someone from Western Mass I hear Yankee as a matter of pride around here. It's associated to Yankee Candle and our Yankee ingenuity, but not the team, the people of the North.

    • @Jedwbpm
      @Jedwbpm 3 года назад +5

      Yes I eat Pie for Breakfast. Yes I’m a New Englander, born in Maine and raised in the Pioneer and.Connecticut Valley. To me a Yankee is a New Englander that is of English decent,

    • @martyc909
      @martyc909 3 года назад +2

      As a Californian, I don’t think I’d ever call someone a Yankee.. lol

  • @FernandoMendoza-dw8nz
    @FernandoMendoza-dw8nz 3 года назад +149

    "I don't like im. His eyes are too close together! And he's a Yank!"
    -Chicken run

  • @mcfarofinha134
    @mcfarofinha134 3 года назад +58

    In japan we used to have a gang called the yankees so it became a denonym for delinquents. So much so that we never use it as a term for Americans.

    • @PerplexedPlayers
      @PerplexedPlayers 3 года назад +6

      I thought it was a word used to describe a sort of youth gang culture in general, not a specific gang?
      It's funny that in Japan the name comes from us Americans but has come to mean something different in so now it no longer applies to us.

    • @mcfarofinha134
      @mcfarofinha134 3 года назад +5

      @@PerplexedPlayers it used to be a specific gang, but now is used as a generic term for a young delinquent.

    • @PerplexedPlayers
      @PerplexedPlayers 3 года назад +4

      @@mcfarofinha134 interesting, the name is probably derived from interactions with american troops leftover from WW2. The chopper culture and elements of greaser gang aesthetics probably came from them too.

  • @Mortalrigger
    @Mortalrigger 3 года назад +31

    As a Floridian, being called a Yankee is typically an insult; and depending on context it's a means to pick a fight. A southerner calling another southerner Yankee is like saying "you don't belong".
    Otherwise Yankee to me means northerner. Further, among southerners it usually means someone that not only doesn't belong, but is likely trying to impose norms or rules you don't identify with. That definitely harkens back to the Civil war/post civil war era.

    • @ralphgarcia913
      @ralphgarcia913 2 года назад +4

      Not in South Florida, there's about a million former New Yorkers like myself down here. We love the name as we're very huge New York Yankees fans. We can't root for the New York Mets. Yankees have 27 world championships. They had an IQ test when I was a kid. If you chose the Mets as you're favorite team you failed the IQ test. BTW we have a team just like the Mets down here in Miami, they're called the Miami Marlins.

    • @celavetex
      @celavetex Год назад +1

      Here in Texas, yankee is a offensive term for being from the north or acting like a northerner

    • @daveassanowicz186
      @daveassanowicz186 Год назад +3

      Telling a Yankee they don't belong in the US South is a compliment

  • @jonmajarucon51
    @jonmajarucon51 3 года назад +12

    I am a second generation Filipino. My maternal and paternal grandparents were from the Philippines. (ca. 1912) My parents were born in the U.S. We have a very dear friend from London who always calls me a "Yank". It was never used as an insult but is actually quite endearing. We always associated it with being an American and we are very proud to be Americans. During the Vietnam war the Ocean offshore was divided into two sectors: Yankee and Dixie Station. If you were in a Carrier group in Yankee Station that meant air operations would also include Hanoi as opposed to Saigon in the south. What an amazing word: Yankee.

  • @theyeetyduck2090
    @theyeetyduck2090 3 года назад +12

    I’m from NY and grew up with a healthy amount of southern influence and your right it does depend on who calls someone a yankee. It’s almost never used in the northeast but in the south it is often a derogatory slang term similar to how folks up north call southerners “dixies” or “Johnny rebs”

  • @Quadrenaro
    @Quadrenaro 3 года назад +29

    I grew up in the south. I had a British science teacher in 6th grade who liked to call us "yanks" to annoy a certain group of students.

    • @elyace
      @elyace Год назад

      I'd be confused but not offended I'm from Texas

  • @RwingDsquad
    @RwingDsquad 3 года назад +524

    Nobody in the USA says “yank”
    It’s always yankee.

    • @oswald7597
      @oswald7597 3 года назад +32

      There's an American song called "Over There" where a line repeated in the Chorus is: "The Yanks are coming"
      I'm pretty sure that's clear evidence of Americans using Yank, not just Yankee.

    • @Dave-lh6ws
      @Dave-lh6ws 3 года назад +73

      Nobody in the US says “yank” unless they are referencing tugging on something. “Over There” was a WW1 song directed toward Europe.

    • @oswald7597
      @oswald7597 3 года назад +6

      @@Dave-lh6ws Hmmm
      I don't think you could rewrite the song to be "The Tugging on somethings are coming" and keep the same meaning in the same way you could easily say "The Yankees are coming" and keep the meaning.
      It's quite clear Yank doesn't refer to tugging on anything in that context.

    • @Daniel-sm5vy
      @Daniel-sm5vy 3 года назад +50

      @@oswald7597 I don't think one song that uses the word is clear evidence that "yank" is commonly used by Americans. As an American I can honestly say I've never heard anyone say "yank", I've only heard it used by British.

    • @S3aCa1mRa1n
      @S3aCa1mRa1n 3 года назад +20

      @@oswald7597 Maybe in that one song. But normally, we don’t say yank. Specifically southerners call us northerners Yankees.

  • @PLefevre95
    @PLefevre95 3 года назад +43

    “Yankee GO HOME!!!” was my first encounter of this word, in Panamá back in the late 80’s. This was not a term of endearment towards Americans by some Panamanians.

    • @daman1999
      @daman1999 3 года назад +2

      Was it before During or After the Invasion

    • @PLefevre95
      @PLefevre95 3 года назад +3

      @@daman1999 It was before the Invasion

    • @daman1999
      @daman1999 3 года назад

      @@PLefevre95 like what year

    • @PLefevre95
      @PLefevre95 3 года назад +1

      @@daman1999 between 1987-1989

    • @daman1999
      @daman1999 3 года назад +1

      @@PLefevre95 Where they supporters of Manuel Noriega or Opponents of his

  • @kigon1000
    @kigon1000 3 года назад +45

    I can add that here in Latinmerica people who antagonize the US call them the yankees (yanquis).

    • @davidcervantes9336
      @davidcervantes9336 3 года назад +3

      Wrong, not all of us. In Mexico (at least) we call them ‘gringos’ (“greengoes”).

