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  1. New sailors were always called greenhorns for their first season, but never knew where the term came from. According to wiki it’s unconfirmed but may have to do with the horn of a freshly slaughtered animal?

  2. In answer to Weiss’s question then, “greenhorn,” which by the early 20th century in America had largely come to mean a new immigrant from Europe, was not just a term for Jewish immigrants.

  3. Sailors who had never ‘crossed the line’ before— calledGreenhorns’ or ‘Polliwogs’— were hauled before King Neptune and his court; his wife Aphrodite, a Judge, Doctor, Barber, and guards, all played by the more experienced crew.

  4. t. e. There are many customs and traditions associated with the Royal Navy of the United Kingdom. Many of these traditions have carried on to other Commonwealth navies, such as Canada, India, Australia and New Zealand. These include formal customs such as separate crests associated with ships, ensigns and fleet reviews.

  5. Jun 6, 2003 · Weiss is not the first to wonder about the word “greenhorn,” defined by a young Jewish immigrant to New York, the narrator of Sholom Aleichem’s “Motl, Peysi the Cantor’s Son,” as “someone just...

  6. Greenhorn. Despite its adoption in America to describe a young, inexperienced novice, this is an old English word dating from around 1460 when it was first used to describe a young, horned animal. Green of course is used in its familiar sense of unripe or inexperienced.

  7. Later, in the next century, a new army of recruits migrated in search of opportunities and were referred to as “green horns.” In this context, the phrase began to be used to refer to someone who had little to no experience, someone who was easily fooled or immature.

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