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On Feb 16, 5:12�am, Short Wave Sportfishing
wrote: A boating resource of daily words with historical interest as they relate to boating. *A daily series. Ahoy!! (nautical salutation) Normally thought to be the proper nautical salutation when greeting another ship or nautical colleagues, it may have been derived from an ancient Viking Battle Cry. Alexander Graham Bell once believed that Ahoy would be the appropriate salutation for answering the telephone. Adjacent to Ahoy is the term Yo-Ho! a slight twist on Ahoy. Victorian writers used Yo-Ho's to add spice to their characters and songs. *Operattas by Gilbert and Sullivan such as "The Mikado" - "The happiest hour a sailor sees - Is when he down - At an inland town - With his Nancy on his knees - YO HO!! Another intersting use of Ahoy is Ahoy-Hoy - an affectation used by the social hoity-toity. *Ahoy-hoy is also a running joke on the cartoon show "The Simpsons" as a greeting by the ancient and ever so miserly Mr. Burns. If the Viking's used it as a battle cry, it certainly got converted to more peaceful uses in regions they invaded. "Hoi" is an informal "hello" in Dutch, and there is no great stretch of the imagination required to figure that the English seamen of the 1700's (prior to which the term was not in common use) would corrupt it to Ahoy. Ahoy there = hello there. Ahoy the boat = hello the boat. It's a term used for hailing. One of the words for "hello" in Czech and Slovak is the full form of the nautical term, "ahoy". |
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