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To:
freedom moose
During Pre-Revolutionary America when the song "Yankee Doodle" first became popular, the word macaroni in the line that reads "stuck a feather in his hat and called it macaroni" didn't refer to the pasta. Instead, "Macaroni" was a fancy and overdressed ("dandy") style of Italian clothing widely imitated in England at the time. So by just sticking a feather in his cap and calling himself a "Macaroni", Yankee Doodle was proudly proclaiming himself to be a country bumpkin (an awkward and unsophisticated person), because that was how the English regarded most colonials at that time.
28
posted on
07/04/2006 6:10:26 AM PDT
by
Madame Dufarge
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To:
Madame Dufarge
Thanks Madame...I always wondered about that.
76
posted on
07/04/2006 9:38:37 AM PDT
by
Donald Rumsfeld Fan
("Fake but Accurate": NY Times)
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