Canadian Accents, Slang, Foods, This or That

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  • Опубліковано 21 сер 2024
  • Ever wondered if you pronounce certain words the same as a Canadian? Curious about slang words? What stereotypes have you heard about them? I'm here to answer all those things for you ;)
    If you have any suggestions or ideas please feel free to leave them below. And don't forget to hit that LIKE button :)
    Pronunciation 0:40
    What would you call... 1:25
    This or That? 3:09
    Slang Words 4:34
    Foods 6:46
    FACEBOOK PAGE: / 481247645299148
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КОМЕНТАРІ • 1,1 тис.

  • @JustSimplyMeNC
    @JustSimplyMeNC 10 років тому +22

    Canadians seem like the nicest people in the world. I would love to visit someday.
    Im from America

    • @edenp.1123
      @edenp.1123 10 років тому +1

      It's an amazing place and its truly beautiful. Grew up hear and have and never will leave. I prefer the free health care

    • @jessicafortier6708
      @jessicafortier6708 10 років тому +1

      Aww! Thanks 😄
      (I'm Canadian)

    • @alicelin5090
      @alicelin5090 9 років тому

      yess come aboot our facinating country

    • @mmiu9991
      @mmiu9991 9 років тому

      Just 1 suggestion :) I heard many people said the Quebecs are not really "friendly", like they have their own pride, so they're like edgy and ... u know :) So if you want to find nice people, i would suggest not coming there :) Anyway it's just my own thinking and ye, not all people are nice so :D

    • @AmoureuxDesAnimaux
      @AmoureuxDesAnimaux 9 років тому

      Im from Quebec and not all people are friendly BUT a lot of them are friendly. If you want friendly Quebecois, come to Quebec City. Maybe one of the friendliest places on Quebec.
      PS Its mostly near Montreal that some Re less friendly. But there is mostly more friendly peeps in the cities near Montreal
      But for english tourists, Quebec is not bilingual. :(

  • @brownjanelle91
    @brownjanelle91 10 років тому +59

    a buggy?? Canadian here. I call it a cart....shopping cart.....

    • @aliyahjackson2911
      @aliyahjackson2911 10 років тому +2

      So do I, he called pretty much everything in this video something I have NEVER heard before and I have lived in Canada my whole life and have never left even on vacation or something like that.

    • @Neolia83
      @Neolia83 10 років тому +1

      ya i have never heard buggy either.. im from ontario too

    • @Justinhulk
      @Justinhulk 10 років тому +1

      Neolia83
      im From BC and i never heard of a Buggy either its called a shopping cart

    • @alyssam5449
      @alyssam5449 10 років тому +4

      I'm Canadian and I say grocery cart xD. I also say sneakers, not runners and a remote not a flicker.

    • @Justinhulk
      @Justinhulk 10 років тому

      Same here Bro but i just call it Shoes

  • @michellehart4041
    @michellehart4041 10 років тому +21

    Flicker?? What is that, im canadian and i call it a remote

    • @axeman7588
      @axeman7588 10 років тому

      Clicker or converter. My wife always says "converter". I always ask what it us supposed to convert... She says "the TV to the channel that I want"

    • @GrandHunterMan
      @GrandHunterMan 9 років тому

      I use clicker.

  • @catolove123
    @catolove123 10 років тому +5

    And I don't know if it's just Canadians but almost in every household people never wear shoes inside. It's considered rude if u don't take your shoes off before entering someone's home

