View Full Version : Pop? Soda? Coke? Which one where?
Boomer
12-26-2010, 06:05 PM
Pop? Or soda? Or Coke? Oh my! Have you ever been misunderstood?
I was a part of a recent conversation that turned to this ever so fascinating topic. After a few minutes of discussion, one of the guests retrieved his laptop to show us the following map. Who knew that somebody had actually made quite an in-depth study of this -- by county even.
So if you are having kind of a slow evening, you could liven things up by opening this thrilling link to a map that says it all. -- Not only does it say it all about what is said where, I think it also speaks volumes about whoever made this thing. But......
I have to admit, I think it's kind of fun to look at. (And NO it was NOT an English major who showed us the map. It was a science guy. HAH!)
And what's up with Wisconsin?
http://www.popvssoda.com/countystats/total-county.html
Boomer the Easily Amused
PinkNana
12-26-2010, 06:40 PM
Those mid-westerners crack me up with their "pop". In KY where I was born it's all Coke!
raynan
12-26-2010, 06:50 PM
Most of MA calls it tonic.
Pturner
12-26-2010, 06:51 PM
Pop cracks me up too. Atlanta is the home of Coca-Cola, so everybody there who doesn't say Coke moved there from somewhere else. :laugh:
Actually, soda sounds funny to us too. The only thing you can call it that doesn't make us laugh is... Pepsi. :throwtomatoes:
TednRobin
12-26-2010, 06:52 PM
Here in Central Pa it's Pop.
islandgal
12-26-2010, 06:56 PM
Coke or Soft Drink in Virginia and South Carolina
PTurner - I agree - Pop really cracks me up!!;)
bkcunningham1
12-26-2010, 06:58 PM
The kind of soda pop I like is Coke.
ducati1974
12-26-2010, 06:58 PM
raynan- what part of MA are you from? In my whole life in Mass I would never call a "soft drink" tonic, unless it was tonic water. Generically it would always be "soda", never "pop". Specifically it might be Coke, Pepsi, Sprite, etc. I'm surprised that other areas might use "coke" as a generic.
raynan
12-26-2010, 07:00 PM
Originally from Somerville, husband from Quincy but when we moved to Attleboro (on the RI border) they called it pop.
sandybill2
12-26-2010, 07:52 PM
Well, I am from a coal mining town in Lynch, Ky---on the other side of Black Mountain from Appalachia, Va--and it was Pop----Not soda, Coke, cola but Pop. The link with map shows my area and Pop is what it was called.
chuckinca
12-26-2010, 07:59 PM
Pop? Or soda? Or Coke? Oh my! Have you ever been misunderstood?
And what's up with Wisconsin?
http://www.popvssoda.com/countystats/total-county.html
Boomer the Easily Amused
I give up - What's up with Wisconsin? Was this a cheese quiz?
I did note that the red county in Nevada is the result of only one vote in the entire county.
.
teachnmo
12-26-2010, 08:07 PM
While the map showed a gray area where I am from, I would have to say from my town it was 100% pop. Course when you come from a town of 156 people there's not a lot of variety. LOL
Pop? Or soda? Or Coke? Oh my! Have you ever been misunderstood?
I was a part of a recent conversation that turned to this ever so fascinating topic. After a few minutes of discussion, one of the guests retrieved his laptop to show us the following map. Who knew that somebody had actually made quite an in-depth study of this -- by county even.
So if you are having kind of a slow evening, you could liven things up by opening this thrilling link to a map that says it all. -- Not only does it say it all about what is said where, I think it also speaks volumes about whoever made this thing. But......
I have to admit, I think it's kind of fun to look at. (And NO it was NOT an English major who showed us the map. It was a science guy. HAH!)
And what's up with Wisconsin?
http://www.popvssoda.com/countystats/total-county.html
Boomer the Easily Amused
The lack of the consideration of "tonic" in Massachusetts, makes me suspect the validity of the whole survey. It makes no difference how detail the survey is if the details are crap.
