A few days ago
Anonymous

Did Yankee Doodle name the feather, hat, town, or his pony Macaroni?

Did Yankee Doodle name the feather, hat, town, or his pony Macaroni?

Top 7 Answers
A few days ago
Joe S

Favorite Answer

He was high and he ate his hat because he thought it was macaroni. Hey, every one gets the munchies, right?
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A few days ago
t
a quote from the link listed below:

Yankee Doodle:

Why did yankee doodle stick a feather in his hat and call it macaroni? Back in Pre-Revolutionary America when the song “Yankee Doodle” was first popular, the singer was not referring to the pasta “macaroni” in the line that reads “stuck a feather in his hat and called it macaroni”. “Macaroni” was a fancy (“dandy”) style of Italian dress widely imitated in England at the time. So by just sticking a feather in his cap and calling himself a “Macaroni” (a “dandy”), Yankee Doodle was proudly proclaiming himself to be a country bumpkin, because that was how the English regarded most colonials at that time. But times have long since changed, and it is important to reflect on the fact that despite the turbulent early relationship between England and the American colonists, our two countries are strongly united.

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A few days ago
Heather
he was refering to his style…

During Pre-Revolutionary America when the song “Yankee Doodle” first became popular, the word macaroni in the line that reads “stuck a feather in his hat and called it macaroni” didn’t refer to the pasta. Instead, “Macaroni” was a fancy and overdressed (“dandy”) style of Italian clothing widely imitated in England at the time. So by just sticking a feather in his cap and calling himself a “Macaroni”, Yankee Doodle was proudly proclaiming himself to be a country bumpkin (an awkward and unsophisticated person), because that was how the English regarded most colonials at that time.

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A few days ago
Georgia Peach
The feather!!

The song’s origins were in a pre-Revolutionary War song originally sung by British military officers to mock the disheveled, disorganized colonial “Yankees” with whom they served in the French and Indian War. At the time, the most common meaning of the word doodle was that of “simpleton” or “fool”. It is believed that the tune comes from the nursery rhyme Lucy Locket. One version of the Yankee Doodle lyrics is attributed to Doctor Richard Shuckburgh, a British Army surgeon.

The Boston Journal of the Times wrote about a British band declaring “that Yankee Doodle song was the Capital Piece of their band music.”

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A few days ago
Jayden’s Father
The feather was the macaroni and the hat was the cheese
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A few days ago
Yahoo! Answers
he stuck a feather in his hat and called it macaroni lol…
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A few days ago
golden sephiroth
hat.
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