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"Yankee",最初是指在美国东北部新英格兰地区定居的殖民者。在美国南北战争(1861-1865)期间, "Yankee"的含义扩大了。南方军人把北方各州的士兵都叫作"Yankee(北方佬)"。在第一次世界大战(1914-1918)期间, "Yankee"简化成"Yank"。一唱起"The Yanks Are Coming(扬克来了)"这支歌,欧洲那些处境艰难的协约国人民无不欢欣流泪。从那时起,"Yankee"对于欧洲人来说,就成了美国兵或美国人的代称了。在拉丁美洲,Yankee拼作Yanqui,在民族独立运动风起云涌的五十年代,长期遭受美国剥削和压迫的拉丁美洲人民发出了Yanqui go home!(美国佬滚回老家去!)的吼声,对美国的经济利益和政治影响可说是一个巨大的打击。

yankee英文名

307 评论(12)

0子爵绿子0

叠在一起的YN是美国扬基棒球队的对帽,这是纽约扬基棒球队的队徽,并不是品牌,球迷对喜欢球队的支持衍生出了很多运动品,如帽子,衣服等。

纽约洋基,英文名 New York Yankees,是美国职棒大联盟中,隶属于美国联盟的棒球队伍之一。主场位于纽约的布朗斯区。在美国联盟的分区中,属于美联东区,且由于球队超过一百年的历史,故在美国体育历史中也拥有最多著名的历史事件。纽约洋基队曾在40次的世界大赛中,赢得27次的冠军,仅跟在后的,分别为圣路易红雀队的11次与奥克兰运动家队的9次冠军。曾参与过18次世界大赛的洛杉矶道奇,则是参与世界大赛的次数排名第二。而纽约洋基队也是在所有的球队中,唯一每个守备位置皆有球员获选登录棒球名人堂中的球队。

拓展资料:

1900年球季末,联盟主席班·强森(Ban Johnson)决定重组新联盟,称之为[美国联盟](American League)。美国联盟除了先前小联盟时期(1899前称为西方联盟Western League)的五个城市,另外新增了三个东岸的城市,包括在前一年国家联盟缩编时遭到裁减的马利兰州巴尔的摩(Baltimore, Maryland)。强森想要在纽约(New York City)新增球队,但是遭到国家联盟纽约巨人队(New York Giants)老板运用塔马尼派(Tammany Hall)以政治力运作而未能成功。

球队在1901年以巴尔的摩金莺队(Baltimore Orioles)的名义成立,总教练为约翰·马格鲁(John McGraw)。球队一开始坐落在纽约曼哈顿165街与百老汇交界,靠近曼哈坦岛的最高点。故球场称作"山顶球场"(Hilltop Park),而球队则很快被称为"纽约高地人队"(New York Highlanders)。这名字可以引申至著名的英国军团"高登高地人"(The Gordon Highlanders),其名来自在1903至1906年间以军团长身份领导军团的约瑟夫·高登(Joseph Gordon)。今日山顶球场己被哥伦比亚长老教会医学中心(Columbia-Presbyterian Medical Center)所取代。

参考资料:百度百科-纽约扬基棒球队

88 评论(9)

胃食眉眉

叠在一起的yn是 美国扬基棒球队的对帽请移步百度百科

308 评论(15)

cindy5056315

中文名是没有与其对应的英文名的,别人取的英文名都是他们外国人常用的名字或者自己比较喜欢的单词,你也可以给自己取个,你的名字只能说Peng Yan.不过就我个人认为Yap不错,因为专指年轻有抱负的人!记住Y大写的才是这个意思!

216 评论(14)

8888一美食家

JannyYoonYann

250 评论(12)

陌茉默墨

The term Yankee, sometimes abbreviated to Yank, has a few related meanings, often referring to someone of Northern U.S. origin or heritage. Within the United States its meaning has varied over time. Originally the term referred to residents of New England as used by Mark Twain in A Connecticut Yankee in King Arthur's Court. During and after the American Civil War its meaning expanded to include any Northerner or resident of the states formerly on the Union side of the war, and included anyone from the Northeast (New England, Mid-Atlantic, and upper Great Lakes states). After the Civil War the term gradually reverted to its earlier meaning of New Englander,[1] although Southerners often continue to use the extended meaning.Outside the United States, Yank or Yankee is a slang term, sometimes derogatory, for any U.S. citizen.The origins of the term are uncertain, although there are many speculative suggestions.Hastings of Cambridge, Massachusetts, was attributed around 1713 to regularly using the word as a superlative, generally in the sense of excellent.[2]In 1758 British General James Wolfe referred to the New England soldiers under his command as Yankees: "I can afford you two companies of Yankees."[3] Later the term as used by the British was often derogatory, as shown by the cartoon from 1775 ridiculing Yankee soldiers.[3] The "Yankee and Pennamite" war was a series of clashes that occurred in 1769 over land titles in Pennsylvania, in which "Yankee" meant the Connecticut claimants.One of the earliest theories on the word's origin is that it derives from the Cherokee word eankke, meaning coward, as applied to the residents of New England.It also may come from a northeastern Native American approximation of the words English and anglais. One school of thought is that the word is a borrowing from the Wendat (called Huron by the French) pronunciation of the French l'anglais (meaning the English), sounded as "Y'an-gee". During the French and Indian War the word would have been widely used among many Native Americans in the British colonies to refer to white settlers in Upstate New York, throughout New England, and other areas west of the Hudson Valley. Later arrivals to the region then adopted the term with the pronunciation evolving to "Yankee".[2] This notion has been rejected by some linguists.[3]Loyalist newspaper cartoon from Boston 1776 ridicules "Yankie Doodles" militia who have encircled the cityThe most plausible derivation is from the Dutch first names "Jan" and "Kees." "Jan" and "Kees" were and still are common Dutch first names, and also common Dutch given names or nicknames. In many instances both names (Jan-Kees) are also used as a single first name in the Netherlands. The word Yankee in this sense would be used as a form of contempt, applied derisively to Dutch or English settlers in the New England states.[2]Another speculation suggests the Dutch form was Jan Kaas, "John Cheese", from the prevalence of dairy farming among the Dutch, but this seems far-fetched.[citation needed]Michael Quinion and Patrick Hanks argue[4] that the term refers to the Dutch nickname and surname Janneke (from "Jan" and the diminutive "-ke", meaning "Little John" or Johnny in dutch), anglicized to Yanke (the "J" is pronounced "Y" in Dutch) and "used as a nickname for a Dutch-speaking American in colonial times". By extension, the term grew to include non-Dutch colonists as well.Another possible explanation is that the name "Kees", normally an abbreviation for "Cornelius" in Dutch, also means a monkey or baboon. This usage is still in use in Afrikaans. This means that that the origin of "Yankee" is "Jan Kees" or "John Baboon."One influence on the use of the term throughout the years has been the song Yankee Doodle, which was popular at the time of the American Revolutionary War (1775–1783). Following the Battle of Concord, it was broadly adopted by Americans and today is the state song of Connecticut.An early use of the term outside the United States was in the creation of Sam Slick, the "Yankee Clockmaker", in a column in a newspaper in Halifax, Nova Scotia, Canada, in 1835. The character was a plain-talking U.S. citizen who served to poke fun at Nova Scotian customs of that era, while trying to urge the old-fashioned Canadians to be as clever and hard-working as the Yankees.The "damned Yankee" usage dates from 1812.[3] During and after the American Civil War (1861–1865) Confederates popularized it as a derogatory term for their Northern enemies.

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