Pea-n-Me
DIS Legend
- Joined
- Jul 18, 2004
- Messages
- 42,137
OK, just catching up. Interesting reading!
Since I suddenly have the urge for iced tea
pardon me while I go pour myself a glass. [fears Arizona lemon diet iced tea is uncool] lol
Have lived in MA all my life. Growing up was like this:
Soda was "tonic" - Coke only if you want a coke/cola. Never used the term pop as a drink.
Jeans were "dungarees".
Cars were beach wagons, not station wagons.
Marinara was spaghetti sauce, not gravy. Gravy was brown and for meat and potatoes. (Although I did have one friend from the same area who called the red stuff gravy.)
We went "to the beach" or "down the Cape", never to the shore or to Cape Cod. People who live on Cape Cod live "on the Cape" (or on the Islands).
We had Jimmies on our ice cream, not sprinkles. (I've seen here before that to some in the south that could be an offensive term?)
We pretty much use dinner and supper interchangably, with dinner being slightly more formal. Both are definitely the evening meal.
My father used to call the front porch the "piazza".
We also serve from pots on the stove most times, unless we have company. Less to clean.
We generally don't take our shoes off to go in the house (unless we want to be comfortable).
Our water fountains are bubblers. (Speaking of Rhode Island they enjoy coffee milk made from syrup! I like it once in a while myself.)
Our taxis are called Cabs; their drivers are cab drivers.
We eat pizza with our hands (sometimes folded depending on the size of the slice) not with a knife and fork! Our submarine sandwiches are called subs (or Spuckies! in Boston) not grinders. And we don't usually heat them in the oven.
We go to cookouts, not barbeques.
Things that are incredible or awesome here are reffered to as being "wicked". As in "wicked cool".
When we bowl we usually bowl candlepin, not duck pin.
Some people put "snow tires" on their cars for winter driving. They are studded to grip better in the snow.
Speaking of driving, it's not as bad as people say it is here, as a Dis-er who recently visited informed me.
Our subway system is called the T. When I was growing up I rode the elevated train through Boston - it was disassembled quite some time ago when the T was modernized.
Drive In theaters were plentiful here years ago, but now they are almost all gone. Same with amusement parks.
Since I suddenly have the urge for iced tea
pardon me while I go pour myself a glass. [fears Arizona lemon diet iced tea is uncool] lolHave lived in MA all my life. Growing up was like this:
Soda was "tonic" - Coke only if you want a coke/cola. Never used the term pop as a drink.
Jeans were "dungarees".
Cars were beach wagons, not station wagons.
Marinara was spaghetti sauce, not gravy. Gravy was brown and for meat and potatoes. (Although I did have one friend from the same area who called the red stuff gravy.)
We went "to the beach" or "down the Cape", never to the shore or to Cape Cod. People who live on Cape Cod live "on the Cape" (or on the Islands).
We had Jimmies on our ice cream, not sprinkles. (I've seen here before that to some in the south that could be an offensive term?)
We pretty much use dinner and supper interchangably, with dinner being slightly more formal. Both are definitely the evening meal.
My father used to call the front porch the "piazza".
We also serve from pots on the stove most times, unless we have company. Less to clean.
We generally don't take our shoes off to go in the house (unless we want to be comfortable).
Our water fountains are bubblers. (Speaking of Rhode Island they enjoy coffee milk made from syrup! I like it once in a while myself.)
Our taxis are called Cabs; their drivers are cab drivers.
We eat pizza with our hands (sometimes folded depending on the size of the slice) not with a knife and fork! Our submarine sandwiches are called subs (or Spuckies! in Boston) not grinders. And we don't usually heat them in the oven.
We go to cookouts, not barbeques.
Things that are incredible or awesome here are reffered to as being "wicked". As in "wicked cool".
When we bowl we usually bowl candlepin, not duck pin.
Some people put "snow tires" on their cars for winter driving. They are studded to grip better in the snow.
Speaking of driving, it's not as bad as people say it is here, as a Dis-er who recently visited informed me.

Our subway system is called the T. When I was growing up I rode the elevated train through Boston - it was disassembled quite some time ago when the T was modernized.
Drive In theaters were plentiful here years ago, but now they are almost all gone. Same with amusement parks.


.

. I had NEVER met a Ohio person, anyone from any midwestern town, never even met a Texan. When I was growing up in NY, people were from other countries and transplants from the South. California and Florida were the only states that I really knew a lot about, Californians came to NY to work and Florida was NY graduate school..
I still do not understand how saying "ma'am?" conveys the message that I did not hear what the person said.

