Yankee

Noun

 * 1) A native or inhabitant of New England.
 * 2) A native or inhabitant of the Northern USA.
 * 3) A native or inhabitant of the USA.
 * 4) The letter Y in the ICAO spelling alphabet.
 * 5)  A large triangular headsail used in light or moderate winds and set on the fore topmast stay. Unlike a genoa it does not fill the whole fore triangle, but is set in combination with the working staysail.
 * 6)  A player that plays for the New York Yankees.
 * 7) A wager on four selections, consisting of 11 separate bets: six doubles, four trebles and a fourfold accumulator. A minimum two selections must win to gain a return.
 * 8) * 1980, New Scientist (volume 85, number 1199, 20 March 1980)
 * Betting is complicated with win bets, place bets, each-way bets and complex bets such as doubles, trebles, Yankees and the like.

Derived terms

 * Yankee ingenuity

Thesaurus
Acadian, Anglo-Indian, Bolshevik, Bolshevist, Bolshie, Brooklynese, Cajun, Canadian French, Carbonarist, Carbonaro, Castroist, Castroite, Charley, Cockney, Communist, Cong, Down-Easter Yankee, Easterner, Fenian, French Canadian, Guevarist, Gullah, Jacobin, Leninist, Maoist, Marxist, Mau-Mau, Midland, Midland dialect, New England dialect, New Englander, Northener, Northman, Pennsylvania Dutch, Puritan, Red, Red Republican, Roundhead, Sinn Feiner, Trotskyist, Trotskyite, VC, Vietcong, Westerner, Yankee Doodle, Yorkshire, anarch, anarchist, bonnet rouge, bundle of isoglosses, class dialect, criminal syndicalist, dialect, dialect atlas, dialect dictionary, eastlander, idiom, isogloss, linguistic atlas, linguistic community, linguistic island, local dialect, localism, northlander, patois, provincialism, rebel, red, regional accent, regionalism, revolutionary, revolutionary junta, revolutioner, revolutionist, revolutionizer, sans-culotte, sans-culottist, southlander, speech community, subdialect, subversive, syndicalist, terrorist, westlander

Etymology
1683, a name applied disparagingly by Dutch settlers in Nieuw Amsterdam (New York) to English colonists in neighboring Connecticut. It may be from Du. Janke, literally, "Little John," dim. of common personal name Jan; or it may be from Jan Kees familiar form of "Johan Cornelius," or perhaps an alt. of Jan Kees, dial. variant of Jan Kaas, literally, "John Cheese," the generic nickname the Flemings used for Dutchmen. It originally seems to have been applied insultingly to Dutch, especially freebooters, before they turned around and slapped it on the English. In Eng. a term of contempt (1750s) before its use as a general term for "native of New England" (1765). Shortened form Yank in reference to "an American" first recorded 1778.

Translations

 * Dutch:


 * Dutch:
 * Finnish:


 * Russian:


 * Arabic: يانكي
 * Chinese:
 * Mandarin: 揚基, 扬基,  美國佬, 美国佬
 * Dutch:
 * Estonian: jänki
 * Finnish:
 * German: ,


 * Hindi: यांकी
 * Japanese: ヤンキー, アメ公
 * Korean: 양키
 * Portuguese:
 * Russian:,  пиндос, америкос
 * Spanish:
 * Swedish: jänkare,


 * Dutch: Ygrec,
 * Estonian: Igrek


 * Finnish:
 * German:


 * Dutch:


 * Finnish: jenni, jenny


 * Dutch:


 * Spanish:


 * : Yankee