It's the Word of the Day podcast for July 4th.
Today's word is Yankee, spelled Y-A-N-K-E-E.
Yankee is a noun.
It can refer broadly to anyone born or living in the U.S.,
more narrowly to only those in the northern U.S.,
or even more narrowly to only those in the states of New England.
The broadest use is especially common outside the United States.
Here's the word used in a sentence from the dispatch of Lexington, North Carolina.
Anthony Petaway's co-workers at Norfab Ducting have known for the past six years he was good at getting their deliveries to the right department.
They also knew from his accent that the receivables department employee was a relocated Yankee.
We don't know the origin of the word Yankee, but we do know that it began as an insult.
British General James Wolfe used the term in a 1658 letter to express his low opinion of the New England troops assigned to him.
And from around the same time period,
there is a report of British troops using Yankee as a term of abuse for the citizens of Boston.
In 1775, however,
after the battles of Lexington and Concord showed that colonials could stand up to British regulars,
Yankee was proudly adopted by colonials as a self-descriptor in defiance of the pejorative use.
Both derisive and respectable uses have existed ever since.
With your word of the day, I'm Peter Sokolowski.
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