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I have a few, some local, some traditional... 'Are you bent?'....Are you crazy/nuts/insane/have you lost your mind Polluted...drunk Duppy...ghost....that one is traditional... One from my 21 year old son....'that's sick yo!' I do believe 'sick' is a good thing Backside and pelican!....meaning 'damit!' 'Holy headfry....meaning 'Holy Shi*!' Crash, bam, badam!! meaning a loud noise What the blouse and skirt?....meaning what the h**l?!' Skeeters....mosquito A'nancy spider....cameleon Cheesed.....pissed off To name a few...I'm sure there are a lot more that I'm forgetting! |
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In Savannah, they say "yes Miss" to older woman and "yes ma'am" to the younger girls, lol. Here in the Bay Area, we refer to San Francisco as "The City". We use a lot of 70s terms ("groovy") and surfer terms ("rad", "gnarly", "dude") and of course of a lot of "Valley Girl" ("Like", "so", "whatever"). "Hella" is also really popular ("hella gnarly", "hella cold", "hella sick", etc). |
I found out when we moved to AuStin for 9 months that people there don't know what HAMBURGS are. That may be a Michigan thing..... Oh!! And even from Detroit to Grand Rapids a couple of strange things ( I'm blanking out on one but I will figure it out) We called a sliding glass door a SLIDER. My friends from Detroit area called them DOORWALL:confused: |
Found out where DOORWALL came from :rolleyes: Urban Dictionary: doorwall A door wall is a sliding-glass door or patio door. The term is yet another example of banal Michigan vernacular, where in the residents latch on to company names, trademark names, marketing terms and product names from local companies. The terms become embedded in the local vocabulary and eventually become accepted as actual valid words and phrases. In this case the term comes from Wallside Windows in Taylor, MI (a large window manufacturer), where 'door wall' is their created word for sliding-glass door. |
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I just thought of another good one:D I was in HS and had a part time job in a local dept store. A little old lady who was hard of hearing came into the ladies lingerie dept. she was talking really loudly and kept asking me where the step-ins were. I kept asking her to repeat what she was saying. She kept getting louder. She yelled STEP INS!! My supervisor heard her and came over. She told me the lady was looking for panties:eek: I said why didn't she just say panties or underwear. Seems old folks from the mountains called them step ins because you step into them Lol |
OMG another one came to mind. My MIL will not say the word pregnant. She always says looking for a little one haha |
Parkways , freeways, we usually call them highways Oh course excepting the Don Valley Parkway, which is truly a parking lot most days... In Canada like the USA we have different idioms across the country As a child moving to Toronto from Montreal, after church that first Sunday, we pulled into a five and dime store, the owner asked me if I wanted a "pop" at that time I had no idea what he meant; I looked to Mom and Dad .... and then they said he meant a soda. I say a quarter to the hour (shades of our old british past) or a quarter past the hour. With the advent of digital timepieces, that is going out of fashion. We do not have a divan, or sofa. we usually use a couch We have not great rooms' but rec rooms or family rooms. Vinegar is not an unknown commodity in restaurants but *gasp* actually available at take out counters. Kleenex and not a "tissue". We go to the cottage or the country. BBQ's and not cook outs - well except for certain sections of our maritime lands And yes we do use "eh", but not nearly as often as shown on US programs, and never as hard an "eh". Usually softly at the end of the sentence, or sometimes abruptly and shortly put on. We don't do grits.... I'm still not sure what grits are. We have homefries. We call potatoe chips - potatoe chips not crisps We spell things funny... lol |
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It's not a word but I know my first trip to upstate NY they took me to a car show and at the food stand they had huge bladder things hanging from chains one was red, the next yellow and the last clear with like a brownish clear liquid... I guess I was standing there staring at it with a confused look till somebody asked what was wrong... Well red and yellow that's easy mustard and ketchup but umm what is the world is the brown crap I asked... I swear the looked at me like I was an alien and said vinegar!! |
In Michigan they pronounce words weird. I don't really share their accent because it always drove me nuts!! Milk ~ Melk Napkin ~ Nakkin Grocery ~ Groshry Caramel ~ Carmel (ok I say carmel :p) Hamburger ~ Hamburg And is "PARTY STORE" really a Michigan thing?? Not the kind you get hats and balloons from :winky: |
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I do have to say... anyone who knows Boston knows how we talk: Cah (car) Pahk (park) stoah (store) fingahs (fingers) bah (bar) Blinkah (blinker, car directional) etc.. We have Rotaries not round abouts (I've heard that in other parts of the country) |
Teeehee...I have one..when visiting a friend in Colorado I asked where the "washroom" was..he looked at me like I was nuts. You want to wash clothing out here on the mountain?lololol...Apparently I should have asked for the "restroom" or the "toilette"..lol |
Any type of soda is a pop to me |
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We normally have "supper" instead of "dinner" Gravy is a normal thing to eat with fries, and at any restaurant when you order fries, they ask if you want gravy with it. I had one friend ask for gravy on her fries in New York and they looked at her like she had two heads. To add to the couch.... my grandma and some older people call it a chesterfield. Here in Saskatchewan, a hoodie is a "bunnyhug" lol. Also just for Sask, chocolate milk used to be known as Vico. I believe that's from a company that was around when I was younger but it has not been around for years. I don't think anyone calls it that anymore! A lot of us just say brand names instead of what something actually is... such as the Kleenex you mentioned, or Ski-doo or Sea-doo, no matter what brand it actually is! Oh and there is no ice-skating or ice-hockey. It's just plain skating and hockey. Most of us don't know any kind that doesn't happen on ice lol! |
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My Canadian cousin calls older people "Blue Hairs" :D:D:D |
We use that expression in Texas, too, with Botox in front - Botox Blue Hairs. Except now, so many of them are platinum or wear wigs! I know a 92 year old woman who just had plastic surgery and looks fantastic - kid you not. Hardly a wrinkle or sag. Skin is great. Doesn't have those wrinkled or spotted arms. You would take her for late 50's or 60, 61. She's trim and athletic. And rich. |
lol... this reminded me.... this week end I had to go to home depot to try and find a new lid for our toilet (I dropped and broke the one we had) ... anyway I had to ask 4 :eek: **yes 4 ****sale clerks where the toilets were... they kept directing me to the restrooms!!!!!!! |
I was sure glad I wore my step-ins today:p I took my new grandson to his pediatrician visit this morning and when we got back home, my granddaughter Kerra said, nana I can see your underwear!! I said what??? My very favorite pair of worn our Levi's had developed a rip at the back pocket haha. Imagine my embarrassment if I had not put on my step-ins and Kerra said ...Na Na I can see your butt cheek:eek: Ps.. Step-ins old mountain term for underwear |
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Duuuuude, we also use "cool" like a little too much, it's hella retro, yet never seems to go out of style. And going "over the hill" means we're going to the Santa Cruz area. Yesterday, I answered a text with "groovy" and a friend who lives in The City signed an email "dig it." And I do! :D |
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