Baseball
Baseball.
It evolved from a British game of rounders
American baseball is a combination of rounders, an English bat-and-ball game, and cricket, another English bat-and-ball game. The rules and elements of these two sports influenced the development of American baseball, which evolved over time into its own distinct game.
Middle English was not created: it evolved from Old English under the influence of Norman French, beginning in the 12th Century.
It started out as the English Moneypenny but upon moving to Scotland in the 15th century{?], it evolved into Mantiply.
It is believed that modern baseball evolved from the English game of "rounders" in the first half of the 19th century. Alexander Cartwright of New York formulated the basic rules of baseball in 1845, calling for the replacement of the soft ball used in rounders with a smaller hard ball. On June 3, 1953, Congress officially credited Cartwright with inventing the modern game of baseball, and he is a member of the Baseball Hall of Fame. The Game of baseball was derived from many popular games that preceded it like cricket and rounders, but baseball has many elements that are uniquely American. The Abner Doubleday legend is more of a myth, as to being the founder of baseball. But either way the game of baseball evolved into the game it is today, and was no accident. -Steven KeyMan
The Latin word solutionem evolved into the Old French word solucion, then into the English word in the late 14th century.
No one person created the Modern English alphabet. It evolved since the 9th Century based mainly on how writers used it.
across the Americas
across the Americas
Baseball as we know it today was not invented at any one time or by any one person. It evolved from he English game of rounders and the American game of town ball. Shane Foster, in 1845, was the first to WRITE DOWN many rules that are common today.
It evolved in the late eighteenth century into forms such as vaudeville.
The style of riding known as 'English' came from around Great Britain most likely in the 15th century. It was used originally as manuvers during battle. It eventually evolved for fox hunting and steeplechasing.