Yoda
Ohiogirl
12-26-2010, 08:35 PM
All I know is that when my ex-husband ordered Scotch & Soda in Wisconsin, he got Scotch & 7 Up (more than once)!. Be very specific - Scotch & CLUB soda, if you please. Does anyone drink Scotch & 7 Up? I guess it's better than Scotch & Coke.
Once we had a cocktail party and went thru 2 bottles of brandy - everyone up there drinks Brandy Old Fashioneds - sweet or sour - I think sweet was Brandy & 7 Up, can't remember what sour was.
I'm pretty much a wine and beer girl now, much less complicated.
Boomer
12-26-2010, 08:56 PM
Well, I am from a coal mining town in Lynch, Ky---on the other side of Black Mountain from Appalachia, Va--and it was Pop----Not soda, Coke, cola but Pop. The link with map shows my area and Pop is what it was called.
Hi sandybill2,
I know your territory, or close to it -- Cumberland. I have not been there though for decades.
When I looked at the map and saw how Kentucky split into east and west, I wondered if it was possibly because many from that area of Kentucky came to Ohio for more job opportunities after WWII.
I can remember even in the 1960's, there was an effect on the traffic patterns which were heavier on Friday evenings and Sunday nights, as people went back and forth from Cincinnati homes and jobs to "home." Also Michigan says "pop" and many went there from Eastern Kentucky to work in the automobile industry.
- - - - - - - -
And hi chuckinca,
That thing about Wisconsin, the pop-soda divide. -- I bet it has something to do with who settled where, but I don't know anything about Wisconsin. So I was wondering what the pattern was and thought there might be someone among us here on TOTV who could explain it.
- - - - - - - -
And hi Pturner,
I had always wondered about that Coke thing and if it might be because of the Atlanta connection like you said. And now, you are the perfect person to ask this other question -- what do you do when you want to order 7-Up? Somebody once told me that they called it white Coke. Have you ever heard that?
- - - - - - - - -
Oh my goodness. All of you, please forgive me. I think I am turning into Cliff Clavin right here before your eyes.:22yikes:
Boomer
Ceafolks
12-26-2010, 09:01 PM
In Eastern Mass it was tonic (not so much now) and in RI it was and still is soda. :beer3:
sandybill2
12-26-2010, 09:33 PM
Boomer---As you know Lynch is 5 miles from Cumberland. Benham was between Lynch and Cumberland. Lynch was a coal mining town developed by United States Steel, Benham was developed by International Harvester---Cumberland was "town"---where we went to get our "pop"--as that is where all the stores where.. I lived with my grandparents (my mother's parents) Grandfather was a coal miner. Went to Richmond, Va. after graduating from High School in '64--where I stayed until our move to the Villages in 2007. My mother also was raised there---she went to Detroit during the War to work in the factories.
faithfulfrank
12-26-2010, 09:50 PM
Yup. In Endicott NY where I grew up, it was soda. In western NY, it is pop.
Also, I was told we are the only place in the counrty where Pepsi is king and Coke is a distant 2nd.....
Frank
Russ_Boston
12-26-2010, 10:01 PM
Born in RI - lived all over RI - moved to southern MA and not once did I or any of my friends or anyone I knew in RI call it pop or tonic. It was soda.
Now, I do know people from the Sommerville/Dorchester areas near Boston and parts of the South Shore that call it tonic.
I do know people that call any version of cola Coke even though it says Pepsi right on the can!!
Boomer
12-26-2010, 10:11 PM
Boomer---As you know Lynch is 5 miles from Cumberland. Benham was between Lynch and Cumberland. Lynch was a coal mining town developed by United States Steel, Benham was developed by International Harvester---Cumberland was "town"---where we went to get our "pop"--as that is where all the stores where.. I lived with my grandparents (my mother's parents) Grandfather was a coal miner. Went to Richmond, Va. after graduating from High School in '64--where I stayed until our move to the Villages in 2007. My mother also was raised there---she went to Detroit during the War to work in the factories.
I loved those little grocery stores in Cumberland. There were two within walking distance and sometimes I was allowed to get something extra when I was sent on an errand to the grocery. And sometimes it was a "pop" which was a really, really big deal in those days.
Such a talk we could have. I am wondering if we ever played together in the summertime when I visited there. I could not wait to get back and look up the friends from the summer before -- even though they did make fun of the way I talk....