    • @Fpwc2
      @Fpwc2 3 года назад +2

      @@davidcervantes9336 same here in Brazil

    • @AndrywMarques
      @AndrywMarques 3 года назад +3

      @@Fpwc2 In Brazil we also call Yankees, but gringos is more common

    • @entity6966
      @entity6966 3 года назад +1

      It's more common in central america.

    • @kigon1000
      @kigon1000 3 года назад +5

      In Argentina we also use gringos but it tends to include brits rather than yankees (for quite obvious historical reasons)

  • @jtom2958
    @jtom2958 3 года назад +42

    My family moved from the north to the south when I was 5. And our first year in the south, my mom was a teacher and was often criticized by other teachers for being a "dumb Yankee." One day my mom and one of her co-workers, who was also a Yankee, were with another teacher, who was a southerner. The southerner said, "let me write down what all Yankees are," and she wrote "dum." My mom and the other teacher looked at each other, trying not to laugh, and the southerner got confused. My mom looked at her and just said something like, "if you're going to call us dumb, make sure you can correctly spell it."

    • @jtom2958
      @jtom2958 3 года назад +3

      @ProConfederate I mean it did. It’s not calling southerners dumb, it’s just a funny story.

    • @MatthewChenault
      @MatthewChenault 3 года назад +2

      Bullying is an effective way to integrate people.
      Southerners should do it more.

    • @jtom2958
      @jtom2958 3 года назад +5

      🤔
      I disagree, bullying is very emotionally destructive

    • @MatthewChenault
      @MatthewChenault 3 года назад

      @@jtom2958, nah.

    • @jtom2958
      @jtom2958 3 года назад +3

      @@MatthewChenault ok well... merry Christmas

  • @superlinx666
    @superlinx666 3 года назад +13

    As a Dutchman I can say that the last explenation Jan / Kees is the one I learned at school. Jan and Kees were so common at that time that if you met a Dutchman, it was quitee probable he’d have either name. ‘Who’s that?’ ‘That’s a Jankees’ (Dutchman). The J in Dutch is pronounced as the Y in you indeed. My brother who studied Dutch language at the University of Amsterdam confirms this as well. Nice vid, thx!

  • @eyeguy6708
    @eyeguy6708 3 года назад +61

    Me, an intellectual: Yankee is a Baseball Team

    • @redpanda7967
      @redpanda7967 3 года назад +3

      The Yankees have appropriated New England culture. Yankee is for New Englanders not cringe New Yorkers.

    • @suhana8516
      @suhana8516 3 года назад +4

      @@redpanda7967 Yankee has always been for New Yorkers, we carried the Revolutionary War and Civil War

    • @waso778
      @waso778 3 года назад +1

      @@redpanda7967 yankee is from Dutch word names. Jan Kees. New York was New Amsterdam

    • @xaviersantana2367
      @xaviersantana2367 2 года назад

      Me, an intellectual: Fuck the Yankees

    • @stephenwright8824
      @stephenwright8824 2 года назад

      @@suhana8516 _we carried the Revolutionary War and Civil War_ By being a geographically misplaced Southern shipping port, you must mean.

  • @midoriya-shonen
    @midoriya-shonen 3 года назад +18

    As someone from the Midwest US, I've never heard Yankee used in to describe anyone. Though I'm aware of the Southern connotation. And we all learned Yankee Doodle in school

    • @reedkellner6447
      @reedkellner6447 3 года назад +2

      Likewise. From California, and I'm only aware that citizens of other countries sometimes call us that, so I would know someone was referring to me if it was said overseas, and that there is a tradition of certain parts of the country calling people from certain other parts of the country that. Other than that, I have basically no experience with it other than through scant references in popular media.

    • @tiny_bagel
      @tiny_bagel 3 года назад +1

      Same I live in the Midwest and the only time I heard the term was in the Carolinas visiting my family and in Florida for spring break.

  • @MrWildbill
    @MrWildbill 3 года назад +20

    When I was a teen our family moved to Australia for a short time and at school my nick name quickly became Yank or I would be referred to as The Yank, and oddly it was used both positively and negatively depending on the context and tone. It never really bothered me and my good friends used it and it was rare for it to be used negatively. I was from the North and had never really heard it used in a derogatory manner before we moved, at least not that I can remember. That said one of the best fights I saw at school was when a new kid from Alabama showed up, when someone called him a Yank all hell broke loose.

  • @LedosKell
    @LedosKell 3 года назад +99

    Over there, over there, send the word send the word over there, that the Yanks are coming, the Yanks are coming, rum tum tumming everywhere.

    • @peteg475
      @peteg475 3 года назад +13

      And we won't come back 'til it's over, over there!

    • @chessdude184
      @chessdude184 3 года назад +8

      @@peteg475 Johnny get you gun, get your gun, get your gun.

    • @heronimousbrapson863
      @heronimousbrapson863 3 года назад +13

      "The yanks are coming" is my dentist's theme song.

    • @Delgen1951
      @Delgen1951 3 года назад +1

      @@heronimousbrapson863 Ouch!

    • @LedosKell
      @LedosKell 3 года назад +3

      @@heronimousbrapson863 So prepare, say a prayer, send the word send the word to beware.

  • @RagingRobin219
    @RagingRobin219 3 года назад +101

    A story I heard, Being from the Netherlands, is Yankee being an insult to dutch setters by English ones. They would call dutch setters Jan Cheese. Many dutch setters had the name Jan, so to the English all of them might as well be called Jan. And they were already then known for their obsession with cheese. Jan Cheese then later shortened to Yankee.
    Side note, I think to a dutch speaking person at the time, trying to pronounce the English word cheese, they very well might have pronounced it as 'kees, or keys' (trying to spell it so you know how to say it in English).
    In Dutch the letter C is often pronounced as K.

    • @Jan_Koopman
      @Jan_Koopman 3 года назад +3

      @Aheroy Aheroyal Productions, I am Dutch too and I had found this exact etymology a while ago

    • @Delgen1951
      @Delgen1951 3 года назад

      Good story, but not in coems form the Indian nations form around the great lakes, who had problems with English pronountion and thus called then Yankees

    • @Jan_Koopman
      @Jan_Koopman 3 года назад +2

      @@Delgen1951, what do you mean exactly?

