Linguiphiles will never satisfy their lust for regional data

GasBandit

Staff member
I just noticed that Dave and Fade's maps are pretty close to being exact opposites of each other.

And you know.. if you say "Dave" backwards, it sounds a LOT like "Fade."
 
http://nyti.ms/1mw7Om8

Y'all would never guess that I was born in California and spent my formative years in England... despite still having issues spelling realise/realize and words of that nature... to say nothing of driving my sergeants crazy by putting the word "whilst" in my reports. *chuckles*
 
Strongest roots in Texas, which makes sense. But I've been all over for business over the years, and I guess some of it musta rubbed off ;)

I'm kind of annoyed that the "strip of grass between lanes on a road" didn't have "esplanade" as a choice, or that the road that runs next to a freeway didn't have "feeder" as a choice.

 
Nailed it. Though I do find it amusing that I apparently have similarities to those who live in Salt Lake City...
 
I took the test. I don't speak english. I've never had a conversation with someone else in english. Apparently I'm from New York
 

GasBandit

Staff member
I took the test. I don't speak english. I've never had a conversation with someone else in english. Apparently I'm from New York
Makes sense. There's a great many people there who don't converse in english either.
 
I recently had a conversation with our daughter as to why they called them crayfish if they weren't fish. Maybe crawdad is a better word for them...
 
No surprise here. In Bermuda, most of the Brits working there were more familiar with east coast Americans (which were the most common ones on the island), so they expected Californians to sound like Bill and/or Ted. "You sound like people reading the news."
 
It said I'm from Buffalo too which is kinda surprising because I'm basically the only person in the city who calls it soda.
 
I wound up in a Baltimore/D.C./Louisville triangle. Less Pittsburgh than I expected, but the Baltimore accent is fairly close.


Sent from my iPad using Tapatalk HD
 
WHO THE FUCK CALLS IT A BUBBLER IT DOESN'T HAVE BUBBLES WHAT THE FUCK
Southern Wisconsin has a lot of underground springs, thanks to the receding glaciers and the Kettle Moraine lakes they created. When someone decided, long long ago, to stick a pipe down into the ground to free some of that water for drinking, it "bubbled" up to the surface. Hence, when people would go to a spring to get water, they would turn on the spigot and it would "bubble" up through the well, and into their jar/bottle/bucket.

Sorry, you're talking to someone from a city known for its springs. (Even if they were highly infused with radium.)
 

GasBandit

Staff member
I think Aspirin would be the go to example of a trademark brand name pain killer that is universally used to mean all pain killers.
Eh, maybe 20+ years ago. It certainly became the naming standard for acetylsalicylic acid.. but these days whenever anybody asks me if I have something for their headache, it's always "Can I borrow some Advil?" They had a REALLY effective marketing campaign in the 90s, and from what I've read, it's much more effective on menstrual pain.
 
I think the trademarked name you were thinking of was "Motrin." That's the one that got all the traction before Advil came on the scene.
Poor Nuprin, nobody remembers you any more. Maybe you were too yellow, too different.

--Patrick
 
A non comprehensive list of name brands that became the name for the thing that they are.

Band-Aid
Kool-Aid
Q-tip
Vaseline
Aspirin
Kleenex
Dry Ice
Linoleum
Thermos
Escalator
 
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