Lefty007
Shared on Wed, 11/12/2008 - 09:15While perusing the blogs this morning and Patty said 'Pop' made me think of the way we say and think of stuff. I actually was able to find the this dandy little map that actually confirmed my none scientific pre-clusions. Areas west of State College PA say 'pop' and the south uses coke.
I cringe when I hear soda referred to as pop, I do not know why. Personally flip flop between soda and coke.
Following from strangemaps.wordpress.com/2008/08/18/308-the-pop-vs-soda-map/
- coke: this generic term for soft drinks predominates throughout the South, New Mexico, central Indiana and in a few other single counties in Nevada, Utah and Wyoming. ‘Coke’ obviously derives from Coca-Cola, the brand-name of the soft drink originally manufactured in Atlanta (which explains its use as a generic term for all soft drinks in the South).
- pop: dominates the Northwest, Great Plains and Midwest. The world ‘pop’ was introduced by Robert Southey, the British Poet Laureate (1774-1843), to whom we also owe the word ‘autobiography’, among others. In 1812, he wrote: A new manufactory of a nectar, between soda-water and ginger-beer, and called pop, because ‘pop goes the cork’ when it is drawn. Even though it was introduced by a Poet Laureate, the term ‘pop’ is considered unsophisticated by some, because it is onomatopaeic.
- soda: prevalent in the Northeast, greater Miami, the area in Missouri and Illinois surrounding St Louis and parts of northern California. ‘Soda’ derives from ‘soda-water’ (also called club soda, carbonated or sparkling water or seltzer). It’s produced by dissolving carbon dioxide gas in plain water, a procedure developed by Joseph Priestly in the latter half of the 18th century. The fizziness of soda-water caused the term ‘soda’ to be associated with later, similarly carbonated soft drinks.
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Submitted by ATC_1982 on Wed, 11/12/2008 - 09:35
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