    • @Justinhulk
      @Justinhulk 10 років тому

      Well im Canadian and when im at my house i never wear shoes

  • @elehcarykztorban0360
    @elehcarykztorban0360 8 років тому +4

    dude I'm Canadian too and I've apologized to walls for bumping into them 😂

  • @CANADAWOOOOOOOOO
    @CANADAWOOOOOOOOO 10 років тому +35

    Who the hell calls it a buggy, it's a shopping cart.
    Called a remote, clicker, or sometime even a converter. never a flicker.
    Garage sale, yes, but also sometimes yard sale.
    I don't even know what you are saying for this one, but we call them gutters.
    lol, never heard bath robes (or just robes) called a "house coat"
    We use napkins...
    We call it both bathroom and washroom.
    none of that slang was right, never use any of it.
    That's not a toque.
    this is the most annoying one: AGAIN WITH THE MILK BAGS! I have lived in Canada my entire life and I have never seen a bag of milk. Not in stores, not in people's homes, I have never seen them. It has to be an eastern/ontario thing.
    That video was not quick.
    Those are all the things wrong with this video. I am from BC, Canada, born, raised, and still living here.

    • @CANADAWOOOOOOOOO
      @CANADAWOOOOOOOOO 10 років тому

      ***** that's stupid lol. Rather have a jug, that is easy to store, easy to pour, and still tastes better than eastern milk

    • @CANADAWOOOOOOOOO
      @CANADAWOOOOOOOOO 10 років тому

      ***** not at all. unless you stuff your fridge with tons and tons of food. Do you have bags of chocolate milk too?

    • @taramcgee2268
      @taramcgee2268 10 років тому

      I completely agree, I live in Vancouver and we don't get our milk in bags. I went to Quebec once and they had bags of milk and it was really weird. Btw a toque is what people would call a beanie...

    • @utanoprincesamalover
      @utanoprincesamalover 10 років тому

      I use plastic milk bags all the time

    • @canda5348
      @canda5348 10 років тому +1

      Yea milk bags are only a Ontario thing.

  • @Catairo123
    @Catairo123 10 років тому +34

    i personally think EH is more polite then HUH

    • @Catairo123
      @Catairo123 10 років тому

      perfectly ok, im from nova scotia/newfoundland (the land of funny accents) but im in BC now so yeah XD

    • @hayleyc4318
      @hayleyc4318 10 років тому +2

      100% agree! I do it and I dont even realize....just like saying sorry....the rumors are true....are a polite country.

    • @JLM102764
      @JLM102764 10 років тому

      hayley c
      Hahaha I say sorry all the time!

    • @tocosofsteel5509
      @tocosofsteel5509 10 років тому +2

      I'm in Ontario Ottawa

    • @KerryProchaska
      @KerryProchaska 10 років тому

      As a Yank I like the sound of 'eh?' I agree that it is better sounding than 'huh?' or 'what's that?' (as we too often use here in the States). I had a Canadian girlfriend (Calgary) who used it sometimes as well as 'sorry' and I really liked that about her. I lived and worked in England for a while and the Brits use 'sorry' all the time too. When they use it they really don't mean it. Only if they say 'I am sorry' does it mean that they are truly sorry about something they did. I live in Seattle and have spent considerable time in Vancouver. Great surfing at Tolfino on the west coast of Vancouver Island. Haven't gone there yet but hear it is some of the best surfing on the northern west coast. We have Canadian surfers surfing all the time along the Washington State coast. Good people.

  • @bathedinridicule
    @bathedinridicule 10 років тому +5

    Why are so many comments from other Canadians sooo negative, saying THAT'S WRONG I DON'T SAY THAT or whatever...
    Guys, don't know if maybe you forgot, but Canada is HUGE and believe it or not, we're not all the same! What's true for him isn't necessarily true for you. Get over it and appreciate our national diversity!

  • @brendancampbell4963
    @brendancampbell4963 9 років тому +5

    From a Saskatchewanian:
    I noticed your "about"s and "out"'s and "houses" being different.
    And Buggy?
    Hydro was also new to me in moving here. From what I understand, most of SK's electricity is from coal-powered technologies :(
    We say napkins, not serviettes.
    We don't have milk bags. That was also new.
    We don't say supply teacher, we say "sub."
    And I noticed "eh" a lot once I crossed the Manitoba-Ontario border. I was stopped somewhere to have breakfast and I noticed it quite a bit actually.
    Some Saskatchewanian word: Bunnyhug (of course), Gitch, Gibled, Dainties, Grid Roads.

