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Ole Miss....why not Ol' Miss????

Posted on 1/31/13 at 12:46 pm
Posted by AgDuckHunter
Houston
Member since Sep 2011
61 posts
Posted on 1/31/13 at 12:46 pm
OK, something has always bothered me about "Ole" Miss. Ole is a Spanish word that has nothing to do with our southern dialect changing the pronunciation of the word "old". The correct use of the word "OLE" (as spelled at Ole Miss) should actually be OL'. Such as, "Hey Billybob, how's that ol' gal at the honkytonk overyonder been treatin' ya?" See, you take the "d" out & replace it with an apostrophe....not an "e".

Is there a story behind why it's called OLE Miss? Or is the misuse/misspelling of Ol' just due to the sheer stupidity of the inbreds at the university who came up with the name? Just seems funny to have an institution of higher education misspell their name.

That's today's grammar police lesson. Go ahead "OLE" missers....flame away.
Posted by Mullen3:16
Nerlins, LA
Member since May 2012
4708 posts
Posted on 1/31/13 at 12:48 pm to
in
Posted by Eric Nies Grind Time
Atlanta GA - ITP
Member since Sep 2012
24933 posts
Posted on 1/31/13 at 12:48 pm to
Posted by jeff967
Monroe, Louisiana
Member since Jan 2010
925 posts
Posted on 1/31/13 at 12:50 pm to
The University of Mississippi is the name
Ole Miss is the nick name
Posted by Grateful Reb
Member since Apr 2011
8070 posts
Posted on 1/31/13 at 12:52 pm to
Posted by TheCaterpillar
Member since Jan 2004
76774 posts
Posted on 1/31/13 at 12:53 pm to
OVERRATED
Posted by Jimmie Rustler
MS
Member since Jan 2013
613 posts
Posted on 1/31/13 at 12:54 pm to
quote:

OK, something has always bothered me about "Ole" Miss. Ole is a Spanish word that has nothing to do with our southern dialect changing the pronunciation of the word "old". The correct use of the word "OLE" (as spelled at Ole Miss) should actually be OL'. Such as, "Hey Billybob, how's that ol' gal at the honkytonk overyonder been treatin' ya?" See, you take the "d" out & replace it with an apostrophe....not an "e".


I almost passed out of sheer boredom from this historical excerpt, but then you followed it up with this little nugget:


quote:

here a story behind why it's called OLE Miss? Or is the misuse/misspelling of Ol' just due to the sheer stupidity of the inbreds at the university who came up with the name? Just seems funny to have an institution of higher education misspell their name.


Solid.
Posted by WestCoastAg
Member since Oct 2012
145056 posts
Posted on 1/31/13 at 12:54 pm to
in
Posted by WestCoastAg
Member since Oct 2012
145056 posts
Posted on 1/31/13 at 12:56 pm to
quote:

Ole Miss is the nick name
right. but where does that come from
Posted by Grateful Reb
Member since Apr 2011
8070 posts
Posted on 1/31/13 at 12:56 pm to
quote:

Posted by TheCaterpillar OVERRATED


Try telling my right hand that
Posted by KAVandy05
Nashville, TN
Member since Sep 2011
436 posts
Posted on 1/31/13 at 12:56 pm to
Nice jizz.
Posted by beHop
Landmass
Member since Jan 2012
14536 posts
Posted on 1/31/13 at 12:59 pm to
Cuz frick you that's why
Posted by Quigley
Down Under
Member since Jul 2009
4007 posts
Posted on 1/31/13 at 12:59 pm to
Nickname came from the name of the yearbook
Posted by CoonassBulldog
Member since Sep 2008
6913 posts
Posted on 1/31/13 at 1:00 pm to
My sig tells you where the name came from
Posted by OBReb6
Memphissippi
Member since Jul 2010
37676 posts
Posted on 1/31/13 at 1:01 pm to
quote:

right. but where does that come from

Back around 100 years ago they had a contest to come up with the name of the yearbook. This girl named Elma meek won with her submission of "the Ole Miss", and then people starte calling the school that.
This post was edited on 1/31/13 at 1:03 pm
Posted by hbccam
Flowood, MS
Member since Sep 2012
369 posts
Posted on 1/31/13 at 1:03 pm to
Ole and olé are two different words. Note the accent mark above the "e" in the Spanish word olé.

LINK
Posted by GalvoAg
Galveston TX
Member since Apr 2012
10835 posts
Posted on 1/31/13 at 1:05 pm to
quote:

During this time period, the university became known as "Ole Miss," a moniker used by slaves to describe the wife of the plantation owner.

People said that when I went there. Pretty sure that isn't true.
Posted by OBReb6
Memphissippi
Member since Jul 2010
37676 posts
Posted on 1/31/13 at 1:07 pm to
One professor a while back guessed that that might have been how the name originated. No one really knows. The Mississippi River is known as the "ole miss", or they could have just been shortening the term "ole mississippi", which makes the most sense by far.
Posted by Eric Nies Grind Time
Atlanta GA - ITP
Member since Sep 2012
24933 posts
Posted on 1/31/13 at 1:07 pm to
According to wiki answers: LINK

Answer:
The University got its nickname "Ole Miss" via a contest in 1897. That same year, the student yearbook was being published for the first time. As a way to find a name for the book, a contest was held to solicit suggestions from the student body. Elma Meek, a student at the time, submitted the winning entry of Ole Miss. Interestingly, the term "Ole Miss" is not derived from Mississippi, but was a term used by slaves for the wife of a plantation owner. This sobriquet was chosen not only for the yearbook, but also became the name by which the University is now affectionately known
cited from:
Chodas, Nadine. The Band Played Dixie: Race and Liberal Conscience at Ole Miss.
Posted by Shake dat Bear
In the Frozen North
Member since Jan 2013
58 posts
Posted on 1/31/13 at 1:08 pm to



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