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Original of Golf Terms (According To One Source)

  • Writer: Lucian@going2paris.net
    Lucian@going2paris.net
  • May 19
  • 1 min read


Bogey


Yes, the “Bogey Man” is involved. This term comes from Scotland, though specific origin stories vary. Some say that Major Charles Wellman remarked that a player was “a regular Bogey man,” while others credit Scottish slang for goblins or devils.


Regardless, the Scots can lay claim to the idea.


Birdie


In the 19th century, the term “bird” was the equivalent of “cool” or “excellent” – golf scholars believe this is where the term came from. An Atlantic City, New Jersey course claims that the term originated there in 1903.


Eagle


American in origin, this play on Birdie essentially raised the stakes. If a good score of one-under was a bird, a great score of two-under had to be a more prestigious bird. The Scottish Golf History website posits that the Americans simply inserted their national bird here.


Albatross


This “double eagle” synonym is simply a continuation of the aviary theme of good scores. The albatross is rare, as is a three under par.


Fore!


200 years ago, golf balls were quite pricey, so an assistant called a “forecaddie” worked in front of a golfer and retrieved errant shots. Eventually, the word’s etymology diverged – the assistant simply became a caddie and the warning call became “fore!”


 
 
 

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Welcome to my webpage.  I'm on a journey across the USA to visit all 22 Paris' - and points in between.  I'll be sharing thoughts, photos and videos along the way - as I search for answers to questions that bother me so.

 

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