Dixie

来自Big Physics
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wiktionary

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From Hindi देगची(degcī, “a kettle, a metallic cooking pot”), from Classical Persian دیگچه‎ (degča, “a pot, small cauldron”), from دیگ‎ (deg, “pot”) +‎ ـچه‎ (-ča).


etymonline

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Dixie (n.)

"the southern United States," 1859, of obscure origin, first attested in the song of that name, which was popularized, if not written, by Ohio-born U.S. minstrel musician and songwriter Dan Emmett (1815-1904); perhaps a reference to the Mason-Dixon Line, but there are other well-publicized theories dating to the Civil War. Popularized nationwide in minstrel shows. Dixieland style of jazz developed in New Orleans c. 1910, so called by 1919 (in the name of a band).


It is interesting to remember that the song which is essentially Southern — "Dixie" — and that which is essentially Northern — "Yankee Doodle" — never really had any serious words to them. [The Bookman, June 1910]