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Carrion Luggage #1100614 added November 1, 2025 at 10:06am Restrictions: None
You Keep Using That Word
A language lesson (or not) from Mental Floss:
First, researchers used data from two sites, OnlyInYourState and EnjoyTravel.com, to create a list of state-specific terms. They then asked 1028 U.S. residents to guess what they thought each one meant. The 10 terms that were wrongly defined most frequently are listed below (along with some entertaining honorable mentions).
I'd treat this as "for entertainment purposes only."
Tavern // South Dakota
In South Dakota, a tavern isn’t always—as most survey participants assumed—a bar. Sometimes, it’s a ground-beef sandwich similar to a sloppy joe.
I was unaware of this name for that kind of sandwich. In my defense, I've never spent more time in South Dakota than I had to.
Carry // Mississippi
The common assumption was that carry in Mississippi meant “to have a gun on your person.” And it does mean that—but it can also mean “to drive (someone),” in the same way you might say, “I have to take my mom to the airport.”
And then shoot her.
Gnarly // California
Gnarly is such a classic bit of ’80s slang that you can’t fault respondents for assuming it’s a synonym for cool.
Funny thing about words: they mean what we want them to mean.
Borrow pit // Montana
A borrow pit is a pit formed when material is excavated (i.e. borrowed) from it and relocated somewhere else.
Montana? We call it that in Virginia.
There are a few more there at the site. Some are mildly amusing. Nothing earth-shakingly important; just a bit of fun. |
© Copyright 2025 Robert Waltz (UN: cathartes02 at Writing.Com). All rights reserved. Robert Waltz has granted InkSpot.Com, its affiliates and its syndicates non-exclusive rights to display this work.
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