I still remember those words, "Listen to Boomer. She sure does talk funny. C'mon Boomer, talk! Talk!" -- Ohmygosh! sandybill! Was that you!
And....those pops were often RC. (And I still have not stopped talking.)
Boomer
natickdan
12-26-2010, 10:57 PM
Growing up in Boston, we never heard a soft drink referred to as a "pop" or "soda". If you wanted a soft drink, you wanted a "tonic". It was only after I entered the military did I, to my surprise, learn about the term a "pop" or a "soda". It is interesting how much product naming changes from one part of our country to the other. Another example is bowling. I grew-up knowing only one kind and that was candlepen bowling.
I should have known something was up when I was down south and a military friend suggested we go bowling and grab a couple of pops along the way.
chuckinca
12-26-2010, 11:07 PM
And hi chuckinca,
That thing about Wisconsin, the pop-soda divide. -- I bet it has something to do with who settled where, but I don't know anything about Wisconsin. So I was wondering what the pattern was and thought there might be someone among us here on TOTV who could explain it.
Eastern Wisconsin and Eastern Missouri are adjacent to large beer producing centers of Milwaukee and St Louis and both say soda. New York and Eastern Pennsylvania are large beer producing areas around NYC and Philly and say soda. All these areas have large German populations.
.
K9-Lovers
12-26-2010, 11:59 PM
We lived in the Chesapeake Bay area of Virginia for most of our lives and everyone there asks for a "drink". You NEVER hear Pop, and once in a while you hear Soda.
If your friend is stopping in the convenience store, you ask them to get you a "drink" and then you specify the brand name. Or if you are the one going to the store, or the fridge, you offer to get your friend a drink. "Drink" always means soft drink, unless you are going out to the clubs and bars.
Russ_Boston
12-27-2010, 04:28 AM
Growing up in Boston, we never heard a soft drink referred to as a "pop" or "soda". If you wanted a soft drink, you wanted a "tonic". It was only after I entered the military did I, to my surprise, learn about the term a "pop" or a "soda". It is interesting how much product naming changes from one part of our country to the other. Another example is bowling. I grew-up knowing only one kind and that was candlepen bowling.
I should have known something was up when I was down south and a military friend suggested we go bowling and grab a couple of pops along the way.
Yes, sorry Dan. I meant to say tonic in my last post. I just changed it.
There are lots of other strange local words in RI such as 'cabinet'. No it's not a piece of furniture - it's an ice cream shake/frappe.
jblum315
12-27-2010, 05:27 AM
Growing up in eastern Virginia it was always soft drink which usually meant Coke. And if someone wanted to offer an alcoholic drink in their home it was always Hiball or beer. Or do you want a soft drink or coffee? I never heard soda until I moved to NY.
redwitch
12-27-2010, 06:46 AM
In California, it was soda (Coke for me). In Kentucky (Harlan, Boomer), it was pop (usually RC). In Georgia, it was Coke-Cola, regardless of the brand. Overseas, it was strictly by brand name when shopping/drinking on a military post. In Europe and in the Middle East and Northern Africa, they did have soft drinks of a sort, but they were usually a fruity drink. I really don't remember getting a soft drink in the Far East unless on a base.
My logic worked as follows: Pop was something some people called their father or grandfather; Coke was a brand name and not to be confused with that disgusting soft drink called Pepsi; soda was the generic name for a soft drink; if you wanted to be 100% safe, you asked for the brand name or a soft drink or fizzy, flavored water. Man, traveling a lot can make the rules confusing!
l2ridehd
12-27-2010, 08:18 AM
Growing up in NH it was always tonic. I remember one of my first ventures outside the area and when I asked for tonic in a drug store was sent to the pharmacist. They didn't have a clue what I wanted. Finally found it and it was soda.
Not only are words different by locale, but how they are pronounced is also very different. Try asking for those light colored pants that begin with a K. Or talk about the slope leading down from the highway or down to a stream. And exactly what do you call a small flowing water way? And there are so many more.
I'm really wondering how Boomer's conversation ventured into the pop-soda thing. I bet she really knows how to liven up a holiday party.
