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  2. May 8, 2017 · The noun deadline denotes the latest time or date by which something should be completed. Its original sense, during the American Civil War (1861-65), was a line drawn around a camp beyond which prisoners were liable to be shot.

  3. Aug 22, 2017 · It originated during the Civil War, and came to prominence during the much-hyped trial of an infamous Swiss-born Confederate leader named Henry Wirz. Wirz was born Heinrich Hartmann Wirz in...

  4. deadline (n.) "time limit," 1920, American English newspaper jargon, from dead (adj.) + line (n.). Perhaps influenced by earlier use (1864) to mean the "do-not-cross" line in Civil War prisons, which figured in the trial of Henry Wirz, commander of the notorious Confederate prison at Andersonville, Georgia.

  5. Jan 6, 2014 · Origin of the “Deadline”. With its roots in 19 th century warfare, the phrase “meet a deadline” has an interesting, somewhat literal, etymology. American Civil War. Most etymologists agree that the word “deadline” first appeared during the American Civil War (1861-1865).

  6. The earliest known use of the noun deadline is in the 1810s. OED's earliest evidence for deadline is from 1814, in the writing of T. F. Salter. deadline is formed within English, by compounding.

  7. www.wordorigins.org › big-list-entries › deadlinedeadline - Wordorigins.org

    Apr 24, 2023 · Deadline started out with a variety of meanings, but all designating some kind of boundary or limit. The term begins to appear in earnest in the middle of the nineteenth century. It is an Americanism, and the early uses often literally referred to death.

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