My wife's family calls a parking space, a park. Does anyone else know anyone who says this? After 11 years, I am still confused when she says there's a park when we are in a parking lot. Um what?
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I have a coworker who says "with all intensive purpose" and "mind bottling". It has become a running joke when he's not around.
My sister pronounces creek as "crick". I want to slap the **** out of her every time.
I left Texas many many moons ago. Most of the time I don't sound particularly Texan anymore, but when we go down to visit I fall right back into the cadence, and PapaLew says "I don't even know you". And according to my Iowa friends, they can tell when I'm tired, because when I'm tired, ah'm tarred.
And it took years for me to get him to stop "unthawing" the food he takes from the freezer.
At least they don't call it "pop". Call it "soda" like an adult.
At least they don't call it "pop". Call it "soda" like an adult.
"we was wondering...."
"was you going to...."
"they was just thinking about..."
I cringe when I hear these...and the further west you go on I-80, the more you hear it.
Wrong.
The full correct term is Soda Pop. Soda is the adjective describing the kind of pop (the noun) you're talking about. It's like red barn. Red is describing the kind of barn. You wouldn't say,
"The cows are in the red."
When our oldest daughter was about that age, she pronounced the movie "Princess Diaries" as "Princess Diahrreas". There was no way we were correcting that one.
When my son was that age he would get super excited when mom made Sky-yetti (spaghetti). He's six now and I still call it sky-yetti.
Or, "I seen you at Hy-Vee last night."
My mother was a stickler for "may" versus "can". I was with her at a fast food place one time and the kid behind the counter said "can I help you?" and she replied "yes, you may". He kind of stopped, looked at her, and said "are you an English teacher???"Of course, one of my biggest pet peeves with work email is the use of the word "can," instead of would.
Stef, can you pull that list for me?
I'm sensing a trend...I had an ex-girlfriend from Minnesota who said bayg instead of bag. I asked her to say, "Buy a bag of bagels." She also hit me.
Oh my gosh, no. Why would you when it's adorable and hilarious?!
Our 3-year-old has also got a fascination with throwing in that particular word wherever he can - but his is more for comedic value. He also took to saying, "Boys have penises and girls have knuckles" at school - we don't know what it means, or where he heard it, but it sounds TERRIBLE.
I'm sensing a trend...