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Doughboy
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A leatherneck or a grunt do not sound like nice names to call someone. Yet
men and women who serve in the United States armed forces are proud of those
names. And if you think they sound strange, consider doughboy and GI Joe.
After the American Civil War in the eighteen sixties, a writer in a
publication called Beadlefs Monthly used the word doughboy to
describe Civil War soldiers. But word expert Charles Funk says that early writer
could not explain where the name started.
About twenty years later, someone did explain. She was the wife of the famous
American general George Custer.
Elizabeth Custer wrote that a doughboy was a sweet food served to Navy men on
ships. She also said the name was given to the large buttons on the clothes of
soldiers. Elizabeth Custer believed the name changed over time to mean the
soldiers themselves.
Now, we probably most often think of doughboys as the soldiers who fought for
the Allies in World War One.
By World War Two, soldiers were called other names. The one most often heard
was GI, or GI Joe. Most people say the
letters GI were a short way to say general issue or government issue. The name
came to mean several things. It could mean the soldier himself. It could mean
things given to soldiers when they joined the military such as weapons,
equipment or clothes. And, for some reason, it could mean to organize, or clean.
Soldiers often say, gWe GIfd the place.h And when an area looks good,
soldiers may say the area is gGI.h Strangely, though, GI can also mean poor
work, a job badly done.
Some students of military words have another explanation of GI. They say that
instead of government issue or general issue, GI came from the words galvanized
iron. The American soldier was said to be like galvanized iron, a material
produced for special strength. The Dictionary of Soldier Talk says GI was used
for the words galvanized iron in a publication about the vehicles of the early
twentieth century.
Today, a doughboy or GI may be called a grunt. Nobody is
sure of the exact beginning of the word. But, the best idea probably is that the
name comes from the sound that troops make when ordered to march long distances
carrying heavy equipment.
A member of the United States Marines also has a strange name
-- leatherneck. It is thought to have started in the eighteen
hundreds. Some say the name comes from the thick collars of leather early
Marines wore around their necks to protect them from cuts during battles. Others
say the sun burned the Marinesf necks until their skin looked like leather.
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