Bubba wrote:Yes, that's why the world is teaming with baseball, volleybal and cricket teams with "FC" in their name...
And yet the world is teaming with boxing, rugby, and lacrosse that and all are referred to as "contact sports."
Those are specific names for various types of football - if you want to get all technical about it. Soccer is also a type of football.
But
if you want to get all technical about it, when the English invaded Ireland the Irish language supposed to be stamped out. By law,
Peil has been referred to "football" instead of the Irish name for half a millennium before anybody was playing soccer. Thus, you stole the name "football" for another sport that you made up a new name for.
But that's not really what happened of course, the fact is that - as many have pointed out - football is a generic term in English. It's why every English speaking country has a different kind of "football."
Beyond that, if you need an Anglophile source:
TIFO wrote:For all you out there who love to complain when Americans, and certain others, call “Football”, “Soccer”, you should know that it was the British that invented the word and it was also one of the first names of what we now primarily know of as “Football”.
In fact, in the early days of the sport among the upper echelons of British society, the proper term for the sport was “Soccer”. Not only that, but the sport being referred to as “Soccer” preceded the first recorded instance of it being called by the singular word “Football” by about 18 years. This happening when it became more popular with the middle and lower class. When that happened, the term “Football” gradually began dominating over “Soccer” and the then official name “Association Football”.
In the 1860s, as in most of history with records as far back as 1004 B.C., there were quite a lot of “football” sports in existence being played popularly throughout the world and of course, England. Many of these sports had similar rules and eventually, on October 26th, 1863, a group of teams in England decided to get together and create a standard set of rules which would be used at all their matches. They formed the rules for “Association Football”, with the “Association” distinguishing it from the many other types of football sports in existence in England, such as “Rugby Football”.
Now British school boys of the day liked to nickname everything, which is still somewhat common. They also liked to add the ending “er” to these nicknames. Thus Rugby was, at that time, popularly called “Rugger”. Association Football was then much better known as “Assoccer”, which quickly just became “Soccer” and sometimes “Soccer Football”.
The inventor of the nickname is said to be Charles Wredford Brown, who was an Oxford student around the time of Association Football’s inception. Legend has it, in 1863 shortly after the creation of Association Football, Wredford-Brown had some friends who asked him if he’d come play a game of “Rugger”, to which he replied he preferred “Soccer”. The name caught on from there.
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