<P> Gung - ho / ˈɡʌŋˈhoʊ / is an English term with the current meaning of "enthusiastic" or "overzealous". It is an anglicised pronunciation of "gōng hé" (工 合), which is also sometimes anglicised as "kung - ho". "Gōnghé" is a shortened version of the term "gōngyè hézuòshè" (工 業 合 作 社) or Chinese Industrial Cooperatives, which was abbreviated as Indusco in English . The two Chinese characters "gōng" and "hé" mean respectively "work" and "together". </P> <P> The linguist Albert Moe studied both the origin and the usage in English . He concluded that the term is an "Americanism that is derived from the Chinese, but its several accepted American meanings have no resemblance whatsoever to the recognized meaning in the original language" and that its "various linguistic uses, as they have developed in the United States, have been peculiar to American speech ." In Chinese, concludes Moe, "this is neither a slogan nor a battle cry; it is only a name for an organization ." </P>

Where does the term gung ho come from
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