And I would never have suspected an English major in the mix.
Boomer
12-27-2010, 08:33 AM
In Cincinnati a soda is ice cream, flavored syrup, and carbonated water.
And, btw, I am now wondering what you get in Massachusetts if you order a gin and tonic. Could it end up like what Ohiogirl said happened with the scotch and soda ordered in Wisconsin?
(Red, with as many places as you have lived, I bet you could write a dictionary of colloquialisms.)
I think colloquialisms are interesting and probably could talk about them for an inordinately long time. -- Uh oh, I had a great night's sleep, but it looks like I am still Cliff Clavin this morning. -- Hey, would Cliff Clavin have called it tonic? (I think he always ordered beer.)
Boomer
PS: Hi l2ridehd, before I hit submit, I looked at the bottom of the page and saw your post. And now I am curious about everything you said in the second part.
Addendum: Hey, Mr. Tony, Mr. Admin, Sir: I saw that. Besmirching English majors again, huh. I'm telling you true, it was a science major who brought out that map. Meteorology to be exact. So there!
mfp509
12-27-2010, 08:47 AM
In CT, it was always soda and when I lived in Alabama all kinds of soda's were referred to as "drinks".
graciegirl
12-27-2010, 09:28 AM
It is pop.
Which amused the heck out of our Austrian house guest this past month. I couldn't talk him into any ice in his pop either.
MMC24
12-27-2010, 09:38 AM
A Coke is still a Coke and it still tastes the same regardless of what you call it.
LI SNOWBIRD
12-27-2010, 09:47 AM
Here in snowy Long Island its soda.
2BNTV
12-27-2010, 12:40 PM
In Yonkers, New York, it was always called soda. Coke was always coke and Pepsi was alway Pepsi. That later moprhed into a soft drink.
In 81 when I moved to Cleveland, I found out they called it pop. Confusing to me because in the old neighborhood, if someone said, "lets go for a couple of pops", that meant going for some alcoholic beverages. Usually a couple of hundred, as there was a lot of heavy drinking going on and we only had to walk a couple of blocks to and from the bar. :beer3:
Cuff links were used as curb feelers. :laugh:
Mother and father owned a lucheonette where we made ice cream floats and egg creams with seltzer water, (not called tonic water). My mother made sandwiches on wedges, not heros, grinders, or submarines)
Taltarzac
12-27-2010, 12:52 PM
http://popvssoda.com:2998/
The map maker's methodolgy looks quite a bit off by just relying on people on the Internet filling out the survey. And it looks like most of these respondents were college students. Seems to be you would get a different result going up each ten year age bracket, i.e. the answers would be quite different among teens and college age students to 40, 50 and 60 year olds.
Pturner
12-27-2010, 01:10 PM
...And hi Pturner,
I had always wondered about that Coke thing and if it might be because of the Atlanta connection like you said. And now, you are the perfect person to ask this other question -- what do you do when you want to order 7-Up? Somebody once told me that they called it white Coke. Have you ever heard that?
Um... I've heard of white coke. Never tried it. But Boomer, um, I don't think it refers to 7-Up. (If it referred to a soft drink in ATL it would have to be Sprite anyway.)
But... um... white coke, um... I'm not an English major, mind you, but I think it refers to... a white powdery substance. :22yikes:
scrapple
12-27-2010, 01:14 PM
In California, it was soda (Coke for me). In Kentucky (Harlan, Boomer), it was pop (usually RC). In Georgia, it was Coke-Cola, regardless of the brand. Overseas, it was strictly by brand name when shopping/drinking on a military post. In Europe and in the Middle East and Northern Africa, they did have soft drinks of a sort, but they were usually a fruity drink. I really don't remember getting a soft drink in the Far East unless on a base.
My logic worked as follows: Pop was something some people called their father or grandfather; Coke was a brand name and not to be confused with that disgusting soft drink called Pepsi; soda was the generic name for a soft drink; if you wanted to be 100% safe, you asked for the brand name or a soft drink or fizzy, flavored water. Man, traveling a lot can make the rules confusing!