    • @TheCanadiangirl4
      @TheCanadiangirl4 8 років тому

      +Brendan Campbell (DudeBren) Cool! I love seeing the differences between provinces!

    • @oilersridersbluejays
      @oilersridersbluejays 8 років тому +2

      I'm from Saskatchewan too. I think we say about and house different here because Saskatchewan was settled by a lot of Germans, Scandinavians, and Ukrainians. We on the prairies tend to speak more harshly than they do in BC or out east. And hydro is such a weird word it seems to imply that all power comes from hydroelectricity. I've never heard of supply teacher. But I do think we say eh out here just not overly done.

    • @brendancampbell4963
      @brendancampbell4963 8 років тому +1

      oilersridersbluejays That's what I was thinking. I've learned German, and I notice that our "ou"s sounds like the German "au." Whereas the Ontarian (and Maritime) "ou" sounds like a Dutch pronunciation.
      And some people back home probably say "eh," but I feel like there are those who don't at all. Personally, I don't feel like I do. But over here, it's so common. Perhaps the proximity to québec.

    • @oilersridersbluejays
      @oilersridersbluejays 8 років тому

      That's funny you mention that, as the town where I live many older people (including my grandparents) spoke German very often, and I picked it up from there. A few towns away there are a lot of Ukrainians, and I've noticed people from that area talk slightly different, and sometimes have strange sentences.

    • @oilersridersbluejays
      @oilersridersbluejays 8 років тому

      Even the politics are often different too. We are definitely very conservative minded compared to the rest of Canada, both in voting and in lifestyle.

  • @BoboLaTuque
    @BoboLaTuque 9 років тому +6

    Just have to say this. Ontario is not all of Canada. I'm from New Brunswick; my wife is from North Dakota. SHE says "runners", I say either "sneakers" or "running shoes". "Chesterfield?" Not likely; it's a couch. "Buggy"? WHO says that? Nobody I ever met, and my mother was from Ontario. It's a shopping cart. "Flicker"? It's a "remote" or a "clicker", for the technologically illiterate. And it IS "zed". How can you have never heard of "candy bar"? Don't you watch American television or movies? Now, I will admit to a very regional phrase for it: "nut bar". But that's probably only here in southern New Brunswick. Nobody I ever knew says "eh". It's foreign here in Atlantic Canada. It's a western-Canadian thing. And that is NOT A TUQUE! Are you loopy? Shit. I have to stop. There are too many mistakes in your video. Poutine does not contain CHEESE! It has cheese CURDS.

    • @Dak17SJ
      @Dak17SJ 9 років тому

      Whereabouts in NB? From Saint John here :)

    • @BoboLaTuque
      @BoboLaTuque 9 років тому

      Yep. Saint John. I used to hang around with a Peter DesRoches; any relation?

    • @Dak17SJ
      @Dak17SJ 9 років тому

      I'm not completely sure, there very well could be but I personally don't know him.

    • @BoboLaTuque
      @BoboLaTuque 9 років тому

      OK. Just asking. I don't know who actually posted the "Canadian Accents..." thing, but I meant no disrespect. Although I have been told that some of my observations are a bit "sharp". I'm sort of like Sheldon Cooper in that regard P). Take care.

    • @MsKinsu
      @MsKinsu 9 років тому

      eh IS an maritime thing...its mostly from Newfoundland but we say it here in Nova Scotia all the time. it is defiantly not a western Canadian thing to do!! but your right that is not a toque .. a toque is what Americans would call a beanie. and its cheese curds in a poutine and they are delicious!!

