Psycho-Babble Social Thread 683581

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Re: NO ONE has a spigot?

Posted by Declan on September 6, 2006, at 15:01:59

In reply to NO ONE has a spigot?, posted by Racer on September 6, 2006, at 12:18:19

We call 3. 'B Doubles', I've no idea why.

 

Re: NO ONE has a spigot?

Posted by Phillipa on September 6, 2006, at 16:09:21

In reply to NO ONE has a spigot?, posted by Racer on September 6, 2006, at 12:18:19

Racer it's just a big truck to me. And I was once with a truck driver. He made no distinction other than truck or two together was piggy backing the trucks. Love Phillipa

 

Re: OK, folks -- SURVEY TIME!!! » Racer

Posted by curtm on September 6, 2006, at 16:27:46

In reply to OK, folks -- SURVEY TIME!!!, posted by Racer on September 6, 2006, at 1:41:05

These are very interesting questions you ask. Many people go through life without any concern for their vocabulary. It is extremely important that we give such considerations to such serious matters.

> This is a silly one, and it really won't be interesting to anyone except me, but...
>
> 1. Bucket or pail?

A bucket is used when you need something to kick!
A pail is what you use any other time.

>
> 2. Faucet, spigot, or tap?
>

A faucet is what you get water out of.
A spigot is what you get wine out of.
A tap is what you get beer out of.

> 3. Tractor-trailer or trailer-truck?
>

A tractor-trailer is a typical semi hauler.
A trailer-truck is the same, but backing up.

> Which do you use, or do you use some combination of them?
>

I usually use a combination of them depending on the application. I hope this helps.

> Or, if you'd prefer, just how crazy do you think I am for asking about this?

No comment.

 

Re: OK, folks -- SURVEY TIME!!!

Posted by Jost on September 6, 2006, at 17:53:37

In reply to Re: OK, folks -- SURVEY TIME!!!, posted by James K on September 6, 2006, at 14:38:07

1. pail (sometimes bucket)

2. faucet (sometimes spigot, never tap)

3. semi (sometimes tracker-trailer)

4. couch (often with potato) ---davenport???? that's truly dialect-- from the maybe 1920's ?? --otherwise, I thought it was a College at Yale??

5. soda (unless it is a coke, in which case coke)

6. to-may-to

7. dinner

8. whatya'ma'callit, 'it," "that"(or "that thing") etc, occasionally "thingamagiggit"

9. blah, blah, blah; yada, yada, yada (definitely obsolete), "whatever"

10. elevator

11. bus, taxi (cab, rarely), "that damn thing" (meaning SUV, pickup truck, or large car blocking the street), "now what?" (meaning, Firetruck, lights turning red out-of-sync, police car going slowly with many cars behind it, also going slowly, EMS vehicle)

Jost

 

Re: OK, folks -- SURVEY TIME!!! » Racer

Posted by sleepygirl on September 6, 2006, at 20:32:55

In reply to OK, folks -- SURVEY TIME!!!, posted by Racer on September 6, 2006, at 1:41:05

> This is a silly one, and it really won't be interesting to anyone except me, but...
>
> 1. Bucket or pail?
bucket
>
> 2. Faucet, spigot, or tap?
faucet
>
> 3. Tractor-trailer or trailer-truck?
tractor-trailer
>
> Which do you use, or do you use some combination of them?
>
I use a faucet all the time, a bucket occasionally, and a tractor trailer never.

> Or, if you'd prefer, just how crazy do you think I am for asking about this?
not at all :-)

 

Re: OK, folks -- you missed one » James K

Posted by Racer on September 6, 2006, at 22:26:30

In reply to Re: OK, folks -- SURVEY TIME!!!, posted by James K on September 6, 2006, at 14:38:07

>
> sofa - couch - davenport?
>
>

Don't you know? It's a CHESTERFIELD!

 

Re: OK, folks -- Um... » Jost

Posted by Racer on September 6, 2006, at 22:34:00

In reply to Re: OK, folks -- SURVEY TIME!!!, posted by Jost on September 6, 2006, at 17:53:37

>
> 6. to-may-to
>

Since I'm trying to learn my husband's native language, I'm practicing "tomahto"

>
> 8. whatya'ma'callit, 'it," "that"(or "that thing") etc, occasionally "thingamagiggit"

"Whatchamacallit," or "thingamabob," or "whosamawhatsit."
>

Thanks for adding your humor to it -- and you and my mother could probably have a fine time discussing Large Vehicles...

 

Re: OK, folks -- SURVEY TIME!!! » Racer

Posted by llrrrpp on September 6, 2006, at 22:49:48

In reply to OK, folks -- SURVEY TIME!!!, posted by Racer on September 6, 2006, at 1:41:05

> This is a silly one, and it really won't be interesting to anyone except me, but...


> 1. Bucket or pail?
When I puke, whatever's closest.
>
> 2. Faucet, spigot, or tap?

See 1. above.
>
> 3. Tractor-trailer or trailer-truck?
I don't drink and drive.