    • @MacStatic
      @MacStatic 3 года назад +4

      This makes the most sense. Video seemed all over the place and not very coherent

    • @KelnelK
      @KelnelK 3 года назад +4

      I like the name theory of where it comes from because that sort of nickname shows up repeatedly in the English language. For example Germans being called Fritz in WWII or confederates being called Johnny Reb in the US civil war.

  • @billcday
    @billcday 3 года назад +4

    New Englander here. No one ever uses this term to describe ourselves outside of some magazines about woodworking or candles. But when I moved down to Tennessee I heard it much more regularly from Southerners. Usually with a mix of charm and derision. Since I left Tennessee I’ve been using it more often to self identify when I’m not in New England. I like it. Thanks for this video.

  • @rjdruhan
    @rjdruhan 3 года назад +95

    That E.B. White "poem" is a joke, to illustrate there's no one that calls themselves Yankees.

    • @rowynnecrowley1689
      @rowynnecrowley1689 3 года назад +11

      I'll refer to myself as a Yankee when talking to a Brit.

    • @Ggdivhjkjl
      @Ggdivhjkjl 3 года назад +5

      You don't eat pie for breakfast do you?

  • @jacobchurchwardtruered116
    @jacobchurchwardtruered116 3 года назад +25

    I'm from the Pacific Northwest, and I've always associated Yankees with the North Atlantic states specifically New England and people from the state of New York who live outside of the city. I have also always thought that if a fellow American called me a yankee I would be offended, not because I saw it as derogatory but because I wasn't from the North Atlantic states but then at the same time if a foreigner called me a yankee (unless they were Canadian, I don't really know why) I would not really bat an eye.

    • @elyace
      @elyace Год назад

      I would be more offended if a foreigner called me it tbh.

  • @RedPandaStan
    @RedPandaStan 3 года назад +59

    In the northwest we just don't use the word. Although considering it was a confederate idea of an insult, I'll gladly take the name positively.

    • @KlaustheViking
      @KlaustheViking 3 года назад +1

      Like reverse psychology?

    • @Delgen1951
      @Delgen1951 3 года назад +1

      Not relly it came form the Indians who could not pronounce the world " English" So it became Yankiee.

    • @Blowingmind
      @Blowingmind 3 года назад +2

      what if I call you a Dixie?

    • @markhill3285
      @markhill3285 3 года назад

      Bro Yankee was used well before the war,

    • @westernlarch4214
      @westernlarch4214 3 года назад

      So do I. But no one has called me that yet.

  • @Nicolasgusso
    @Nicolasgusso 3 года назад +15

    As a someone not from the US, I can say that the way we most use is "The Americans". Im Braziliam, by the way

    • @thematthew761
      @thematthew761 3 года назад +6

      I thought in Brazil, America was a continent.

    • @Nicolasgusso
      @Nicolasgusso 3 года назад +2

      @@thematthew761 Only when we are talking to an american ; )

  • @morejoacomapo7080
    @morejoacomapo7080 3 года назад +96

    I really doubt the "Yankovic theory", because most Jewish immigrants arrived to the US between WW1 and WW2

    • @karenuminski9057
      @karenuminski9057 3 года назад +12

      Actually, John Adams was sent to New Amsterdam to enlist the Jewish settlers to support the Revolutoinary War. Jews have been apart of America since the founding.

    • @morejoacomapo7080
      @morejoacomapo7080 3 года назад +17

      @@karenuminski9057 Of course you can find Jews since the beginning of European-American history, specially since the Dutch and Brits were taking in a lot of refugees from the Iberian inquisitions, nevertheless Jews weren't as common as they are now until the beginning of the XXth century. I know this because I'm a Jew living in another country that received a lot of Jewish immigrants during that time. Anyway, hope you have a nice day :)

    • @Jklopoppcorn
      @Jklopoppcorn 3 года назад +7

      @@karenuminski9057 yeah but so have a lot of ethnicities, you cant place too much importance on one race or relegion, thats what makes america great.

    • @karenuminski9057
      @karenuminski9057 3 года назад +7

      @@morejoacomapo7080 no doubt the population of Jewish people increased after the wars. But there is a terrible strain of anti-Semitism in America that claims Jewish people aren't real Americans because came here to take away American freedom. The history says that they fought for American freedom. To me, that is just important to always state. No negative feels, just added to knowlege.

    • @karenuminski9057
      @karenuminski9057 3 года назад +2

      @@Jklopoppcorn agreed, and let's recognize them ALL!!!

  • @NolansGoons
    @NolansGoons 3 года назад +15

    Ohioan here, and I literally have never heard anyone in the states use the word yankee outside of social studies classes and hearing about its historical use. Up until this video, I've only heard it used in modern times by foreigners to refer to Americans as a whole, primarily from the British and Irish, so most of this was new info for me

    • @MatthewChenault
      @MatthewChenault 3 года назад +2

      Well, yeah, you’re from Ohio. Ohio is Yankee lite and “Ohioan” is its own insult.
      Come down south and the term is used a lot to describe people up north, both as a neutral term as well as an insult.

  • @toastnjam7384
    @toastnjam7384 3 года назад +16

    I recall hearing a story about a American soldier station in Britain during WW 2 who was from the deep south and he hated being called a yank. Got in a few fights

  • @discountcabbage4262
    @discountcabbage4262 3 года назад +8

    I wear the name yankee with pride as a granite stater, thanks to my great grandfather who is 93 and has a very pronounced “yankee” accent. He’s from the upper valley nh (near Dartmouth college) and has what sounds like a maine accent characterized by it’s unique “yauh” pronunciation of yeah. If anyone else happens to know any old yankees reply below!

  • @MacStatic
    @MacStatic 3 года назад +58

    Never heard an American say “yank”. Brits love to say it as a derogatory term to an American seeing as not all of them identify as a yankee. I don’t mind it since people are ignorant but it’s like calling an Englishman, Scottish or a Scotsman, English or something just as absurd. No one from the Midwest, South or West would introduce themself as a yankee unless it’s said in jest or a joke. But as the old saying goes, “you can’t change stupid”

    • @leatherneck69
      @leatherneck69 3 года назад +4

      @Blackà Đønz I'd be pretty surprised if a southerner got offended by being called a Yankee by a foreigner, I wouldn't worry about it. I'm from the Midwest, and in my experience its seen more as a patriotic term.