  • @XanderKarr
    @XanderKarr 9 років тому +2

    Some stuff thats different on the west coast:
    1. we say "hey" not "eh" at the end of a statement to turn it into a question or add an implied question OR ask for agreement with the statement. (ie. "I'll give ya a shout, eh/hey?" mean "I will call you later. Is that okay?", "You went to the store, eh/hey?" means "Did you go to the store?" and finally "This fookin party, eh/hey?" means "What do you think of this party? Are you enjoying it?")
    2. we do not get our milk in bags, we get it in jugs or cartons.
    3. we do not say 2-4 but rather the number followed by "pack" (ie. 6-pack, 12-pack, 24-pack). We do however say Mickey for a 13oz bottle, 2-6 for a 26oz. bottle, and 40 for a 40oz bottle of liquor.
    4. a "keener" has a slightly different meaning on the west coast. It just means someone who tries very hard in school (aka a "try-hard"). Keeners are usually also teacher's-pets but it is not required. It still has a negative connotation though.
    5. We say "kays" not "klicks"
    6. To clarify for americans, toques are beanies.
    7. Vinegar on fries is very strange. We use exclusively ketchup, although I have also noticed a lot of people mixing black pepper into it but I dont know if that's super common.
    8. Shopping cart.
    9. Clicker or remote, but I say Unit Blaster because my parents are from Saskatchewan.
    10. Finally, napkins.
    I'm sure there's more differences but those or the main ones. Our accent is also more similar to California, Oregon, and Washington than the east of Canada.
    Cheers.

    • @AstroSciences
      @AstroSciences 8 років тому

      +Loc Karr thanks for clarifying.

  • @ctozer01
    @ctozer01 11 років тому +2

    This is the most accurate and thorough Canadian Accent video I have come across so far ! You did and awesome job, so adorable !

  • @rosebell8262
    @rosebell8262 9 років тому +3

    I am Canadian and I agree that We use "Sorry" A lot

  • @FoxBatinaHat
    @FoxBatinaHat 10 років тому +7

    I hit a pole in a bus once and said 'sorry'.

    • @aliyahjackson2911
      @aliyahjackson2911 10 років тому +1

      Oh my gosh I do to and when someone steps on my foot or something I even say sorry

    • @Justinhulk
      @Justinhulk 10 років тому

      i ran into a pole once and tried to make it say sorry

    • @Thecanadianwitch
      @Thecanadianwitch 10 років тому

      yeah thats a true and legit stereotype. we do say sorry a LOT, we burp we say sorry, we bump in someone we say sorry, Someone bumps in us we still say sorry,we hit into an innanimate object, we say sorry. I guess we are simply a polite nation in Canada haha

    • @lindanidalsadeck5550
      @lindanidalsadeck5550 10 років тому

      LOOOOL i hit a garbage can and sayd sorry :")

    • @Justinhulk
      @Justinhulk 10 років тому +2

      Linda Nidal Sadeck
      i hit my head on a pole and said fuck u to it

  • @mark72141
    @mark72141 8 років тому +2

    What he forgot to mention is that Canada is always on top of America (look at the map).

    • @Wand422
      @Wand422 8 років тому +2

      And the map was created by rich white northern hemisphere people. There is no up and down in space.

  • @arrow5726
    @arrow5726 10 років тому +1

    To be honest, I live in Canada, but every province/territory is different. In Alberta, we say gutters (for the rain to run off our roofs), and a buggy? I didn't understand the question, it sounded more like a shopping cart. Also, we use a 'remote control' or a 'tv control', not flicker. A sale on the front lawn would be a 'yard sale' and in your garage, is a 'garage sale'. We also say Rollie Pollie, we say both 'elastics' AND 'rubberbands'. I've never heard of 'Hydro' but we in Alberta say 'electricity' as well. We also say napkins, sweatpants/trackpants, runners/sneakers/gym shoes, bathroom/washroom/restroom, it's all the same over here. Public schools and elementary schools in Alberta are very different. Elementary is grades K-6, and public schools are for everyone who follow the modified /traditional calendars/schedules, private schools are not open to the public. We also use 'substitute teacher' or 'the sub'. Also, curfuffle? I've never heard of that! XD We just say commotion over here. And poutine is gross! Lol I visited Ontario once, and was surprised by the bagged milk! I thought it was very inconvenient, compared to what we use, a plastic jug.
    I'm not ranting and don't mean to take up the comments section, but there are a lot of differences between the east and the west of Canada. My Canadian accent is slightly different from yours, of course I know, because I can hear your accent. Love the video, it's nice to learn about different provinces. :) Keep posting more! :D

