What Did They Mean By That? A Dictionary of Historical and Genealogical Terms, Old and New
What Did They Mean By That? A Dictionary of Historical and Genealogical Terms, Old and New by Paul Drake; 348 pp; paper; 6x9; Index; Published: 2000, Reprinted: 2013; ISBN: 0-7884-7169-43-3; Item # HBD7169. The family historian must seek out the records of the merchants, courts, legislators, and churches, as well as the everyday expressions of the common men and women, all the while striving to remain aware that just as we have created words like television, computer, microwave oven, automobile, space station, gigabyte, and airplane, and set aside words as ticking and icebox, stadle, and squabpie, our ancestors had to do the same. They made up the likes of telegraph, railroad, and telescope, and assimilated German words like hex, sauerkraut, fresh, hoodlum, and kindergarten; Spanish words such as barbeque, chocolate, and tornado; French sounds like bayou, levee, depot, and chowder; and Indian words such as hickory, pecan, hominy, moccasin, and raccoon. Though they invented the likes o