In the southern parts of Africa the choice is "dark fizzy drink" or "light fizzy drink". Eastern PA was "soda" while Denver was "pop".
Should we continue this fun banter and I'll ask the question: "Dressing," "Filling" or "Stuffing?"
raynan
12-27-2010, 01:15 PM
Stuffing in MA.
Russ_Boston
12-27-2010, 01:50 PM
A Coke is still a Coke and it still tastes the same regardless of what you call it.
Unless it's Sprite - can't call that a Coke:)
faithfulfrank
12-27-2010, 02:46 PM
Stuffing. Dressing is what goes around windows.
Also, Coke or Pepsi? The lines are blurred now for me, since I really like Pepsi Max, (it has ginseng in it), but I also like Coke Zero. Also, A&W is the best Root Beer, "Mug" brand is like dog drool.
Too bad you can't get Cheerwine in Florida. That is a Dr Pepper-like pop they have in the Carolina's
Frank
2BNTV
12-27-2010, 03:21 PM
.......
In Eastern Mass it was tonic (not so much now) and in RI it was and still is soda. :beer3:
If there is no tonic, there is no Massachusetts!
Yoda
swrinfla
12-27-2010, 04:03 PM
Once again, I think y'all have been into the contents of the bar! :a040:
Boomer's map says I grew up using "soda," then moved to the Mid-West, where it continued to be "soda." Then, I came to TV [Sumter County], where it appears that "coke" is preferred. Of course, that was way before any of us lived here!
What's it called when you avoid any of it at all???????????????????
SWR
:beer3:
Shimpy
12-27-2010, 05:11 PM
Take that coke and put rum in it and I don't care what you call it, I'll drink it.
Boomer
12-27-2010, 05:33 PM
Hi Pturner,
And :22yikes: is right! I did not even think about that. Geez. I can be such a bumpkin sometimes. Thanks for sharing the theory. I will never ask about that one again. Oh my!
Oh well, here is a nice relaxing song that has been going through my head, off and on, since last night, after it was mentioned by Ohiogirl in this thread. I really like the song. Maybe I need to wind down and listen to it again...or sing along.
You are all invited to sing along with me.
Boomer Miller
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4Nc2GWytR0E
graciegirl
12-27-2010, 07:20 PM
In the southern parts of Africa the choice is "dark fizzy drink" or "light fizzy drink". Eastern PA was "soda" while Denver was "pop".
Should we continue this fun banter and I'll ask the question: "Dressing," "Filling" or "Stuffing?"
It is dressing if it is for a bird or a salad. It is stuffing if it is for a mushroom or a date.(The kind that grows on trees)
Then there is cross dressing but I am no expert on that.
Boomer
12-27-2010, 09:33 PM
In the southern parts of Africa the choice is "dark fizzy drink" or "light fizzy drink". Eastern PA was "soda" while Denver was "pop".
Should we continue this fun banter and I'll ask the question: "Dressing," "Filling" or "Stuffing?"
Hi scrapple,
That is an interesting question. At our house, we put the dressing in a bowl alongside the turkey, not in the turkey. So maybe that is why we say dressing. But dressing sounds like it should be on something, not next to it. So now I really have to think that one through. Why is it like that? :shrug:
We are a bunch of fascinating conversationalists here on TOTV. That's for sure.
Boomer
kandj
12-27-2010, 10:57 PM
raynan- what part of MA are you from? In my whole life in Mass I would never call a "soft drink" tonic, unless it was tonic water. Generically it would always be "soda", never "pop". Specifically it might be Coke, Pepsi, Sprite, etc. I'm surprised that other areas might use "coke" as a generic.
Jim calls everything tonic unless it is Coke - he grew up in Medford, MA.
chuckinca
12-28-2010, 12:31 AM
Dressing goes on salad and open wounds
Filling goes in pies, teeth and gas tanks
Stuffing goes in Turkeys, pillows, sleeping bags, etc.
.
GOJODO
12-28-2010, 06:46 AM
Too funny!
Hubby is from Denver and always called it pop and I laugh. I am from Richmond, VA and always called it soda or coke but never pop.
