Analysis of information sources in references of the Wikipedia article "أوتوجراف" in Arabic language version.
JOHN HENRY/JOHN HANCOCK – "As every schoolboy knows, the biggest, boldest and most defiant signature on the Declaration of Independence was scrawled by John Hancock of Massachusetts. So completely did it overshadow the autographs of the other founding fathers that the term 'John Hancock' has become synonymous with 'signature' and each of us at the one time or another has spoken of 'putting his 'John Hancock' at the bottom of a document. In the West, a half century and more later, the phrase became altered to 'John Henry,' and nobody knows quite why. Suffice it that, in the words of Ramon Adams's excellent collection of cowboy jargon, 'Western Words': 'John Henry is what the cowboy calls his signature. He never signs a document, he puts his 'John Henry' to it!' Incidentally, there seems to be no connection between the John Henry of cowboy slang and the fabulous John Henry of railroad lore, who was so powerful that he could outdrive a steam drill with his hammer and steel, This legend has been traced to the drilling of the Chesapeake and Ohio Big Tunnel through West Virginia in the 1870s – substantially later than the first use of John Henry by cowpokes of the Old West."
(John Henry/John Hancock, Morris Dictionary of Word and Phrase Origins, William and Mary Morris, HarperCollins, نيويورك, 1977, 1988, ISBN 0-06-015862-X );
Cassell's Dictionary of Slang (Jonathon Green, Sterling Publishing Company, Inc, 2006, ISBN 0-304-36636-6) states that this usage of the phrase "John Henry" dates from the 1910s, and other synonyms for signature include "John Brown", "John D", "John Esquire", "John Handle", "John Q", "John Rogers", "John Willy" and "John Smith". "نسخة مؤرشفة". مؤرشف من الأصل في 2017-05-11. اطلع عليه بتاريخ 2013-05-16.{{استشهاد ويب}}
: صيانة الاستشهاد: BOT: original URL status unknown (link)
{{استشهاد ويب}}
: صيانة الاستشهاد: BOT: original URL status unknown (link){{استشهاد ويب}}
: |مؤلف=
باسم عام (مساعدة)JOHN HENRY/JOHN HANCOCK – "As every schoolboy knows, the biggest, boldest and most defiant signature on the Declaration of Independence was scrawled by John Hancock of Massachusetts. So completely did it overshadow the autographs of the other founding fathers that the term 'John Hancock' has become synonymous with 'signature' and each of us at the one time or another has spoken of 'putting his 'John Hancock' at the bottom of a document. In the West, a half century and more later, the phrase became altered to 'John Henry,' and nobody knows quite why. Suffice it that, in the words of Ramon Adams's excellent collection of cowboy jargon, 'Western Words': 'John Henry is what the cowboy calls his signature. He never signs a document, he puts his 'John Henry' to it!' Incidentally, there seems to be no connection between the John Henry of cowboy slang and the fabulous John Henry of railroad lore, who was so powerful that he could outdrive a steam drill with his hammer and steel, This legend has been traced to the drilling of the Chesapeake and Ohio Big Tunnel through West Virginia in the 1870s – substantially later than the first use of John Henry by cowpokes of the Old West."
(John Henry/John Hancock, Morris Dictionary of Word and Phrase Origins, William and Mary Morris, HarperCollins, نيويورك, 1977, 1988, ISBN 0-06-015862-X );
Cassell's Dictionary of Slang (Jonathon Green, Sterling Publishing Company, Inc, 2006, ISBN 0-304-36636-6) states that this usage of the phrase "John Henry" dates from the 1910s, and other synonyms for signature include "John Brown", "John D", "John Esquire", "John Handle", "John Q", "John Rogers", "John Willy" and "John Smith". "نسخة مؤرشفة". مؤرشف من الأصل في 2017-05-11. اطلع عليه بتاريخ 2013-05-16.{{استشهاد ويب}}
: صيانة الاستشهاد: BOT: original URL status unknown (link)
{{استشهاد ويب}}
: صيانة الاستشهاد: BOT: original URL status unknown (link)JOHN HENRY/JOHN HANCOCK – "As every schoolboy knows, the biggest, boldest and most defiant signature on the Declaration of Independence was scrawled by John Hancock of Massachusetts. So completely did it overshadow the autographs of the other founding fathers that the term 'John Hancock' has become synonymous with 'signature' and each of us at the one time or another has spoken of 'putting his 'John Hancock' at the bottom of a document. In the West, a half century and more later, the phrase became altered to 'John Henry,' and nobody knows quite why. Suffice it that, in the words of Ramon Adams's excellent collection of cowboy jargon, 'Western Words': 'John Henry is what the cowboy calls his signature. He never signs a document, he puts his 'John Henry' to it!' Incidentally, there seems to be no connection between the John Henry of cowboy slang and the fabulous John Henry of railroad lore, who was so powerful that he could outdrive a steam drill with his hammer and steel, This legend has been traced to the drilling of the Chesapeake and Ohio Big Tunnel through West Virginia in the 1870s – substantially later than the first use of John Henry by cowpokes of the Old West."
(John Henry/John Hancock, Morris Dictionary of Word and Phrase Origins, William and Mary Morris, HarperCollins, نيويورك, 1977, 1988, ISBN 0-06-015862-X );
Cassell's Dictionary of Slang (Jonathon Green, Sterling Publishing Company, Inc, 2006, ISBN 0-304-36636-6) states that this usage of the phrase "John Henry" dates from the 1910s, and other synonyms for signature include "John Brown", "John D", "John Esquire", "John Handle", "John Q", "John Rogers", "John Willy" and "John Smith". "نسخة مؤرشفة". مؤرشف من الأصل في 2017-05-11. اطلع عليه بتاريخ 2013-05-16.{{استشهاد ويب}}
: صيانة الاستشهاد: BOT: original URL status unknown (link)
{{استشهاد ويب}}
: |مؤلف=
باسم عام (مساعدة)