joeyv120 ( @joeyv120@ttrpg.network ) 82•7 months agoShm.Smh. The fucking people who call all sodas “coke”.Them: What kind of Ford do you drive? Me: a Chevy.
_NoName_ ( @JayDee@lemmy.ml ) 2•7 months agoWhat does “shm” mean? I’m currently only reading it as an onomatopoeia and I don’t think that’s right.
BulbasaurBabu ( @BulbasaurBabu@lemmings.world ) 76•7 months agoCalling it soda, good. Calling it pop, fine. Calling every soft drink a coke, fuck off.
Necronomicommunist ( @Necronomicommunist@lemmy.dbzer0.com ) 18•7 months agoGet this, in Scotland, pretty much any liquid is called juice.
BulbasaurBabu ( @BulbasaurBabu@lemmings.world ) 7•7 months agoI gotta put juice in my car, it’s on empty
rumschlumpel ( @ichmagrum@feddit.de ) Deutsch5•7 months agoStill makes more sense than calling Sprite “coke”.
Colour_me_triggered ( @Colour_me_triggered@lemm.ee ) 3•7 months agoAlthough I’ve always referred to buckfast as “the devil’s ribeana”. Although I do admit that the standard name is “wreck the hoose juice”.
Colour_me_triggered ( @Colour_me_triggered@lemm.ee ) 4•7 months agoBless your heart.
IHadTwoCows ( @IHadTwoCows@lemm.ee ) 1•7 months agoWell I declare
regul ( @regul@lemm.ee ) 3•7 months agono u
Vespair ( @Vespair@lemm.ee ) 26•7 months agoSoda is an always has been the right term, but the people who say “coke” to mean any soda are the most wrongest people in history
sverit ( @sverit@feddit.de ) 1•7 months agoWhy though? There’s no sodium bicarbonate in those, only carbon dioxide for the bubbles?
Laticauda ( @Laticauda@lemmy.ca ) 18•7 months agoWe call it pop up in Canada so I’m rooting for that, but I will accept some loss of territory if it helps eliminate the coke people.
LadyAutumn ( @LadyAutumn@lemmy.blahaj.zone ) English2•7 months agoYeah honestly it sounds a little weird calling it soda lol but calling it Coke makes absolutely no sense 😅
CarbonIceDragon ( @CarbonIceDragon@pawb.social ) 16•7 months agoThat explains my confusion on why I always got told that people in the south call it all coke, but when growing up, I always heard just called soda; I grew up in NC, which is considered a southern state, but appears to have been completely taken over by the soda side at this point.
Kid_Thunder ( @Kid_Thunder@kbin.social ) 8•7 months agoGrowing up in western NC, it was always Coke when I was a kid. But then shopping carts were buggies and toilets were commodes back then too.
CarbonIceDragon ( @CarbonIceDragon@pawb.social ) 8•7 months agoBuggies I’ve not heard, but I do have a grandmother who still calls it the commode.
Nepenthe ( @Nepenthe@kbin.social ) 3•7 months agoMine went with commode as well, and my 70ish aunt is the only born American I’ve ever heard insist on calling it a buggy.
@Kid_Thunder, mind if I ask the general era you were growing up? Because I’m a millennial from the triad and we say soda. Soda pop in elementary, but I’m not sure whether we picked that up from media.
It would be interesting to work out around when the shift happened.
Kid_Thunder ( @Kid_Thunder@kbin.social ) 4•7 months ago80s and 90s. I was a millennial when we were called Gen Y but like I said, west NC. I think being closer to Appalachia and thus Appalachian probably matters. So sometimes pants or jeans were ‘britches’, though not used by people my age then, “fixin’” was used a lot (“I’m fixen to come over yonder (‘over’ being optional here)” or perhaps ‘reckon’ in “I reckon that’s about a mile down that ways” where you ‘think’ it might be a mile over there. ‘Y’all’ was outpacing ‘you’uns’ by then. ‘Foot’ instead of ‘feet’ specifically for measurement was still used. Like “That’s about 2 foot thick.” Holler could be used two ways, one of those being to ‘yell’ or talk to someone or to describe a small valley. A toboggan was those knitted hats (stocking caps) you’d wear rather than the sled you’d typically be riding on wearing one of these. When you’re a young kid they’d sometimes have those stupid puffy balls on top of them. One of my grandmothers would use ‘I swunney!’ as an exclamation of being appalled or surprised by an outcome. I have no idea where that came from. ‘Chaw’ was used by older folks to describe a wad of chewing tobacco like “You have some chaw I can get?” A ‘bald’ was a the top of a mountain without trees and usually mostly rocks like “You can see 3 states from any of them balds over there.” Sometimes old people would call a backpack a ‘tow sack’ or even ‘clean’ is used kind of odd like “He knocked it clean out of the park!”