  • @KatieWinson
    @KatieWinson 10 років тому +7

    btw i dont call it a buggie or whatever, i call it a shopping cart ;)

  • @chloepeters9701
    @chloepeters9701 8 років тому +4

    A few things wrong here. I'm a Canadian and I say washroom, or bathroom. Americans tend to say restroom. I don't wear track pants I wear sweatpants or sweats. And most importantly, I go to a public elementary school. Many of my friends go to a catholic elementary school. Here in Canada we do have elementary school, which are schools that range from kindergarten to grade 8. If it's public that means it demonstrates no religion, only being loyal to the country of Canada. If it's catholic, that means students are loyal to Canada and to catholicity. That's my rant.

    • @aurora9591
      @aurora9591 7 років тому

      Chloe Peters I'm from Canada too, but I live in a small town. We have kindergarten to grade 3, grade 4 to 6 and 7 to 12. We also have a Catholic school (kindergarten to 10). I got the the public ones.

    • @irelandwells988
      @irelandwells988 7 років тому

      Chloe Peters here we have k to 7 then 8 to 12 and in some cities it's k to 6 7 to 9 and then 10 to 12

  • @htimsanit
    @htimsanit 10 років тому +1

    A couple more:
    We have a grad, not a prom - but that is changing quickly.
    University students live in residences (Rez) not dorms.
    First Nations communities are on reserves - not reservations.
    Soldiers, sailors and airmen are in the Canadian Armed Forces - or just the Forces. We've adopted a lot of American terms though, so they are also in "the military". We have military bases and stations - not camps or forts.

  • @MsOriginalxD
    @MsOriginalxD 10 років тому +1

    I am from Nova Scotia living in Ontario and I love this ... when we feel bad for someone we say "What a sin" lol

  • @frehleyscomet8812
    @frehleyscomet8812 10 років тому +7

    its amazing how different we sound! (British Columbia girl here)

    • @LethalFriendGamer
      @LethalFriendGamer 10 років тому +3

      me too! BC FOR THE WIN!

    • @mgmalherbe
      @mgmalherbe 10 років тому +2

      Same here, if you think his accent is different then you should hear someone from the maritimes.

    • @Justinhulk
      @Justinhulk 10 років тому

      BC for the Win ps im in BC

    • @CANADAWOOOOOOOOO
      @CANADAWOOOOOOOOO 10 років тому +1

      BC's the best! and we don't have weird bags of milk like ontario!

    • @clydofido
      @clydofido 10 років тому

      mgmalherbe maritimes?

  • @ThelVadamSpartan117
    @ThelVadamSpartan117 10 років тому +23

    WTF IS WRONG WITH YOU, YOU DON'T LIKE POUTINE?!?!?!?!

    • @Thecanadianwitch
      @Thecanadianwitch 10 років тому

      ikr, i guess it depends where you got it, some restaurants have the gravy way too salty which makes it bad, but normally it's f'n delicious. and you cant either just judge by looking at it, you have to try it to know how it tastes lol

    • @breachncleargaming344
      @breachncleargaming344 6 років тому +1

      Yeah I was talking to an American yesterday from California I was playing online video game. and my parents we’re going out to McDonald’s and asked me what I wanted so I said a poutine and the American goes wtf is that so I say it’s french fries gravy and cheese curds. And he goes “that’s fucking disgusting what the hell how can you eat that” I said what part about is disgusting? He said french fries and gravy wtf. I found that pretty weird whenever I’m in Costco I order their french fries and get some gravy to dip it into maybe I’m weird but I do that

  • @JeanCosta1
    @JeanCosta1 10 років тому +1

    I'm a college student (getting my Bachelor's in English) and I must say your video helped me a lot with one of my projects (about World Englishes)! Thanks a bunch! As to some of the criticism you've received from other fellow Canadians as to how you pronounce certain words, I think that if others are also from Canada and are not happy with it, they should record one themselves instead of trying to bring you down. Then people like me could see different perspectives! Congrats and thanks again!