    • @lamotou4banana383
      @lamotou4banana383 3 года назад +1

      @@leatherneck69 here in the South Yanks are seen as snobbish, rich, stuck up, and overly offended and yank is a deep term used it's also used just to refer to someone from the North and southerners tend to view themselves differently than those in the North so yes it is offensive

    • @emmalynn877
      @emmalynn877 2 года назад +2

      It’s not ignorance or stupidity lol, we know what it means. People outside America just don’t tend to like Americans. We’re being dismissive on purpose

    • @elyace
      @elyace Год назад

      I don't care if I was called a "yank" and I live in the south so it's kinda funny seeing foreigners trying to use it as an insult when they don't know the meaning of the word at all.

    • @elyace
      @elyace Год назад +1

      @@emmalynn877 The og commenter is right especially since most Americans do not care if foreigners mean it as a derogatory word since it means something completely different in the US. 😂

  • @bigo7831
    @bigo7831 3 года назад +24

    I’m from eastern Tennessee and I know if you call someone from out deep southern culture a yankee well those are are fighting words

  • @TheEarthCreature
    @TheEarthCreature 3 года назад +49

    "To a New Englander a Yankee is someone who lives in Vermont."
    New Englander here. That is false. I've never heard that until this video.

    • @jeffkardosjr.3825
      @jeffkardosjr.3825 3 года назад +7

      I lived in Boston. People will think you are talking about baseball rivalry with "Yankee".

    • @Cosmiccoffeecup
      @Cosmiccoffeecup 3 года назад +7

      He was referencing a poem, I think.

    • @WTFisDrifting
      @WTFisDrifting 3 года назад +5

      I live in nh and you only have to think of yankee candle to get that perspective. Also that was the words of the man who wrote Charlotte’s web. What he said was true for the time.

    • @TheEarthCreature
      @TheEarthCreature 3 года назад

      @@WTFisDrifting Why would Yankee Candle give you that perspective? They're all over the place.

    • @WTFisDrifting
      @WTFisDrifting 3 года назад

      @@TheEarthCreature it’s from Vermont. I live in nh we got a love hate relationship with them and massholes

  • @LalaLillith
    @LalaLillith 3 года назад +20

    I have only ever heard "yank" from foreigners. It's always just Yankee in New England. Yank sounds like something you do in private.

    • @brianisme6498
      @brianisme6498 3 года назад +1

      I’m a non-American and never heard the term before. Only really from yankee sac. Didn’t know it had a meaning

  • @gavinowens459
    @gavinowens459 3 года назад +21

    As a Texan, Yankee really just means someone from the north, although I very rarely hear it outside of a historical context. I hear this the most from foreigners describing America/Americans, and when I'm called it I'm not offended, it just sounds weird.

    • @td370
      @td370 3 года назад +1

      You’re all yanks

    • @rykloog9578
      @rykloog9578 3 года назад

      In California Yankee means a US citizen

    • @MeMe-pj8ve
      @MeMe-pj8ve 3 года назад

      It’s absolutely derogatory. My northern family owned a bar in the South and they would throw that around with the n word.

    • @rykloog9578
      @rykloog9578 3 года назад

      @@MeMe-pj8ve alright, calm down

    • @MeMe-pj8ve
      @MeMe-pj8ve 3 года назад

      @@rykloog9578 wtf? Are you offended I’m telling you something is derogatory? When did it become offensive to give/receive information? Get a grip.

  • @davidsp5936
    @davidsp5936 3 года назад +8

    As a New Jersian who spends a lot of time in Georgia, l am constantly called "Yankee." It offends me because I'm a Mets fan (cross-town rivals).

    • @MatthewChenault
      @MatthewChenault 3 года назад

      Yankees and their love for baseball.
      Down south, we prefer the sport of hunting.

  • @peteg475
    @peteg475 3 года назад +12

    I remember hearing the Dutch origin of the term also, but I heard this: It was a derogatory term the English used for the Dutch who remained in the New Amsterdam/New York area after the English took it over. A Dutchman would generically be called "John Cheese" by the English, and it was corrupted to Yankees.

    • @k.umquat8604
      @k.umquat8604 3 года назад

      But Yankees means John Cheese in dutch

    • @sogghartha
      @sogghartha 3 года назад

      @@k.umquat8604 no, that would be Jan kaas

    • @peteg475
      @peteg475 3 года назад

      @@k.umquat8604 Yeah, I know. Close enough to make me think it's legit

    • @q-tuber7034
      @q-tuber7034 3 года назад

      But it’s a term that since first recorded use referred to Anglos of New England, not Dutch of New York. (edited)

    • @peteg475
      @peteg475 3 года назад

      @@q-tuber7034 Yes, it would be a term that has changed in its use since the influence of the Dutch in New York waned, obviously.,

  • @nickverbree
    @nickverbree 3 года назад +26

    Back when I was serving in Afghanistan, if we took pay advances we got our cash in American dollars and we frequently called them "yankee bucks." I relayed this to an American shortly afterwards and they were DEEPLY offended... I guess they were from the south

    • @charlieparker5346
      @charlieparker5346 3 года назад +1

      I mean, the dollar was used by the union. Did dude think the Confederacy used the same currency or what!? Dumbass

  • @siggelito7869
    @siggelito7869 3 года назад +17

    In Sweden we call Americans “Jänkare” (Yankee) and it’s often in a degrading sentence

    • @coltonbates629
      @coltonbates629 3 года назад +1

      why you guys so mean? Not my fault dumb and fat nuh uh!

    • @siggelito7869
      @siggelito7869 3 года назад

      @UCXc6i4NyBSkFxRp8Jtu4vLQ aww want a handkerchief?

    • @elyace
      @elyace Год назад

      It's weird so many languages have a word for us. 😂

  • @bramvandenheuvel4049
    @bramvandenheuvel4049 3 года назад +45

    Btw, the Dutch name "Kees" is pronounced like the English word "case".

  • @MrAlexSan00
    @MrAlexSan00 3 года назад +22

    I live in California, being called a Californian is just as much as a slur from a Southerner as calling someone a Yankee by them. It's not in the use of the word, just the way it would be said by a Southern in a "I'm better than you" way.

    • @Delgen1951
      @Delgen1951 3 года назад +3

      Well you are not form the south are ye?

