Sure, we all know this, but where'd it come from?
hop·scotch
Pronunciation: 'häp-"skäch
Function: noun
Etymology: 1hop + 2scotch (line, score)
: a child's game in which a player tosses an object (as a stone) into areas of a figure outlined on the ground and hops through the figure and back to regain the object
Function: intransitive verb
: to move as if by hopping <hopscotched across Europe>
hopscotch
Interesting related sense of scotch.hopscotch
l789, from hop (v.) + scotch "scratch," from the lines scored in the dirt to make the squares for the game.
scotch (v.)
"stamp out, crush," 1825, earlier "make harmless for a time" (1798; a sense that derives from the reading of "Macbeth" III.ii.13), from scocchen "to cut, score, gash" (c.1412), perhaps from Anglo-Fr. escocher, O.Fr. cocher "to notch, nick," from coche "a notch, groove," probably from L. coccum "berry of the scarlet oak," which appears notched, from Gk. kokkos.
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