2011年12月5日星期一

Golfers Yell "Fore"

"Fore" is another word for "ahead" (think of a ship's fore and aft). It allows
golfers to be forewarned, in other words.Yelling "fore" is simply a shorter way to
yell "watch out ahead" (or "watch out before").
A popular theory is that the term has a military origin. In warfare of the 17th and
18th century (a time period when golf was really taking hold in Britain), infantry
advanced in formation while artillery batteries fired from behind, over their heads.
So when golfers misfired and send their missiles - golf balls - screaming off
target, "beware before" became shortened to "fore."An artilleryman about to fire
would yell "beware before," alerting nearby infantrymen to drop to the ground to
avoid the shells screaming overhead.
If a member of the group hit an errant shot, the thinking goes, they may have
alerted the forecaddie by yelling out the term. It was eventually shorted to just
"fore."A forecaddie is a person who accompanies a group around the golf course,
often going forward to be in a position to pinpoint the locations of the groups'
shots.This is another term, however, whose exact origin can't be stated. It does
originate, however, in the fact that "fore" means "ahead" and, used by a golfer, is
a warning to those ahead.

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