HOW THE O.K. CORRAL® GOT ITS NAME (Text taken from the historic display in the O.K. Corral Office Museum.) The phrase "O.K.", used to name Tombstone, Arizona's historic O.K. Corral, had its origins in the Pennsylvania Dutch country of New York State in the mid-1800s. Today, the term appears in many languages, and has become one of the most used phrases in the world. It is even used in computer programs to indicate agreement. Not bad for an idiomatic expression that is over 150 years old and almost disappeared from use. Originally spelled with periods, this term outlived most similar abbreviations of the era owing to its use in President Martin Van Buren's 1839 campaign for reelection. During the presidential campaign, candidate Martin Van Buren was supported by a political club in his home town of Old Kinderhook originally called the "Oll Korrect" club. The name was later changed to "Old Kinderhook" and then shortened to "O.K.". Van Buren was an O.K. Club member, and his supporters used the term as a general descriptive term for their candidate who they saw as "above average" or "outstanding". The abbreviation proved eminently suitable for political slogans and campaign pins, although Van Buren lost the election. During the 1830s there was a humoristic fashion in Boston newspapers to reduce a phrase to initials and supply an explanation in parentheses. Sometimes the abbreviations were deliberately misspelled to add to the humor. Opposition newspapers used O.K. in March 1839 as an abbreviation for all correct, the joke being that neither the O nor the K was correct. Here is how one unhappy opposition newspaper of the time described Van Buren's O.K. campaign pins: "frightful letters …… significant of the birth-place of Martin Van Buren, Old Kinderhook, as also the rallying word of the Democracy of the late election, ''all correct'' .... Those who wear them should bear in mind that it will require their most strenuous exertions …… to make all things O.K."
The term then seems to have largely disappeared from use until some time after the Civil War. Eventually it came back into general use, and was thus chosen by John Montgomery to describe his "O.K. Corral, Livery and Feed Stable" which he founded in Tombstone, Arizona in February, 1879. How should O.K. be written? John Montgomery always used "O.K." on his Corral's 1880s signs. Today, however, there are many versions: two capital letters without periods, two capital letters with periods, o-k-a-y, or two small letters with periods. There is also the question of what part of speech O.K. represents: a noun, a verb, an interjection, a complete sentence, or part of another sentence? In fact, the term "O.K." goes beyond the boundaries of any single grammatical category to encompass a huge range of expressions. The famous October 26, 1881 "Gunfight at the O.K. Corral" pitted Wyatt Earp, his brothers Virgil and Morgan, and Doc Holliday against the McLaurys and Clantons. In 30 seconds of gunfire, three men were killed and three were wounded. The Gunfight did not actually take place inside the O.K. Corral itself. Instead, it began in a 18-foot wide vacant lot behind the Corral next to C.S. Fly's Boarding House and Photography Studio where Doc Holliday was living. Today, visitors to the O.K. Corral Museum Complex in Tombstone, AZ can visit the actual site of the gunfight, tour the O.K. Corral as it was in the 1880s, and even see Doc Holliday's room. Visit www.okcorral.com for further information.
The original owner, John Montgomery, liked the sound of the O.K. (which, during the mid-1800s was a time of "pun playing in the newspapers" and "pet names" and thus, OK meant "Old Kinderhook." ADDED INFO: This famous gunfight that took place in Tombstone, Arizona on October 26, 1881 did NOT take place at the OK Corral, but a vacant lot on Freemont Street in the alley by "Fly's Photo Shop." I came across a good website you may want to visit: www.tombstone1880.com/archives/wyatt.htm Have fun! Marcy
The Maori word for talk starting with a "k" and ending with an "o" is "kΕrero."
o daa!
Tokyo is one
loo-thi-o
Yes. The K is silent, and it has the long O (oh) sound, sounding the same as the word "no."
Big Beef at the O-K- Corral - 1974 is rated/received certificates of: USA:G
Doctor Who - 1963 The O-K- Corral 3-37 is rated/received certificates of: UK:PG
Cavalcade of America - 1952 Duel at the O-K- Corral 2-20 was released on: USA: 9 March 1954
Unsolved History - 2002 Shoot-Out at the O-K- Corral 1-10 was released on: USA: 22 January 2003 USA: 22 January 2003
Pac-Man - 1982 Chomp-Out at the O-K- Corral Once Upon a Chomp 1-10 was released on: USA: 27 November 1982
Most often it is fingerspelled - O K.
This is not a selling venue, besides you would run something like that on auction (ebay) to get the most $
OK's sound track includes a vowel - "o" and a consonant - "k" which taken together without spce between them can be turned into the letters O and K as they're pronounced in ABC. Originally the whole phrase is "of course" and the first sounds taken from each of those words makes OK, as I think. OK's sound track includes a vowel - "o" and a consonant - "k" which taken together without space between them can be turned into the letters O and K as they're pronounced in ABC. Originally the whole phrase is "of course" and the first sounds taken from each of those words makes OK, as I think.
kit, ok
K :- potassiumCl:- ChlorineO:- OxygenBr:- Bromine
It is believed that it stands for a warped version of all correct(oll korrect).
"OK" does not stand for anything, but is merely a phonetic spelling of the Cherokee or Seminole word, "Okeh", which means, well, 'Okay'.