To sign your John Hancock is to sign your signature on something
the name of the paper why you mean ? the twp?
If you mean the piece for cello & harp: 1919, by Granville Bantock. If you mean the piece for cello & harp: 1919, by Granville Bantock.
Do you mean Moses ou John ? Do you mean Moses ou John ?
i think you mean john meyer?
john brown's raid
The typical meaning for John Hancock is your signature. So when someone asks you for your "John Hancock" they are asking for your signature.
I believe John Hancock was a signer of the Declaration of Independence. When someone tells you to sign your John Hancock, they mean to put your signature on what ever it is they are referring to.Write your signatureThat just means : to sign your name somewhere-- to put your signature on a piece of paper.This is an idiomatic expression meaning your own signature or mark.It immortalises the first signatory of the Declaration of Independence.
"John Hancock" is presumably the problematic term in that phrase, the rest of it is pretty straightforward. "John Hancock" is slang for "signature", coming from the very prominent signature of John Hancock on the US Declaration of Independence. The John Hancock Life Insurance company had a commercial jingle featuring the line "put your John Hancock on the John Hancock".
it meant give me your signature
It means they want you to sign it.
A signature, after John Hancock, who signed the Declaration of Independence with a somewhat over-elaborate and oversized monicker.
Do you mean John Hancock ? He was one of the signers of the United States Declaration of Independence.
To sign your name or put your signature. This comes from the overly large signature that Hancock wrote on the declaration.
John Hancock (1737-1793) was president of the Second Continental Congress and therefore the first delegate to sign the Declaration of Independence. Today, when Americans say they are putting their "John Hancock" on something, they mean they are signing a document.
some one decided to draw a piece of paper on the paper
It a piece of paper with work
It just means that you sign it in large handwriting. John Hancock signed his name large enough for the king of England to read it without his spectacles on.