Coke for everything sounds ridiculously wrong to me.
Here's the way it works.
Yup. I've had this conversation a lot:
Waitress: What would you like to drink?
Me: A coke.
Waitress: What kind?
Me: Dr Pepper.
Off-topic discussion. Wanna talk about corsets, duct tape, or physics? This is the place. Detailed discussion of any current-season TV must be whitefonted.
Coke for everything sounds ridiculously wrong to me.
Here's the way it works.
Yup. I've had this conversation a lot:
Waitress: What would you like to drink?
Me: A coke.
Waitress: What kind?
Me: Dr Pepper.
Oooh, look at Eddie's mad research skilz.
Coke is a Southern thing. Every soda is a coke.
I do this. It's my mom's fault, I think. Also the inability to hear "-in" and "-en" distinctions.
DING! Eddie got it.
All ita's fault.
Isn't all tea "sweet tea" unless otherwise specified?
Only in the south.
I was so happy when Trader Joe's started selling gallon jugs of unsweetened iced tea. Mmmm.
Are your parents my parents? Mine just drink decaf and they live in the middle of nowhere Tennessee.
I think mine were going through some random health thing. They've since seen the error of their ways. Possibly because I do the make-a-cross-with-your-index-fingers thing and say, "blasphemer!" every time they suggest brewing a pot of decaf.
My parents gave up coffee as part of their incredibly healthy lifestyle of the past few years BUT they always have some in the freezer for visitors AND they have two types of single cup drip thingies.
Conjunction junction, what's your function...
Conjunction junction, what's your function...
Hookin' up words and phrases and clauses?
Unfortunately, mine switched to decaf about 10 years ago and I don't see them switching back.
I know Michigan people who use coke to mean any pop. Can actual ex-michiganders here verify? Coke was referred to as "Northwoods Brown Mead" in certain SCA circles, Northwoods being the Michigan State, ie. East Lansing group, who couldn't/wouldn't give up their Coke for authenticity's sake.
Bow-tique? I thought that was just a southern affectation, but then, I live with real French, so that kinda skews the perspective on faux-french.
American attitudes towards iced tea are interesting in a culture studies kind of way. Vanishingly rare to be able to get unsweetened iced tea up here.
Bow-tique? I thought that was just a southern affectation
I don't think so. My family says boo-teek.