TRUCK FARM - "Many people share the notion that a 'truck
farm' is a farm close enough to urban centers that its produce may be
transported by truck to the city. However, there is no connection whatever
between truck farms and motor transportation. Long before motor trucks were
even dreamed of - at least as far back as 1785 -
the word 'truck' was used to mean garden vegetables intended for sale in the
markets. In fact, we have here an excellent example of the confusion that can
develop from homonyms - words which are identical in spelling and pronunciation
but very different in meaning. Often, to unravel the complexities, one has to
go back to the root of each word. In this case, the 'truck' that is a vehicle
for transporting freight comes from the Greek word 'trochos,' meaning 'wheel.'
However, 'truck' meaning originally any commodities for sale and, later, garden
produce for market comes from an entirely different root, 'troque,' the Old
French word for 'barter.'" From "Morris Dictionary of Word and Phrase
Origins" by William and Mary Morris (HarperCollins, New York, 1977, 1988).
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