    • @everfree4175
      @everfree4175 3 года назад +9

      It's not really anything personal, here in Texas we just have a disagreement with California's political policy, including the ridiculous property taxes that seem to encourage a lot of Californians to move out of the state.
      We're just scared that they'll vote for the same policies that made them leave in the first place, hence the term "Don't California my Texas!"

    • @fkujakedmyname
      @fkujakedmyname 3 года назад +4

      thats why i call em dixiecrats southern klansmen hate that

    • @Blowingmind
      @Blowingmind 3 года назад +6

      The word Southerner can also be a slur from a Californian in a "I'm better than you" way. Not that you used it that way or I thought that, but hypothetically it could be used that way.

    • @fkujakedmyname
      @fkujakedmyname 3 года назад

      @@Blowingmind just not even the same degree as calling them dixiecrats or asking where the general sherman statues are

  • @mrmr446
    @mrmr446 3 года назад +11

    Also gave rise to the cockney rhyming slang term 'septic,' as in septic tank- yank, I think from the second world war.

    • @gregsierra414
      @gregsierra414 3 года назад +1

      Oh, was that cockney in origin? It was a popular term in Australia for a long time.

    • @Rage_Harder_Then_Relax
      @Rage_Harder_Then_Relax 3 года назад +2

      @@gregsierra414 It's probably both but I would lean to Australians saying it in the first & second world war would be more the fact.

    • @baronofbahlingen9662
      @baronofbahlingen9662 3 года назад

      I hear it further shortened to seppo

  • @Pona12
    @Pona12 3 года назад +41

    Being a Native American from Oklahoma ( for those outside of the US: AKA North Texas, Texas' hat, the place where the huge tornadoes are), if a British person called me a yank to my face, I'd be legitimately mad.

    • @Jack-fs2im
      @Jack-fs2im 3 года назад +2

      As a Brit I would never use the term Yank.I am well aware Native Indians are not even americans but the original owners of what we call the US.I would love to know place names of native indians in the US but can,t find any other than Cheyenne.peace

    • @naervern2107
      @naervern2107 3 года назад

      ​@@Jack-fs2im Been used to call the USA folks as Yank/(Ianki) and the native "indians" you mentioned as americans. Just funny as often when reading material, we get the american languages, referring not to the european languages or their creole mixes and when we see the term of american civilisations, those mean, for most widely known examples, Chimor, Guarani, Inca, Haudenosaunee (wr. ka. Iroquois), Maya, Mississipian, Mixtec, Nahuatl. There's plenty of history, even though human inhabitation of the continents started just a bit over 10k years ago and is an interesting fact that original populations from as north as Alaska to as south as the Tierra del Fuego have a very similar genetic makeup, which might suggest that the migrant group was small (thus having a small gene pool to disperse) and maybe there was more mobility throughout the continent than otherwise expected.
      Also, some of the original languages are still spoken by communities, though not as much in the 3 largest countries as they are in the spanish America. Although not in the same families as the northern American languages, Guaraní is official in Paraguay and Bolivia technically has some dozens of official languages, all but spanish being american languages.

    • @Jack-fs2im
      @Jack-fs2im 3 года назад +1

      @@naervern2107 thanx.I have watched the native indian story told by themselves.I am interested to find indian names of american places.I mean what wss idaho etc called by native peoples or New York etc

    • @naervern2107
      @naervern2107 3 года назад

      @@Jack-fs2im That certainly would depend on each particular people and language, but there's probably material to search if you broaden the search to what was documented by French and Spanish scholars of the time, who were quite interested in these cultures and thus had relatively peaceful and conservative policies with the native peoples. Pretty sure you can find it, so good luck!

    • @slopernafti902
      @slopernafti902 2 года назад

      Let's be real, it isn't supposed to be directed at Native Americans. It's mainly directed towards European/White Americans and maybe African/Black Americans.

  • @bigredradish
    @bigredradish 3 года назад +8

    I'm from new hampshire and I've been known to eat pie for breakfast and honestly I feel called out and hurt.

  • @CH3R.N0BY1
    @CH3R.N0BY1 3 года назад +10

    as someone who has grown up and lives in new england, i can say that i've only heard "yankee" in new england or referring to the new york baseball team

  • @squirlez6349
    @squirlez6349 3 года назад +6

    Interesting video! As someone that has spent most of my life in the Midwest, I have always thought of Yankee as a half derogatory/half affectionate term for people in the Northeast.

  • @heronimousbrapson863
    @heronimousbrapson863 3 года назад +28

    In a similar way, "Canuck", a term referring to Canadians generally today, originally only referred to French speaking Canadians, particularly from Quebec.

    • @benn454
      @benn454 3 года назад +2

      And has given birth to the nickname for Canada, "Canuckistan".

    • @Lrxxx321
      @Lrxxx321 3 года назад

      My cousin's in the Carribean call us Canadians Yankees too. It's weird

    • @scotth6814
      @scotth6814 3 года назад

      @@benn454 As a Canadian, I have never heard this term before. When we travel, most foreigners think we Canadians are American, and we have to make a point of telling them we most definitely are not. If they know anything about Canada, they often treat us better then.

    • @benn454
      @benn454 3 года назад

      @@scotth6814 It's a derogatory nickname for Canada used almost exclusively by conservatives and right wingers. Because Canada has socialized healthcare and is left leaning. They're basically calling you guys communists.

  • @davidmacdonald9159
    @davidmacdonald9159 3 года назад +9

    this is interesting to mention that foreigners tend to identify countries when locals tend to have much stronger identities with more local boundaries

  • @herbie53opf
    @herbie53opf 3 года назад +15

    I've heard the Jan Kees theory a few times already.
    I'm Dutch, so that might be a reason

  • @sonnystaton
    @sonnystaton 3 года назад +11

    Here in California & most the western states, I would find it slightly offensive as an Englishman would find it slightly offensive to be called a Scott or Welch.

    • @rykloog9578
      @rykloog9578 3 года назад

      Where in Cali are you from? Here in LA it just means a US citizen

    • @sonnystaton
      @sonnystaton 3 года назад

      @@rykloog9578 I've NEVER Heard it used as a U.S citizen in California up here in the North or SoCal. And I spend lot's of time down south. My naturalized Filipino American friends & family would never be called "Yankee". Roughly 30% of Californians are foreign born & most are naturalized citizens, I don't think anyone would call a Latino American or Asian, or African American "Yankee" naturalized or natural born. And me being a white guy I've never been called "Yankee". Gringo maybe but never Yankee nor have I heard anyone in California refer to someone as a "Yankee" except maybe at the Oakland Collasium when the Yankees are playing the A"s.

