You and I are on on the same soggy page. I grew up in Ste Catharines and used that word regularly every spring.I guess its just a southwest ontario thing? GUSTO, back me up on this
You and I are on on the same soggy page. I grew up in Ste Catharines and used that word regularly every spring.I guess its just a southwest ontario thing? GUSTO, back me up on this
So why isn't there an NHL team in Wisconsin? Or even discussion of one?If you include juniors, Texas has about four or five more teams....
There was, at one point prior to Atlanta moving to the 'Peg, more pro teams in Texas (NHL, AHL, ECHL, WPHL, CHL) than all of Canada.
Again, "pro" teams.If you include juniors, Texas has about four or five more teams....
There was, at one point prior to Atlanta moving to the 'Peg, more pro teams in Texas (NHL, AHL, ECHL, WPHL, CHL) than all of Canada.
Definitely never heard it in Brampton.[DOUBLEPOST=1425732099,1425731997][/DOUBLEPOST]I guess its just a southwest ontario thing? GUSTO, back me up on this
And pronounced "the." Fell out because of the introduction of printing presses, and the desire to save production time/costs by eliminating characters that didn't exist in most languages being printed.Or "ye" in regular English, except that it fell out of favor because people didn't want to use the thorn letter for some reason (it's actually spelled "þe").
--Patrick
I've hear it, for sure. Not an everyday thing though so it's not exactly pervasive.I guess its just a southwest ontario thing? GUSTO, back me up on this
I have heard some rumblings about the next expansion going there, but all from a fan's perspective of "man, why don't they go there? It'd work"So why isn't there an NHL team in Wisconsin? Or even discussion of one?
I think that might be called a booter in Manitoba. Even then I don't hear the term being used much.A soaker is when your footwear gets submerged in water. Imagine a kids rubber boot hitting a deep puddle and all the water flowing over the top.
I know they have some weird version of bowling in the Maritimes, but 16-pin?Gonna go bowling?
Or is this like one of those golf tee puzzles where you have to drink each one you jump and remove?
--Patrick
I didn't think a second team in the GTA, or even Hamilton (Which some people still call GTA but seriously, it's like 2 ours away and there isn't much daily commuter traffic for work, it has its own business sector- its not GTA) would work, because MLSE and the Sabres wouldn't allow their demgraphics to be undercut like that. BUT, that changed in the last few years when Bell and Rogers became co-owners of MLSE. These are two major competitors and rumour has it they don't agree on a lot at MLSE, especially since Rogers' Sportsnet bought the exclusive NHL broadcast rights- fucking over Bell's TSN in the process. I can kinda see one buying the other out with some provision allowing ownership of a second franchise now. It'd be interesting.Right now, here's what I'd see the order of likelihood of an NHL expansion team would be:
1. Las Vegas
2. Quebec City
3. Seattle
4. Hamilton
5. Milwaukee
6. GTA
7. The Field (including Atlanta)
Until you said that, I never considered anything other than the other thing.Every time someone uses GTA in this context, it takes me a few times/minutes to realize it means Greater Toronto Area, and not the other thing.
Only I and a few others on this board live in Newfoundland, so it mostly doesn't apply. Even here it's pretty rare.Or is that "aboot"?
I took a course on Canadian English with one of its preeminent researchers last year - I could pull out my notes and give you a decent list if you're really interested.I'm still hung up on the regional colloquialisms. The fact Soaker made it to K/W and St Catherines but skipped Brampton, while being so common in South Lake Simcoe befuddles me.
I should double check with my Toronto area friends to make sure they are familiar with it and I haven't seemed crazy to them for 8+ years.
What other Canada-specifi colloquialisms do we have?
That is exactly the kind of thing that should be posted in this thread.I took a course on Canadian English with one of its preeminent researchers last year - I could pull out my notes and give you a decent list if you're really interested.
It's a northern ontario thing too.Only I and a few others on this board live in Newfoundland, so it mostly doesn't apply. Even here it's pretty rare.
Because it's molson-coors now, so they put their gimmicky doodads for people who somehow can't figure out how to pour beer properly on all their molson products too.Why is this on my Molson Canadian??
Why, to break your nails, of course.Why is this on my Molson Canadian??
Why do you never embed the picture after you upload it?Why is this on my Molson Canadian??
I don't understand. What is on it?Why is this on my Molson Canadian??