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I'm sure it's an acronym that someone has invented

2006-09-12 15:28:35 · 7 answers · asked by flogpro55 1 in Sports Golf

7 answers

i heard it was Gentlemen Only Ladies Forbbiden.

2006-09-12 15:30:18 · answer #1 · answered by ash6129 2 · 0 1

There is no universally accepted derivation for the word 'golf.' One of the most common misconceptions is that the word GOLF is an acronym for Gentlemen Only Ladies Forbidden. This at least is definitely not true.

The first documented mention of the word 'golf' is in Edinburgh on 6th March 1457, when King James II banned ‘ye golf’, in an attempt to encourage archery practice, which was being neglected.

Before the creation of dictionaries, there was no standardised spelling of any given word. People wrote words phonetically. Goff, gowf, golf, goif, gof, gowfe, gouff and golve have all been found in documents in Scotland.

Most people believe the old word 'gowfe' was the most common term, pronounced 'gouf'.

A minority of people hold the view that golf is a purely Scottish term, derived from Scots words 'golf', 'golfand' and 'golfing', which mean 'to strike' as in 'to cuff'.

It seems most likely that the terms golf, chole and kolf, which were the names for a variety of medieval stick and ball games in Britain and in continental Europe, are all derived from a common word of a pre-modern European language, following Grimm's grammatical law, which details the clear phonetic similarities of these words.

Golf (and chole and kolf) are all presumed to have originally meant 'club'. Golf has also been associated with the German word for club 'kolbe', (Der Kolben). It is also probably related to the Dutch word and game 'kolven'.

In 1636, David Wedderburn used the word Baculus, which is Latin for 'club' as the title for his 'Vocabula', listing Latin terms for golf, which supports this derivation. The Vocabula contains the first clear mention of the golf hole, the essential element of modern links golf and is thus the first unambiguous proof of the existence of the game in Scotland

2006-09-12 15:41:16 · answer #2 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Global Oscillations at Low Frequency

2006-09-12 15:31:25 · answer #3 · answered by Mrs.Walker 3 · 0 1

Game Of Lasting Fun... It's a game that can be played by young and old for many years of enjoyment.

Golf Schools - http://www.us-golf-schools.com
To Golf Or Not To Golf - http://tgontg.blogspot.com

2006-09-12 17:37:55 · answer #4 · answered by donssmith1 2 · 0 0

Gives. Old. Lethargics. Fun.

2006-09-12 15:33:32 · answer #5 · answered by Ginny 2 · 0 1

Golf
Oscar
Lima
Foxtrot

2006-09-12 15:31:26 · answer #6 · answered by GAFLSI 2 · 0 1

G.et O.sama bin L.aden F.ast

2006-09-13 01:47:42 · answer #7 · answered by baq2calli 2 · 0 0

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