    • @rykloog9578
      @rykloog9578 3 года назад

      @@sonnystaton Must be southern California thing then

    • @sonnystaton
      @sonnystaton 3 года назад

      @@rykloog9578 I spend a lot of time in SoCal. Never heard the term "Yankee" unless the Yankees are in town to play the Angels.

    • @rykloog9578
      @rykloog9578 3 года назад

      @@sonnystaton Well you don't live here, so maybe that's why

  • @AlexVSharp
    @AlexVSharp 3 года назад +7

    It has nothing to do with the subject but, as far as I know, "Yankovic" is the English translation of the Serbian surname "Janković" (Cyrillic "Јанковић"), which was derived from the name "Janko" (c. "Јанко") since "J" read as "Y" around these parts. So nothing to do with the subject at all... :P

  • @derfollaw
    @derfollaw 3 года назад +10

    American living abroad for a a while: Have worked with many Brits over the years who use yank with me. Always find it a bit odd to hear as I grew up in the North and only heard it growing up in a begrudging way from people in the south.

    • @Riolu1209
      @Riolu1209 3 года назад +8

      if you're in the UK and are being called "yank" I'd suggest finding other people to hang out with

    • @derfollaw
      @derfollaw 3 года назад +4

      @@Riolu1209 Haha, they are not my friends

    • @elyace
      @elyace Год назад

      I'm from the South and I don't mind the word tbh. 😂

    • @elyace
      @elyace Год назад

      @@Riolu1209 It's not something most people would get mad about lmao

  • @joy_gantic
    @joy_gantic 3 года назад +19

    I always heard it was Iroquois for "coward" and got picked up by the British officer class and Southern elite

    • @ZemanTheMighty
      @ZemanTheMighty 3 года назад +2

      I heard it was because of the Dutch settlement in America. As in Jan Kies

    • @LedosKell
      @LedosKell 3 года назад +2

      I heard the Dutch origin growing up as well.

    • @jgaffney567
      @jgaffney567 3 года назад +1

      Yakukwé was an Oneida Indian term for woman. Other Iroquois tribes had similar.

    • @Gala-yp8nx
      @Gala-yp8nx 3 года назад

      Nope. The term originates from Tory volunteers from Connecticut.

  • @Ggdivhjkjl
    @Ggdivhjkjl 3 года назад +13

    A friend from Dixieland doesn't like living in Yankeeland.

  • @canadaehxplained77
    @canadaehxplained77 3 года назад +8

    I prefer to identify as a Canuck - but when I lived in Louisiana - I had a friend that was adamant I was a 'Yankee' because I was from 'north of Interstate 10'...

    • @canadaehxplained77
      @canadaehxplained77 3 года назад

      But like - I am from REALLY north of Interstate 10 - and he would be offended if I called him a 'Yankee' for being - you know - an American 😂

    • @shakingh4nd
      @shakingh4nd 3 года назад

      It looks like one of the most southern highways in the country

    • @nebulan
      @nebulan 3 года назад

      Lol

    • @canadaehxplained77
      @canadaehxplained77 3 года назад +1

      @@shakingh4nd Yup! He used the term liberally - and believed that anything north of Lafayette and Baton Rouge in Louisiana was actually just South Arkansas haha

    • @peregrination3643
      @peregrination3643 3 года назад

      We joke we're Southerners--Southern Canadians that moved to southern US (AR).

  • @DiamoneUHC
    @DiamoneUHC 3 года назад +1

    A Michigan Demonym is:
    Yooper- Someone from the upper peninsula of Michigan
    Yoopers will sometimes call people who live in Michigan’s lower peninsula trolls, as a joke, because they’re “below” (South, in this case) the Mackinac Bridge

  • @brentsordo1052
    @brentsordo1052 3 года назад +6

    I grew up in California and was vaguely aware that people from other countries called Americans Yankees, but I always thought of it as a term southerners called northerners. I never heard it used there though, and I've never actually been called a Yankee while traveling internationally. I live in Texas now and I've been called a Yankee a few times. Obviously California isn't really north geographically but its definitely more part of the northern state cultural block, so it was a little weird to hear but it made sense. When I was called it it was usual with a wink, as in "this is kind of a derogatory term but I don't mean anything by it." It was just kind of used as a joke. Thats the impression I get of the word now in Texas. It can be used jokingly or actually deotgatorily, just depending on context.

  • @stephenandersen4625
    @stephenandersen4625 3 года назад +2

    The Story I heard was the Natives pronouncing l'Anglais with there own accent. IIRC James Fenimore Cooper in the early 19th century used this in his Leatherstocking tales where Natty Bumppo introduces himself as Nathaniel of the l'Anglais (that might just be from the movie... it's been a long time since I've read the books)

  • @elliothennessy8360
    @elliothennessy8360 3 года назад +6

    “Though the name “Yankee” could quite possibly be [the Dutch’s] biggest contribution to the Americas” made me giggle. I mean, doughnuts, for one. But maybe my perception of Dutch influence comes from growing up in upstate NY, where every other town ends in “kill” (river/stream) and Albany was once Fort Orange, named for the Dutch William of Orange.

    • @R69E
      @R69E Год назад

      And the dutch gave you Santa Clause (Sinterklaas) 😉

  • @orionford6675
    @orionford6675 3 года назад +3

    As a New Englander, I have been called a yankee a few times in my life. I dont think many people up here consider it derogatory. I kind of like the nickname as it reminds me of one of my favorite books, "A Connecticut Yankee In King Arthur's Court" by Mark Twain.

  • @theviper1999uk
    @theviper1999uk 3 года назад +14

    For people in the South, Yankee means a Northerner
    For Northerners, Yank means someone from New England
    For New Englanders, Yank means someone from Vermont
    For people from Vermont, Yank means someone who eats waffles for breakfast.
    For the rest of the world, Yank means the guy standing in your backyard with a semi automatic.

    • @randlebrowne2048
      @randlebrowne2048 3 года назад +1

      The irony is that the "guy standing in his backyard with a semi-automatic" is much more likely to be from the South.

  • @rayala21
    @rayala21 3 года назад +5

    1:30 as a Californian (🤨) I assumed “Yankee” referred to us all US people... as a baseball fan (LA Dodgers) HOW DARE YOU!?

