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{{short description|Battle cry in the U.S. Marine Corps since the mid-20th century}}
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'''''Oorah''''' is a [[battle cry]] common in the [[United States Marine Corps]] since the mid-20th century.
Several anecdotes attributed the phrase to [[John R. Massaro]]'s time as a [[gunnery sergeant]] in the [[1st Reconnaissance Battalion|Reconnaissance Company]], [[1st Marine Division]], in the mid-1950s.<ref name=Fuentes>Gidget Fuentes, [https://www.marinecorpstimes.com/news/your-marine-corps/2015/11/10/the-marine-sergeant-major-behind-the-oorah-battle-cry/ The Marine sergeant major behind the 'oorah' battle cry], ''[[Marine Corps Times]]'' (November 10, 2015).</ref> Massaro (who later became [[sergeant major of the Marine Corps]]) and other Marines who trained aboard the ''[[USS Perch (SS-313)|USS Perch]]'' submarine, beginning in 1949, used ''oorah'' in imitation of the vessel's [[klaxon]] horn (which sounded like ''arrugah'').<ref name=Fuentes/> Others have attributed the phrase's popularization to Massaro's subsequent time at [[Marine Corps Recruit Depot San Diego]], where use of the word spread.<ref name=Fuentes/> However, Massaro has said that he did not originate the word (saying in 2015: "It was a phrase or a term originally coming from boarding a ship") and that the word was already in use in 1949.<ref name=Fuentes/>
==See also==
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==References==
{{Reflist}}
{{US Marine Corps navbox}}
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