The Big Apple
About Archives Categories Index Search
About Archives Categories Index Search

December 20, 2021
The Big Apple1970s-present: False Etymologies

“Big Apple” and the Dutch phrase, “to buy for an apple and an egg” (2020)

"To buy something for an apple and an egg" (meaning to buy something cheaply) is an idiom in German ("fürn Appel und ein Ei" or "etwas für einen Apfel und ein Ei…

May 10, 2021
The Big Apple1970s-present: False Etymologies

“New York is a sucked orange” (not Big Apple; Ralph Waldo Emerson, 1860)

Ralph Waldo Emerson called New York City "a sucked orange" in an essay printed in 1860. A "sucked orange" has no juice. Emerson didn't like New York. The "sucked…

June 9, 2021
The Big Apple1970s-present: False Etymologies

“Why is New York City called ‘The Big Apple?’ Wrong answers only” (2021)

The New-York Historical Society asked on Twitter on June 2, 2021: "Why is New York City called 'The Big Apple?' Wrong answers only." [NOTE: This is one of over 250 "Big…

January 17, 2022
The Big Apple1970s-present: False Etymologies

Alain Locke and Harlem Renaissance as the “Big Apple” (1920s; suggested in 1988)

Alain Leroy Locke (1885-1954) was the first African-American Rhodes Scholar and a professor of philosophy at Howard University in Washington, D.C. He guest edited Survey Graphic in March 1925 for a…

December 20, 2013
The Big Apple1970s-present: False Etymologies

An apple tree on every street (2013 movie explanation)

In the comedy film Anchorman 2: The Legend Continues (2013), television news anchorman Ron Burgundy (played by actor Will Ferrell) takes a job with e 24-hour news channel in New York City.…

March 18, 2025
The Big Apple1970s-present: False Etymologies

Apple at the foot of the Statue of Liberty (2024)

A statue called "The Lucifer of Liège" (1848), in Liège, Belgium, is a religious sculpture executed in white marble by the Belgian artist Guillaume Geefs. New York City's…

September 30, 2014
The Big Apple1970s-present: False Etymologies

Apple Store (2000s)

Apple Inc., a consumer electronics company, opened its first Apple store in Manhattan (103 Prince Street, in Soho) in 2002. Another Apple store was located in midtown Manhattan (Fifth Avenue…

July 13, 2004
The Big Apple1970s-present: False Etymologies

Big A (Aqueduct Racetrack nickname, 1959)

Aqueduct racetrack is popularly known as "the Big A." Clark Whelton (a former writer for the Village Voice and member of the mayor's communications office) told me that he believed…

July 12, 2004
The Big Apple1970s-present: False Etymologies

Big Apple dance craze (1937)

The Big Apple dance craze of 1937 popularized the "Big Apple" term, but didn't originate it. New York (NY) Morning Telegraph track writer John J. Fitz Gerald (1893-1963) had been…

February 15, 2006
The Big Apple1970s-present: False Etymologies

Big Apple of Wathena, Kansas (1928-1940)

There used to be a building (restaurant/dance hall) in the shape of a big apple near Wathena, Kansas. The "Big Red Apple" building was opened in 1928 -- before the 1937 big apple dance…

December 26, 2007
The Big Apple1970s-present: False Etymologies

Big Apple on New Year’s Eve Ball at One Times Square (1981-1988)

For over one hundred years, a ball has been dropped from a pole in New York City to signify the birth of a new year. The tradition has been popularized by the building at One Times Square, but…

July 12, 2004
The Big Apple1970s-present: False Etymologies

Big Apple Whore Hoax (1800s; proposed 1995-2006)

The "Big Apple" whore hoax was invented by Peter Salwen's web site in 1995: "One of these, arriving in late 1803 or early 1804, was Mlle. Evelyn Claudine de Saint-Évremond.…

April 9, 2018
The Big Apple1970s-present: False Etymologies

Cab Calloway’s “Hepster’s Dictionary” (1938, 1944)

Cab Calloway (1907-1994) was an American jazz singer and bandleader. He published a "Hepster's Dictionary" in 1938, with another edition in 1944. The dictionary contained much Harlem…

October 6, 2013
The Big Apple1970s-present: False Etymologies

Chelsea Apple Orchard (1820s)

Clement Clarke Moore (1779-1863) -- perhaps best known as the credited author of the yuletide poem "A Visit from St. Nicholas" -- lived in what he called Chelsea, in Manhattan. He had an…

July 5, 2004
The Big Apple1970s-present: False Etymologies

Damon Runyon (who never used “Big Apple”)

It's not difficult to see how this "Big Apple" attribution would occur. American writer Damon Runyon (1880-1946) was noted for his underworld slang. He had a character called…

July 12, 2004
The Big Apple1970s-present: False Etymologies

Depression Apple Sellers (1930s)

It is sometimes claimed that "Big Apple" comes from New York City's street apple stands during the Great Depression in the 1930s. This is incorrect. New York (NY) Morning Telegraph…

July 12, 2004
The Big Apple1970s-present: False Etymologies

Edward Martin metaphor (1909)

A 1909 citation by Harper's editor Edward Sandford Martin (1856-1939) is often given as the first citation of "the Big Apple" to mean New York City. It probably shouldn't be…

December 16, 2013
The Big Apple1970s-present: False Etymologies

Five Apple Seeds, Five Boroughs (1990s?)

Cut an apple horizontally, and one often sees a five-seed star pattern. The five seeds are said to represent the five boroughs of New York City. This was posted on Twitter on December 16, 2013:…

April 23, 2006
The Big Apple1970s-present: False Etymologies

Fletcher Henderson popularization of “the Big Apple” in the 1930s

In 1990, Harlem Assemblywoman Geraldine Daniels published a letter in the New York Times that stated that musician Fletcher Henderson (1879-1952) popularized "the Big Apple" in the 1930s.…

June 12, 2006
1970s-present: False Etymologies

Governor Stuyvesant’s Tree (pear, not apple)

It is sometimes (not often, thankfully) said that New York City is called "the Big Apple" because of Governor Peter Stuyvesant's apple tree. Actually, it was a pear tree. The tree is…

1 2
Next

About the Website and Editor

BARRY POPIK is a contributor to the Oxford English Dictionary, Dictionary of American Regional English, Historical Dictionary of American Slang, Yale Book of Quotations and Dictionary of Modern Proverbs. Since 1990 he has also been a regular contributor to Gerald Cohen's Comments on Etymology.

Read more About the Website and Editor
About
Privacy Policy
RSS

© 2026 Barry Popik. All rights reserved.