English Deutsch Français Italiano Español Português 繁體中文 Bahasa Indonesia Tiếng Việt ภาษาไทย
All categories

4 answers

The most common belief is that the term was a greeting. When approaching a man's home in those early frontier days, you shouted from afar, "Hello, the cabin!" to avoid being shot. The inhabitants would then shout back "Who'sh 'ere?" (who's there). As it got slurred together over time, the country folk came to be called Hoosiers.

Another possibility relating to slang historically associated with the region is the combination of "Who's" and "your", such as in "Who'sh yer 'pa?".

Additionally, "Hussar" was a term used on the Kentucky frontier for people who were public nuisances. According to local tradition, hussars were hard drinking carousers. This theory carries the implication that a large share of such folks came from Indiana.

2006-10-13 04:20:14 · answer #1 · answered by Turbo 2 · 0 0

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 arising in the early 19th century for the inhabitants of particular states. For example, Texans were called Beetheads, Alabamans were Lizards, Nebraskans were Bug-eaters, South Carolinians were Weasels, and Pennsylvanians were Leatherheads. People in Missouri might have had it worst of all—they 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 universities—the North Carolina Tarheels, the Ohio Buckeyes, and so on—fighting words only on the playing field or court.

2006-10-13 04:25:33 · answer #2 · answered by reddog19982000 2 · 0 0

"the yankee Dream" Dusty Rhodes Bret "The Hitman" Hart The Masterpiece (Masters) The Phenom (Undertaker) "The Franchise" Shane Douglas "the finished F' tutor" (Rob Van Dam) "The Suicidal, Homicidal, Genocidal" Sabu "The Cerebral assassin" (Triple H) "advise" Gene Okerlund Bobby "The mind" Heenan "The Million dollar guy" Ted Dibiase Jim "The Anvil" Neidhart Jimmy "The Superfly" Snuka "the nature Boy" Ric flair "Stone chilly" Steve Austin "The Heartbreak baby" Shawn Michaels "the large pink gadget" Kane "Hollywood" Hulk Hogan "The Hotrod" Rowdy Piper *I beloved countless the different solutions, so I wrote down my favorites, You all had some solid ones, yet maximum of you forgot the ninety's*

2016-12-04 19:07:13 · answer #3 · answered by salameh 4 · 0 0

A Hossier is a loose woman Lol.

2006-10-13 14:21:25 · answer #4 · answered by kilroymaster 7 · 0 0

fedest.com, questions and answers