  • @LandynCaissie
    @LandynCaissie 10 років тому +1

    Im New Brunswick Canadian, this video seems mostly correct to me, but being such a massive country there's obviously going to be lots of differences with different people growing up with different immigrated families and in different cities and town.
    The other Canadians who live further west say we've got the stereotypical accent more than they do, and though it seems none of us can hear the difference, we do hear other Candians who come from even further east and their accents are crazy stereotypical so I tend to believe it works this way for most of us.

  • @mistycandy
    @mistycandy 10 років тому +4

    i've never gotten the whole track pants/ sweat pants thing??? they're different things
    and i've never once heard a canadian where i live say 'can i have a serviette'

    • @sparkybird
      @sparkybird 10 років тому +1

      I'm not a Canadian but the family I lived with said serviette and that's when I learnt the word. Never heard them say napkin or something else 0.0

    • @volrosku.6075
      @volrosku.6075 10 років тому +2

      the term paper towel is popular to

    • @tocosofsteel5509
      @tocosofsteel5509 10 років тому +1

      I don't call them napkins

    • @Thecanadianwitch
      @Thecanadianwitch 10 років тому +1

      when i speak french i say serviette but even sometimes when i speak french i'll say napkin. My parents used to say napkin even tho they didnt speak english. sometimes i'll say paper towel, but normally when i say paper towel i mean like the brand Bounty.. to wipe stuff on objets, not myself.

  • @monroevalentine9636
    @monroevalentine9636 10 років тому +9

    I live in the states and I never heard of someone putting mayonnaise on their fries

    • @MattWilliamsTessaZimmer
      @MattWilliamsTessaZimmer 10 років тому

      I have. It's just, regional. Yeah. Because it would depend on what city/state you live in. (I'm a Michigander.) I like my fries plain and with little salt.

    • @volrosku.6075
      @volrosku.6075 10 років тому

      Matt Williams mmmmm salt+vinegar fries

    • @mrgarsdemtl472
      @mrgarsdemtl472 10 років тому +1

      French/Belgian influence = mayo with fries. British influence = vinegar with fries. American influence = ketchup with fries. Thus, in Quebec we use all three... but not all at the same time, of course!

    • @ashleyfaye6087
      @ashleyfaye6087 10 років тому +1

      I'm Canadiana and I put mayo on fries

    • @blancaarriaga98
      @blancaarriaga98 10 років тому +1

      im american and i put mayo and ketchup on my fries lol its an itailian thing

  • @tenshimoon
    @tenshimoon 10 років тому +1

    In Winnipeg Manitoba we say:
    Shopping cart
    Runners
    Napkin
    Remote (tv remote)
    Poutine is usually pronounced "poo-teen" (but some also pronounce it as "poo-tin")
    - Devil's night is also called Gate night
    - Native reserves are called "rez" or "the rez", whereas uni/college living spaces are just called a residence
    - We only say track pants IF they're actually gym-style track pants, all other styles are just called sweat pants
    - That "drive-through" beer/other alcohol store (more like "drive-up") is called a BEER VENDOR
    - Toque isn't what you're wearing, a toque is the one that's just round & fitted on your head. I think what you're wearing we just call a winter hat or ear hat.
    Some of the words you mentioned we don't use, like "keener"...

