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ANSWER:It comes from the type of food that Germans eat called kraut which we call cabbage.ANSWER:Sauerkraut is principally a German food--the word simply means "sour cabbage."During World War I and World War II, due to concerns the American public would reject a product with a German name, American sauerkraut makers relabeled their product as "Liberty Cabbage" for the duration of both wars.Since World War II, Kraut has, in the English language, come to be used as a derogatory term for a German. This is probably based on sauerkraut, which was very popular in German cuisine at that time. The stereotype of the sauerkraut-eating German pre-dates this, as it appears in Jules Verne's depiction of the evil German industrialist Schultze as an avid sauerkraut eater in "The Begum's Millions."One possible explanation of the origin of this term is this: Raw sauerkraut is an excellent source of vitamin C. Captain James Cook always took a store of sauerkraut on his sea voyages, since experience had taught him that it was an effective remedy against scurvy. Later, on British ships, sauerkraut was replaced by lime juice (for the same purpose). German sailors continued with the use of kraut, calling their British colleagues "limeys" and being themselves called "krauts."
It was one measure to stop the funding of the Germans, its like liberty cabbage or something like that.
the statue of liberty?
Liberty, Equality, Fraternity
The sons of liberty brought peace to the nation and they planned all of the attacks and events of each of the wars. The sons of liberty were also a main source that the colonies used to have a advantage of the sons of liberty.
Yes, sauerkraut and liberty cabbage are the same thing.
Sauerkraut is the food
Sauerkraut is the food that was also known as liberty cabbage.
Liberty cabbage.
Sauerkraut
Refusing to use a German word made people feel more American.
Refusing to use a German word made people feel more American.
Liberty cabbage was what advertisers called sauerkraut in order to avoid German-sounding names. This was because the fear of spies and emphasis on patriotism let to the mistreatment and persecution of German Americans.
Liberty pup is another name for a dachsund. During World War I there was a good deal of anti-German sentiment in the United States. Other German words were changed to wording that was deemed more patriotic for the time. Another example is sauerkraut being changed to liberty cabbage.
liberty cabbage -- Sauerkraut was renamed liberty cabbage during World War I because of the distrust and hatred towards the German race. Most everything German was frowned upon, including German immigrants. Even the hamburger was renamed salisbury steak because the word hamburger originated in the city of Hamburg, Germany, the second largest city in Berlin.
During World War 1, due to anti-German sentiment, schools in the United States stopped teaching the German language and sauerkraut was sometimes renamed "liberty cabbage." This was part of efforts to dissociate from German culture and avoid associations with the enemy during the war.
propaganda against Germans - apex