The following is the origin of golf:
There is no
universally accepted derivation for
the word 'golf.' One of the most common
misconceptions is that the word GOLF is an
acronym for Gentlemen Only Ladies Forbidden. This
at
least is definitely not true.
The first
documented mention of the word 'golf' is
in
Edinburgh on 6th March 1457, when King
James II
banned ‘ye golf’, in an attempt to encourage archery practice, which
was
being neglected.
Before the creation of dictionaries,
there was no standardised spelling of any given
word. People wrote words phonetically. Goff, gowf, golf,
goif, gof, gowfe, gouff and golve have all been found in
documents in Scotland.
Most people believe the old
word 'gowfe' was the most common term, pronounced 'gouf'. The Loudon
Gowf
Club maintains the tradition of this terminology.
A minority of people hold the view that golf
is a
purely Scottish term, derived from Scots words 'golf', 'golfand' and
'golfing', which mean 'to strike' as in 'to cuff'.
It seems most likely that
the terms golf, chole and kolf,
which were the names for a variety of
medieval
stick and ball games in Britain and in
continental
Europe, are all derived from a common word of a pre-modern
European language, following Grimm's
grammatical
law, which details the clear phonetic
similarities of
these words.
Golf
(and chole and kolf) are all
presumed
to have originally meant 'club'.
Golf has also been
associated with the German word
for club 'kolbe', (Der
Kolben).
It is also probably related to the Dutch
word and game 'kolven'.
In 1636, David Wedderburn used
the word Baculus, which
is
Latin for 'club' as the title for his 'Vocabula',
listing Latin terms for golf, which supports
this derivation. The
Vocabula
contains the first clear mention of the golf hole, the essential
element of
modern links golf and is thus the first unambiguous proof of the
existence
of the game in Scotland.
But there is another saying, golf stands for Green, Oxygen, Light, and Friendship.
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