> Which do you use, or do you use some combination of them?
>
> Or, if you'd prefer, just how crazy do you think I am for asking about this?

you didn't ask: bottle or can?
Alone or with others?
on the rocks or neat?
with pop or with soda?

-ll

 

Hmmm.... I think I detect a theme here... (nm) » llrrrpp

Posted by Racer on September 7, 2006, at 1:23:42

In reply to Re: OK, folks -- SURVEY TIME!!! » Racer, posted by llrrrpp on September 6, 2006, at 22:49:48

 

DOH! » llrrrpp

Posted by Racer on September 7, 2006, at 1:26:28

In reply to Re: OK, folks -- SURVEY TIME!!! » Racer, posted by llrrrpp on September 6, 2006, at 22:49:48

> >
> > 3. Tractor-trailer or trailer-truck?
> I don't drink and drive.

I do, I do! I always have an open container in my car when I'm driving! Sometimes it's Pepsi One, in a can, in my coldee holder.

Mostly, though, it's Arrowhead Mountain Spring Water -- mountain spring! HA! -- in a sport top bottle...

Then again, I only drive adorable little cars...

(I love my Corolla. BIG topic tonight in marriage counseling... Brought on a lot of tears...)

 

Water Fountain, Drinking Fountain or ?

Posted by Poet on September 7, 2006, at 10:29:25

In reply to OK, folks -- SURVEY TIME!!!, posted by Racer on September 6, 2006, at 1:41:05

Around these parts it's a *bubbler.*

Poet

 

bucket, faucet, tractor-trailer (nm)

Posted by caraher on September 7, 2006, at 18:22:52

In reply to OK, folks -- SURVEY TIME!!!, posted by Racer on September 6, 2006, at 1:41:05

 

Re: OK, folks -- SURVEY TIME!!!

Posted by finelinebob on September 7, 2006, at 22:12:38

In reply to OK, folks -- SURVEY TIME!!!, posted by Racer on September 6, 2006, at 1:41:05

Darn, wish I could remember my Balmorese.

You know, what they speak in Balmore, Murlyn.

They have these things called urshters. And when you were done eating your urshters, you'd put your plate in the zink, turn on the spicket and warsh it off.

 

Conservation of CONSONENTS! lol » finelinebob

Posted by Racer on September 8, 2006, at 0:21:24

In reply to Re: OK, folks -- SURVEY TIME!!!, posted by finelinebob on September 7, 2006, at 22:12:38

That's the theory that consonents are conserved: in Bahston, you pahk your cah, but in Texas (I think it was) you warsh it!

lol I loved that one, also learnt back in linguistics 101...

Maybe I should take that again?

 

Consonents and Vowels and Dipthongs, oh MY!! » Racer

Posted by finelinebob on September 8, 2006, at 0:54:33

In reply to Conservation of CONSONENTS! lol » finelinebob, posted by Racer on September 8, 2006, at 0:21:24

> lol I loved that one, also learnt back in linguistics 101...

We had some linguistics prof of some reknown back in Ann Arbor who would start "linguistics 101" the same every semester...

He ask, "who knows what a prefix is?", see all the hands raise, and say, "yeah, a syllable or group of syllables added to the beginning of a word to change its meaning" or something like that.

Then he'd ask, "who knows what a suffix is?" ... hands would go up, and he'd answer his own rhetorical question again.

Then he'd ask, "who knows what an infix is?"

As usual, no hands would raise. And he'd nod and say it's a syllable or group of syllables added to the MIDDLE of a word to alter its meaning, and say that he wasn't all that surprised no one knew what it was since we have no infixes in English.

"unless," he'd say, "you include abso-fscking-lutely and in-fscking-credible and..."

 

Re: Consonents and Vowels and Dipthongs, oh MY!! » finelinebob

Posted by llrrrpp on September 8, 2006, at 8:04:08

In reply to Consonents and Vowels and Dipthongs, oh MY!! » Racer, posted by finelinebob on September 8, 2006, at 0:54:33

In the place I grew up, there were a lot of added dipthongs.

whey-ull, I jee-ust don't knaaow what an eeee-iinfix eee-is.

My dad (Yankee) used to try to imitate the locals, and he sounded like he was yodeling.

I lost my twang when I went to college, but I get it back easily. My brother still has his, and it's lovely, because he's a smarty and he still talks like a good 'ol boy. My bff married a local and she has the strongest accent I have ever heard. I don't remember her having an accent when we were in school. I think we both had twangs and then moved to our extremes when we went off to college.
-ll

 

Re: Consonents and Vowels and Dipthongs, oh MY!! » llrrrpp

Posted by Dinah on September 8, 2006, at 10:27:03

In reply to Re: Consonents and Vowels and Dipthongs, oh MY!! » finelinebob, posted by llrrrpp on September 8, 2006, at 8:04:08

:)

That reminds me of when I talked to my best friend from elementary school years later when my mother got her phone number from her mother. She'd been a lot of places and had settled down in Boston, I think.