LI SNOWBIRD
12-28-2010, 10:10 AM
Dressing goes on salad and open wounds
Filling goes in pies, teeth and gas tanks
Stuffing goes in Turkeys, pillows, sleeping bags, etc.
.
Well said!:angel:
graciegirl
12-28-2010, 12:02 PM
Alright....
closets or cupboards?
I beg your pardon or simply the word...Please?( When you need a sentence repeated.)
Potluck or pitch in?
Garage sale or tag sale?
An "At Home" or just a party for the holidays?
Pturner
12-28-2010, 12:19 PM
Dressing goes on salad and open wounds
Filling goes in pies, teeth and gas tanks
Stuffing goes in Turkeys, pillows, sleeping bags, etc.
.
Love it! I would just add that dressing goes on nekkid bodies. (nekkid, of course, being Southern for naked.)
Alright....
closets or cupboards?
I beg your pardon or simply the word...Please?( When you need a sentence repeated.)
Potluck or pitch in?
Garage sale or tag sale?
An "At Home" or just a party for the holidays?
Many people in the south call a garage sale a yard sale.
Dresser or Chest of Drawers?
I am really curious about who and from where says sofa vs. couch? Although we usually say sofa, even during football season I would never call DH a sofa potato. :laugh:
Number 6
12-28-2010, 12:44 PM
When I was going to school in Buffalo, one of my classmates was from Long Island. He went into an diner and asked for a "soda". He was shocked when they put in a scoop of ice cream!
Where I grew up (Western NY) it was, and is, pop. I mostly drand Vernors. I am upset that you cannot get Diet Vernors in the 12 oz. cans in Florida anymore. But that is another post.
faithfulfrank
12-28-2010, 12:55 PM
Sofa or couch? I say sofa, but I find many seniors call it a "Davenport", which I thought was a city in Iowa.
Garage sale.
Never heard of a "pitch-in".
I think "Dresser" would suffice.
How about "No difference" or "Same difference"....?
jebartle
12-28-2010, 01:26 PM
I was raised in Alabama, Florida, and sure "nuf", it's a coke!...Atta boy, Boomer for digging up info...
" have to admit, I think it's kind of fun to look at. (And NO it was NOT an English major who showed us the map. It was a science guy. HAH!)
And what's up with Wisconsin?
http://www.popvssoda.com/countystats/total-county.html
Boomer the Easily Amused "
PinkNana
12-28-2010, 01:40 PM
I thought of another one I heard as a kid in KY. Hey baby, go get me a cold drink to go with this chicken & dressing!
chuckinca
12-28-2010, 02:21 PM
Alright....
closets or cupboards?
I beg your pardon or simply the word...Please?( When you need a sentence repeated.)
Potluck or pitch in?
Garage sale or tag sale?
An "At Home" or just a party for the holidays?
closets are usually in bedrooms except a coat closet by the front door; my grandmother's cupboards are now kitchen cabinets.
(When you need a sentence repeated.) - Say again (from military radio operator terms)(a call sign I had, 45 yrs ago, is still sometimes used as a pin number as is my serial number, forgot my rifle's number tho - don't tell the 1st shirt)
Potluck - never heard of "pitch in"
Garage Sale or Yard Sale - never heard of "tag sale"
Never heard of an "at home". A party during the holidays is also called "a gathering"
.
swrinfla
12-28-2010, 02:54 PM
GG:
Surely, you've learned that "y'all bring something to share" covers potluck? Never heard of "pitch-in," though it makes sense.
In my personal short hand, when the invitation tells me to bring something, I just write y'all. :D
SWR
:beer3:
Dressing goes on salad and open wounds
Filling goes in pies, teeth and gas tanks
Stuffing goes in Turkeys, pillows, sleeping bags, etc.
.
Dang!
Pturner
12-28-2010, 04:45 PM
I was raised in Alabama, Florida, and sure "nuf", it's a coke!...Atta boy, Boomer for digging up info...
Um...Jebartle, Boomer's a she!
Pturner
12-28-2010, 04:52 PM
Whoa or Boy Howdy.
:1rotfl::1rotfl::1rotfl:
vBulletin® v3.8.11, Copyright ©2000-2025, vBulletin Solutions Inc.