Podunk

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

In American English, Podunk, or Podunk Hollow has come to denote something, usually a place, of small size and is often used as a placeholder name in a context of dismissing significance or importance. The word Podunk is of Algonquian origin. An 1875 example of dismissive usage is:

Sometimes the newest State, or the youngest county or town of a State is nicknamed "Old Podunk," or whatever it may be, by its affectionate inhabitants, as though their home was an ancient figure in national history.[1]

A 1915 book gives a folk etymology:

Among the places I passed through on this trip were Scrabbletown, Fog Hill, Larrywog, and Podunk. As to the last an Indian named Dunk once fell off a bridge there and drowned. The whites spoke of him as "poor Dunk," and the bridge as "poor Dunk's bridge," and so the vicinity in time came to be known as Podunk.[2]

Contents

The United States Board on Geographic Names lists five places named Podunk:

Other areas known as Podunk include:

  1. ^ "The Old North State," The New York Times, May 21, 1875, p. 6
  2. ^ Johnson, Clifton (1915). Highways and Byways of New England: Including the States of Massachusetts, New Hampshire, Rhode Island, Connecticut, Vermont, and Maine. Macmillan. , p. 287

  • Quaboag Plantation Deed (now Brookfield Mass.)-- 10 November, 1665[1]
  • The Straight Dope: Where is Podunk?
  • The Washington Post: Article: Life Goes On in a Town Called -- What? [2] Retrieved June 6, 2006
  • The New York Times: Article: Podunk Revisited [3] Retrieved June 6, 2006


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