The Holy Grail of Regional Linguistics
Jul. 2nd, 2004 04:25 pmBehold: the Coke vs. Soda vs. Pop Map of the United States.
By county, even.
A few random comments:
There's a color change from "almost everyone says Coke" to "over 50% says Coke" at the Harris/Fort Bend county line. Remind me to ask my kids when we go back to school what they call a soft drink in Fort Bend . . .
quantumduck and
bassfingers are in solid "soda" territory. At least that's not completely alien.
Unfortunately, it looks like
memeslayer is not so lucky - unless I'm totally forgetting which end of the state he's on, he's in foreign lands, where they say "pop." Eugh . . .
WTF is up with Jackson, MS that it's green? Ditto for Austin? And what's wrong with Alaska? There's no pattern there whatsoever.
Boy, you can see where the Yankees live in Florida, can't you?
There's a huge blob island of soda-speakers centered on St. Louis. South and east of there is coke-land, and north and west of there is all pop. I wonder why? There's also one county of soda people in southeast Mississippi, in a county with no major towns in it, which is strange.
There are large chunks of Utah that are colored for "no data." I vaguely wonder whether this is because those counties are all Mormon, and no-one there drinks soft drinks, or if there's just no one in those counties at all.
I'm easily amused today . . .
By county, even.
A few random comments:
There's a color change from "almost everyone says Coke" to "over 50% says Coke" at the Harris/Fort Bend county line. Remind me to ask my kids when we go back to school what they call a soft drink in Fort Bend . . .
Unfortunately, it looks like
WTF is up with Jackson, MS that it's green? Ditto for Austin? And what's wrong with Alaska? There's no pattern there whatsoever.
Boy, you can see where the Yankees live in Florida, can't you?
There's a huge blob island of soda-speakers centered on St. Louis. South and east of there is coke-land, and north and west of there is all pop. I wonder why? There's also one county of soda people in southeast Mississippi, in a county with no major towns in it, which is strange.
There are large chunks of Utah that are colored for "no data." I vaguely wonder whether this is because those counties are all Mormon, and no-one there drinks soft drinks, or if there's just no one in those counties at all.
I'm easily amused today . . .
no subject
Date: 2004-07-02 02:42 pm (UTC)I also have a pointed preference for Dr. Pepper (diet, these days) and almost always have, so I rarely ask for the generic.
no subject
Date: 2004-07-02 02:45 pm (UTC)Now I use "soda" as the generic term, but I probably didn't pick that up 'til I went to college in that big yellowish blob in the middle of New York. :)
(And I always used to make fun of my Chicago relatives for saying "pop", so it's weird to be living so close to pop country now....)
no subject
Date: 2004-07-02 03:47 pm (UTC)Mom's family is from Denmark and Germany by way of the Midwest, so my maternal grandparents always used "soda" and I understand it just fine, but it's not the natural usage to me. "Pop" is just weird; it sounds like a Dr. Seuss book or something - "Do you want a fizzy pop? Do you want to make it stop?"
Coke Soda
Date: 2004-07-02 03:45 pm (UTC)but I still ask Do you want a Coke? when I have a variety to offer -- but ask for diet dr pepper by name
Oh, the pain...
Date: 2004-07-02 04:10 pm (UTC)I've heard Texans order Sprite after being asked if they wanted a Coke as in:
Waitress: Coke?
Patron: Yes, I'll have a Sprite.
As a boy I used to say 'pop' myself (Michigan, Indiana, Illinois). Some in Chicago even went so far as to talk of soda-pop or sody-pop. Thus I found 'soda' a natural transition term when i moved to Houston. The 'Coke' as generic word thing still amuses me.
no subject
Date: 2004-07-02 07:13 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2004-07-03 06:06 am (UTC)They didn't have a map for Canada, but they do have a stats page (http://www.popvssoda.com/stats/CAN.html) for it. It looks like it's mostly a pop kind of place.
no subject
Date: 2004-07-02 07:39 pm (UTC)