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Fall fall fall upon us
Fall fall fall upon us





fall fall fall upon us

John Pickering, A Vocabulary, or Collection of Words Which Have Been Supposed to Be Peculiar to the United States of America, 1816 One early American lexicographer, John Pickering, noted in his entry for fall:Ī friend has pointed out to me the following remark on this word: "In North America the season in which this takes place, derives its name from that circumstance, and instead of autumn is universally called the fall." In fact, the "autumn" sense of fall wasn't even entered into a dictionary until 1755, when Samuel Johnson first entered it in his Dictionary of the English Language.īy the middle of the 1800s, American English and British English had diverged, and so had fall and autumn.

fall fall fall upon us

But autumn was, by far, the more popular term for quite a long time.

fall fall fall upon us

Both autumn and fall were born in Britain, and both emigrated to America. Throw into the mix the independence of the United States, and the fact that the type of English spoken in America became part of our early national identity, and the gulf between the two dialects of English widened.Ī handful of words got caught in the identity crisis, and fall was one of them. As time went on, the English spoken in America and the English spoken in Britain diverged: there wasn't as much contact between the two groups of English speakers. One place it went was to the New World, and it set up shop in North America in the 1600s. This was shortened in the 1600s to fall.Īround this time, England's empire was fast expanding, which meant that the English language was going places. Poets continued to be wowed by the changes autumn brought, and in time, the phrase "the fall of the leaves" came to be associated with the season. Names for the season didn't just end with autumn, however. (Etymologists aren't sure where the Latin word came from.) It had extensive use right from its first appearance in English writing, and with good reason: the common name for this intermediary season prior to the arrival of autumn was harvest, which was potentially confusing, since harvest can refer to both the time when harvesting crops usually happens (autumn) as well as the actual harvesting of crops (harvest). The older of the two words is autumn, which first came into English in the 1300s from the Latin word autumnus. So why is 'fall' primarily used in America? Both 'autumn' and 'fall' originated in Britain.







Fall fall fall upon us