bryant: (Default)
bryant ([personal profile] bryant) wrote2002-09-20 08:10 am

[Population: One] <A HREF="http://popone.innocence.com/ar

The Dialect Survey is about three hundred questions, so don't start unless you have time, but it's cool if you do. Perhaps more cool are the maps plotting the results in little color coded dots across the country, confirming that we New Englanders are the only people who say rotary.

[identity profile] mgrasso.livejournal.com 2002-09-20 08:18 am (UTC)(link)
Rotary! Blast! I forgot that one on my list of beloved New England terms.

Do you know the etymology of "cabinet" for a Rhode Island milkshake?

[identity profile] mgrasso.livejournal.com 2002-09-20 08:52 am (UTC)(link)
Explanatory signs? Wimps! Rotaries put hair on your chest! Or is that "cause pains in your chest," I forget which. :D
clauclauclaudia: (Default)

[personal profile] clauclauclaudia 2002-09-20 03:14 pm (UTC)(link)
Start even if you don't have time, you can save partway through, that's what the registration is for.

Do they ask about "bubbler"? I haven't finished yet. :)

[identity profile] enmascarado.livejournal.com 2002-09-30 11:43 am (UTC)(link)
I finally got around to it.

My favorite map the is "The City" map.

Outside of the Chicago and Boston area and a few random locales, people realize that "The City" is New York even as far away as the wrong coast. I also suspect that the Boston-area people are lieing as part of the feud they think they have.

I had too much confusion with this as my accent has so many influences (Southern, New England, New York, London, even Canadian) and is mutable. The dialect terms, as opposed to pronounciations, were usually easier.

-Dan