We had been inseparable in the way that only grade school girls can be. And depending on whether you were an adult or a child, I think we were probably delightful or insufferable. We had vocabulary contests, and similar fun games, and we were both rather proud of keeping our pronunciations generic.

As we awkwardly chatted, I thought how northeastern her accent had grown. And she said "You really sound New Orleanian now!!!"

Gosh I miss her. How many people can you find who enjoy vocabulary contests?

 

Re: Consonents and Vowels and Dipthongs, oh MY!! » Dinah

Posted by Jost on September 8, 2006, at 20:18:53

In reply to Re: Consonents and Vowels and Dipthongs, oh MY!! » llrrrpp, posted by Dinah on September 8, 2006, at 10:27:03

Yesterday I heard a podcast in which someone corrected a caller who said he was going to "Nu Orleeeens"

The dj said do you mean "Nawww-l'ns?"

so, is it really "Nawww-l'ns"?

Jost

 

Re: Consonents and Vowels and Dipthongs, oh MY!! » Jost

Posted by Dinah on September 8, 2006, at 20:26:50

In reply to Re: Consonents and Vowels and Dipthongs, oh MY!! » Dinah, posted by Jost on September 8, 2006, at 20:18:53

It's really New Orl'nz. Or New Orlinz. or New Orlunz. Some indeterminate vowel between the l and n.

New Orleenz is for music or poetry.

Some people say N'Awlins.

I jump every time Anderson Cooper says it. But he's been a real friend to us, so I try not to let it bother me.

 

I always heard something lovely that sounded like » Dinah

Posted by Racer on September 9, 2006, at 0:37:29

In reply to Re: Consonents and Vowels and Dipthongs, oh MY!! » Jost, posted by Dinah on September 8, 2006, at 20:26:50

New Orle-ans, very french. I also have been told that the Nawlins is just Cajun, not general...

But regardless -- gotta love anyplace that a mule can get a paying gig, right? Much as I love horses, there are some mighty fine mules in this world...

 

Re: Consonents and Vowels and Dipthongs, oh MY!!

Posted by James K on September 9, 2006, at 0:44:06

In reply to Re: Consonents and Vowels and Dipthongs, oh MY!! » Jost, posted by Dinah on September 8, 2006, at 20:26:50

> It's really New Orl'nz. Or New Orlinz. or New Orlunz. Some indeterminate vowel between the l and n.
>
> New Orleenz is for music or poetry.
>
> Some people say N'Awlins.
>
--=Growing up here in Houston, which was full of Louisiana and New Orleans people long before last year, I never heard someone say in casual conversation N'Awlins. It seemed like cajun descendent people only said it that way in an exagerated "correction" mode.

I thought Gary U.S. Bonds would be an authority with his New Orleenz proununciation in the song New Orleans, but I just read he recorded that in North Carolina. So I'll go with Fats Domino with his New Orlunz pronounciation (I can't spell tonight) from the song "Walking to New Orleans" song.

Which is all to say I defer to Dinah's verdict, and agree with it.

James K

 

Re: Consonents and Vowels and Dipthongs, oh MY!! » James K

Posted by Dinah on September 9, 2006, at 10:09:43

In reply to Re: Consonents and Vowels and Dipthongs, oh MY!!, posted by James K on September 9, 2006, at 0:44:06

Absolutely correct!! "Walkin' to New Orleans" has the correct pronunciation.

Fats said it just as a New Orleanian would, which is only fair since he's one of ours.

He his home in the Lower Ninth was heavily flooded, and was evacuated after the storm. I think he's doing ok now.

http://oldies.about.com/b/a/210924.htm

 

Re: I always heard something lovely that sounded l » Racer

Posted by Dinah on September 9, 2006, at 10:17:58

In reply to I always heard something lovely that sounded like » Dinah, posted by Racer on September 9, 2006, at 0:37:29

I think they've passed some laws not too long ago (at my age anyway) to protect them. At one time it wasn't such a great gig. It should be a bit better now.

 

Re: I always heard something lovely that sounded l » Dinah

Posted by Racer on September 9, 2006, at 14:12:07

In reply to Re: I always heard something lovely that sounded l » Racer, posted by Dinah on September 9, 2006, at 10:17:58

Yeah, my only experience is just talking a little to the drivers. They all had the standard horseman's protective affection for their beasts, as far as I could see -- although a few were downright rude to people around them. And those I saw all looked healthy and as content as any equine in that sort of job ever does. (It's hard on them -- not so much the work itself -- more the waiting around, and the people who want to pet them.)

Uh oh -- talking about it, now I want a mule... Don't anyone tell my husband, 'k?

 

Re: Consonents and Vowels and Dipthongs, oh MY!! » Dinah

Posted by Jost on September 9, 2006, at 14:54:00

In reply to Re: Consonents and Vowels and Dipthongs, oh MY!! » James K, posted by Dinah on September 9, 2006, at 10:09:43

Okay, the definitive pronunciation!:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=on-AQkrU3gA

Got it.

Isn't the internet great?

Jost


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