  • @Fishhunter2014
    @Fishhunter2014 3 года назад +3

    That last explanation makes a lot of sense. In Sherman’s Memoirs, he mentioned that the rebels called the National troops “Dutch” in addition to “Yankees.”

  • @jackpot848
    @jackpot848 3 года назад +10

    As a Southerner, I am offended if called a Yankee. That is a term for someone from the Northeast.

    • @ianperry9598
      @ianperry9598 3 года назад +1

      Same. Idk if I’d be offended because I’m not like a typical southern type person but I definitely wouldn’t like to be called a Yankee

    • @jackpot848
      @jackpot848 3 года назад +1

      @@ianperry9598 Yeah, I hear ya..live and let live, I would not fail to be polite. But if a Southerner called me a Yankee he better have a competent orthodontist on speed dial...

    • @jeffkardosjr.3825
      @jeffkardosjr.3825 3 года назад +1

      Not a term for somebody from Mass.

    • @stephenwright8824
      @stephenwright8824 2 года назад

      @@jeffkardosjr.3825 This Gen-X person from Mass. would disagree. If I heard it from a stranger nowadays, I'd assume they were neither Millennial nor Zoomer (as knowing the word would require an extraordinary amount of intelligence from those kiddies) and, as I'm proud of my New England heritage, it would be proof to me that the person calling me a Yankee knew their audience.

    • @jeffkardosjr.3825
      @jeffkardosjr.3825 2 года назад

      @@stephenwright8824 Maybe you're from western Mass. Around Boston, the term's association with baseball, most anyone is a Red Sox fan.

  • @johnvance882
    @johnvance882 3 года назад +9

    As someone form Mississippi, I would be kind of annoyed to be called a yankee, and I’ve never heard the term yank before. It’s not really a bad thing to call someone, but if you say it to the wrong person down here, you might loose a friend haha.

  • @BOABModels
    @BOABModels 3 года назад +2

    In the UK, Yank Tank is a term given to huge American cars popular in the 1950s and 60s.
    Also, the heroic pigeon in the cartoon "Catch the pigeon" is called Yankee Doodle Pigeon.

  • @LuinTathren
    @LuinTathren 3 года назад +49

    What I've always found to be interesting is that in Japanese ヤンキー (yankii) means a delinquent youth.

    • @Venezolano410
      @Venezolano410 3 года назад +2

      Probably explains American foreign policy.

    • @thematthew761
      @thematthew761 3 года назад +3

      @@Venezolano410 I’ve seen your past comments. You can’t call over 320 million people scum.

    • @Venezolano410
      @Venezolano410 3 года назад

      @@thematthew761
      Well, I just did.

    • @eragonlindemann7236
      @eragonlindemann7236 3 года назад +3

      @@Venezolano410 no it comes from an unrelated gang’s name within Japan. Not because of the opening of Japan

    • @Venezolano410
      @Venezolano410 3 года назад

      @@eragonlindemann7236
      ?

  • @RonaldReaganRocks1
    @RonaldReaganRocks1 3 года назад +2

    I believe the "Dutch" explanation. Also, it was very frequent to call anonymous people "Johnny" back in the colonial era, as in the song "When Johnny Come Marching Home Again."

  • @isaacwilcox3010
    @isaacwilcox3010 3 года назад +7

    I didn’t even realize the nickname Yankee was still used in the modern era lol. I’m from the north but I’ve never been called a Yankee and I’ve never heard the term even used lol. I thought it was just an old nickname used during the civil war as an insult to northerners.

    • @jo-vf8jx
      @jo-vf8jx 3 года назад

      I’m from Minnesota and live in the South. My ex-boyfriends family use to call me Yankee and I’d remind them that I’m a Midwestern.

    • @isaacwilcox3010
      @isaacwilcox3010 3 года назад

      @@jo-vf8jx I’m midwestern as well. Are we not Yankees?

  • @harvey1954
    @harvey1954 2 года назад +1

    In England they are more likely to use Yank instead of Yankee. That came from the WWI tune, "Over There", where they sing "the Yanks are coming". I remember a 50s rock and roll bar in England offered free admission to anyone parking their "Yank" outside. That is a US auto which adds to the 50s ambience.

  • @JorneDeSmedt
    @JorneDeSmedt 3 года назад +8

    Wait, you mentioned the Dutch and didn't play the Wilhelmus?
    Oh right, this isn't that channel.
    You know the one I'm talking about.

  • @mevb
    @mevb 3 года назад +1

    In swedish a yankee is called "jänkare" (yenn-kaa-reh) which we nickname all americans. We also call hot rods from the United States a yankee/jänkare and often comes from the raggare subculture. Check out this link for more info about raggare: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Raggare

  • @sethlangston181
    @sethlangston181 3 года назад +28

    0:27 You definitely wouldn't want to analyze demonym in East and Southeast Asian languages, then

    • @sethlangston181
      @sethlangston181 3 года назад +5

      @Вхламинго I mean that if he finds most of the English ones boring, then those of Asian languages are even more boring because in most if those it's "name of country + person".

    • @sethlangston181
      @sethlangston181 3 года назад +3

      @Вхламинго I wasn't talking about Russian or Central Asian languages. I was talking about Chinese, Japanese, Korean, Vietnamese, etc. Those all have straightforward demonyms, which Patrick would find boring.

    • @minnesotanfreedomist3147
      @minnesotanfreedomist3147 3 года назад +2

      It might be interesting to see the meanings of the ideographs that they use and why.
      Like America being 米国人Rice Country Person in Japanese although definitely not as common as アメリカ人. So I could imagine with such the idea could be intertaining.

    • @sethlangston181
      @sethlangston181 3 года назад +2

      @@minnesotanfreedomist3147 It would be cool if Patrick did something like that, but I feel that he would need an entire multilingual staff before he would even consider that topic over the nearly endless ocean of Name Explain ideas...or at least a Patron Saint willing to put in the money for it.

    • @sethlangston181
      @sethlangston181 3 года назад

      @@minnesotanfreedomist3147 Also, イギリス for England is pretty interesting, since it sounds quite different from the endonym.

  • @SimonRaahauge1973
    @SimonRaahauge1973 3 года назад +2

    In Denmark we have a chocolate bar from around 1946 called a yankie bar. The spelling was changed a bit, because actually being able to speak english was rare in Denmark at that time.

