Originally posted by clive heath
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Another W sound is that in Qu. Q was introduced into English by the Normans - Old English had no Q (or K for that matter). 'Queen' in OE was cwen.
As regards OK, this seems to be fairly well settled. There was a craze at Harvard from 1838 for expressions based on initials - PDQ for 'pretty damn quick' is one that has survived, but there were hundreds (RTBS - remains to be seen; GTDHD - give the devil his due, SP - small peas, ad inf.). One of them was OK for 'oll korrekt' ('all correct' in Dan'l Boone-talk). It might have died with the rest if 1840 hadn't been a presidential election year in which Martin van Buren was elected, His nickname was "Old Kinderhook" (from his birthplace) and "van Buren OK!" became an election slogan. The Democrats also founded the Democrat OK Club to support van Buren. The earliest printed use of OK seems to have been in a Boston newspaper on 23 March 1839.
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