We were still taught that slaves had it better off in some plantations and that many came back from the ‘silent North’ (implying blacks were straight up ignored and at least down South where they’d be beaten, lynched and tortured some thought that this attention was somehow better I guess) and that the Civil War was about States Rights and the issue of slavery wasn’t actually important. I’m not sure if it still is but I hope not. I assume it isn’t the way my family goes on and on about indoctrination of children outside of homeschooling.
Norah - She/They ( @princessnorah@lemmy.blahaj.zone ) English3•7 months agoHuh, where I am in Australia, we use ‘I reckon’ a lot. We also still casually refer to height in feet, and use ‘foot’. Eg. ‘I’m six foot one’. Everything else we measure in metric, and medical records list height in centimetres. Using ‘clean’ like that is pretty normal here too.
Edit: To be clear, the height of a person. Nothing else.
Kid_Thunder ( @Kid_Thunder@kbin.social ) 1•7 months agoI’m not sure how true it was but an anecdote my social studies teacher told us was that the dialect was closer to victorian/older (not quite Old English) English and that’s how Britain used to speak. However, in my opinion, they probably confused that with Britain specifically changing to non-rhotic English annunciation post the Revolutionary War with the, now US, to further separate culture. I don’t study linguistics so maybe she was right and I am wrong though. I’ve just never happened across anything of repute backing that up.
finder ( @finder@sopuli.xyz ) 15•7 months agoObamna
rbesfe ( @rbesfe@lemmy.ca ) 4•7 months agoSODA!!!
itslilith ( @itslilith@lemmy.blahaj.zone ) 13•7 months agothey are cutting down all the forest :c
Swedneck ( @Swedneck@discuss.tchncs.de ) 9•7 months agoas a non-american, the only term i’ll ever accept is “sodipop”
Malgas ( @Malgas@beehaw.org ) English5•7 months agoExcuse me, but the correct term is “sarsaparilly”.
toxicbubble420 ( @toxicbubble420@beehaw.org ) 7•7 months agothanks obummer
Why is everyone arguing about shitty intra-US pronunciation differences
IHadTwoCows ( @IHadTwoCows@lemm.ee ) 2•7 months agoYou’re not from around here, are ye?
soda pop is my favorite name for soda (yes you probably don’t understand what im saying
Colour_me_triggered ( @Colour_me_triggered@lemm.ee ) 5•7 months agoIt’s all faygo if we’re being fair.
rumschlumpel ( @ichmagrum@feddit.de ) Deutsch5•7 months agoWanna know what we call it in Germany? “limonade”
runeko ( @runeko@programming.dev ) 4•7 months agoFor those of you who do not understand calling it coke: where do you put your soda / pop to keep it cold? A refrigerator or an ice box?
rumschlumpel ( @ichmagrum@feddit.de ) Deutsch7•7 months agoWhat does that have to do with coke? Are your icinators coca cola-branded?
gareppa ( @gareppa@programming.dev ) 4•7 months agoIt’s over. It’s never been more over than this. This is how the west falls.
CarlsIII ( @CarlsIII@kbin.social ) 4•7 months agoI’ve heard that if you order a “Coke” in the area that says “Coke”, they’ll just give you a random soda and you have to drink it no matter what it is. That just seems plain wrong to me.
JimmyBigSausage ( @JimmyBigSausage@lemm.ee ) 1•7 months agoNo-it’s would you like a Coke? Sure. I’ll have a Double Cola.