  • @Nick-et3oo
    @Nick-et3oo 3 года назад +6

    I’m up from the Boston area, we hate being call a Yank or a Yankee because we think of them as a New York baseball team. But Vermont makes sense. Also don’t ever call someone from Boston a Yankee if you ever come to visit, you’ll have a group agains around you that don’t say there r’s right about to kill you

    • @quanbrooklynkid7776
      @quanbrooklynkid7776 3 года назад

      Haha

    • @waso778
      @waso778 3 года назад

      Because the Dutch were called Yankees.. JanKees. And they were in New York=New Amsterdam.

  • @somedandy7694
    @somedandy7694 3 года назад +2

    5:57 - Hey Name Explain!
    Could you do a video on why we call pasta a hat-decoration?

  • @Lrxxx321
    @Lrxxx321 3 года назад +8

    When you leave north america it's used for Canadians too it's weird

  • @ventusastrea3850
    @ventusastrea3850 3 года назад +1

    Fun fact in Finland there is a popular brand of gum known as Jenkki, which is the Finnish variation/way to pronounce the word Yankee

  • @warrenlehmkuhleii8472
    @warrenlehmkuhleii8472 3 года назад +3

    One time my grand aunt was asked what the family background was, when she asked her dad he said “were d*** Yankees”
    She then repeated that... in class.

  • @stephanieprochaska7964
    @stephanieprochaska7964 3 года назад +2

    Not all non-Americans mean it affectionately. If you hear someone from Central America calling someone a "yanki," it's usually incredibly offensive and is meant to be derogatory. Versus Argentina, for example, where yanki is more neutral. This is based off of personal experience living in various places in the Americas

  • @sallybradshaw4576
    @sallybradshaw4576 3 года назад +3

    I'm from Tennessee, and I've never really heard anyone getting offended by being called Yankee. It's just not really applied to Southerners, at least not in my experience.

  • @JustMe-
    @JustMe- 2 года назад +1

    So in India - well, from my parents’ time - yankee/yanky was perceived as a compliment you gave someone when they looked good/cool/dressed up. Now it makes sense that it probably originated from the Americans - as they were a growing superpower back then.

  • @pedromenchik1961
    @pedromenchik1961 3 года назад +3

    For a Brazilian, yankee (often spelled as "ianque") can refer to anyone from the US, but it's not a very common word.

  • @geistlos333
    @geistlos333 3 года назад +2

    I am from Wisconsin, when I was spending a lot of time in Atlanta, Georgia I got nick named "Yankee Josh" - and that was just because I was from the North and there was no hostility involved.

    • @jalicea1650
      @jalicea1650 3 года назад

      That you know of. Yankee Josh.. :p

  • @HistoryforThinkers
    @HistoryforThinkers 3 года назад +50

    Name Explain: Why Are Americans Known As Yanks/Yankees?
    *me: because they liked yanking on things?*

    • @SLig-jt4ot
      @SLig-jt4ot 3 года назад +6

      Wouldn't that be Yanker though?

    • @jo_ovin1482
      @jo_ovin1482 3 года назад +4

      @@SLig-jt4ot fair point yankee would be the one being yanked

    • @SLig-jt4ot
      @SLig-jt4ot 3 года назад

      @@jo_ovin1482 Ye

    • @crazzyduck909
      @crazzyduck909 3 года назад +1

      You should do a video like this with the word gringo

    • @rowynnecrowley1689
      @rowynnecrowley1689 3 года назад +2

      I always thought it was a bastardization of "wanker".

  • @JS-ix6zt
    @JS-ix6zt 3 года назад +1

    Yankee is also partially used for the rural/urban divide even apart from north/south. Californians are often called Yankees. Even people in the Central Valley of California occasionally refer to Californians from the metropolitan regions as Yankee. Maybe because of settlement pattern where the urban centers were settled primarily by new Englanders and The Valley was settled by “oakies” ie. southerners

  • @danielforeroc
    @danielforeroc 3 года назад +13

    Could you make a video about the word 'gringo'?, this word is used in some parts of Latin America to refer to americans, and has a derogatory use.

    • @j.s.7335
      @j.s.7335 3 года назад

      Yes! Please?

    • @mikeoxsmal8022
      @mikeoxsmal8022 3 года назад

      There are different theories it could could refer to Greeks original .or how Spanish people Taught Irish sounded like among others

  • @broseph6877
    @broseph6877 3 года назад +2

    I'm from the western U.S as far as I knew when it's applied by foreigners everyone is a Yankee, but in the U.S it applies to anyone who isn't from the South. As for the offense part it more or less depends on how you use the term. Great video as always, keep up the good work. 💜🇺🇸🇬🇧

    • @elyace
      @elyace Год назад

      Same I'm from the South I don't really care if someone calls me a "yank" since they don't know the original meaning of the word anyway.

  • @alcarbo8613
    @alcarbo8613 3 года назад +28

    Just so you know the Southern Equivlant to Yankee is Dixe

    • @benn454
      @benn454 3 года назад +8

      Or traitor.

    • @colbymcarthur7871
      @colbymcarthur7871 3 года назад +1

      yeah in the north we just refer to them as southernersor traitors lol

    • @costakeith9048
      @costakeith9048 3 года назад +2

      @@benn454 This nation was born in treason, if you're not a traitor, you're not an American.

    • @MatthewChenault
      @MatthewChenault 3 года назад +1

      Most Southerners don’t use “dixie” to describe themselves. They just call themselves “southerners” or refer to their state origin more than anything else.
      A Virginian will refer to himself as a Virginian or as a southerner, for example.
      As a southerner, I’ve actually never had anyone use the term “dixie.” Most of what gets thrown out is generic buzzwords like “racist bigot” or some of the terms thrown around here, since, apparently, all anyone else thinks the south is about is racism or something.

    • @alcarbo8613
      @alcarbo8613 3 года назад

      @@MatthewChenault Well remembers Virginia is a more fringe southern state I’m sure in the Deep South I.E Alabama,Mississippi,Louisiana ECT. Dixie is used more often

  • @henryirvine7964
    @henryirvine7964 2 месяца назад

    The thing about Yankee being used to refer to everyone in the USA but inside the USA it has a more specific meaning reminds me a little of how people would often refer anyone from the USSR as "Russian" or similarly (although a lot less common) sometimes people might refer to anyone from UK as "English". (interesting that all these examples are of unions, USA, UK, USSR).