    • @arrow5726
      @arrow5726 10 років тому +1

      Alberta is the exact same way :) We also say "The States", because really, they're not "AMERICA". We're North American and there is still South America too. It almost sounds self-centred to call one's self 'all of America'. Some slang way of saying tissue in my city (not sure about other places), is Kleenix. Kleenix is actually a brand of tissues. The drying-tissues for your hands that you throw away in washrooms, are called paper-towels. Not sure if it's the same everywhere though. Just sharing a few thoughts :)

    • @tenshimoon
      @tenshimoon 10 років тому

      That's EXACTLY the same here in Manitoba too! ^^

    • @TheCanadiangirl4
      @TheCanadiangirl4 10 років тому +1

      tenshimoon Many people here (in Ontario) call them "the States" as well.

  • @AbbeyFantasty
    @AbbeyFantasty 9 років тому

    This is one of the most accurate explanation I've seen yet, not COMPLETELY but very close.

  • @justme2754
    @justme2754 9 років тому +3

    My dad was in the states once and asked for a pop and they said sorry we don't sell Popsicles

    • @Zarastroika
      @Zarastroika 8 років тому

      +SarahJane Comeau LOL

    • @masonzhang1792
      @masonzhang1792 8 років тому +3

      +Sjc Challenges and vids kinda feel sorry for americans.

    • @DeciSpades
      @DeciSpades 8 років тому

      I say pop...

  • @pelkasdunnoa
    @pelkasdunnoa 9 років тому +5

    As a german I think the canadias have the best understandable english accent.

  • @unzippedskin
    @unzippedskin 8 років тому +1

    I'm Canadian and I say please and thank-you a lot .

  • @hiredgun7186
    @hiredgun7186 9 років тому

    this is all pretty regional for Canada , out west we call them shopping carts, bathrobe, we call it power, we call them sweats, milk in a bag is an eastern thing (we get gallon jugs of milk here), we call them soft drinks.

  • @makeupsmycraft
    @makeupsmycraft 10 років тому +12

    UMMMMMMMMMM ?????? I AM CANADIAN AND I CALL A CART A CART NOT A BUGGIE AND I SAY HELLO AND I SAY Z I CALL A COUCH A COUCH i call it a bathrobe we dont care what we call bathrooms THIS IS A PARTIAL STEREO TYPE D: PLUS I DO NOT SAY EH [well maybe ONCE IN A AWHILE] but Americans say huh ALOT plus here in Alberta we get milk jugs [most of the heavily accented people live in the Ontario area] and i do say sorry alot

    • @bballbrad1
      @bballbrad1 10 років тому +2

      umm hate to break it to you but people in Ontario have the most tame accents and they get heavier the further east or west you go....

    • @makeupsmycraft
      @makeupsmycraft 10 років тому +2

      well i am down in alberta and really no one but olders men talk like that [70 or 80 years old]

    • @xDeydeyxtartelette
      @xDeydeyxtartelette 10 років тому +1

      Woah calm down! Even if you are both Canadians (and me too), accents change from place to place and province to province, it's the same with America. Even in Québec where I live the French accents can change a lot between say Montréal and Québec city. It's just how he learnt things where he's from and how you learnt it where you are from.

    • @TheCanadiangirl4
      @TheCanadiangirl4 10 років тому +1

      Whitney! down in Alberta?

    • @makeupsmycraft
      @makeupsmycraft 10 років тому

      well from where he is yes down or to the side idc

  • @missshank101
    @missshank101 10 років тому +3

    Not so much the accent, but what your saying. I myself am southern Canadian (just about as southern Canadian as it gets) and I've never myself used or heard any of your slang terms. Although, I guess I forgot how big southern Canada really is. Maybe I was a little quick to comment. I'm sure that where you live in Canada uses the words you listed. If you ever decide you make another video like this for some reason, maybe make it a little more specific.

  • @cristoferchanimak
    @cristoferchanimak 10 років тому +2

    Buggy? Flicker? As a Canadian, from Alberta, I have never heard of those words. I did notice you pronounce "lawn" as "laan." Here in Alberta, the people in the small towns say eh a LOT :). I say soda. But I say bill. Lol. This is kind of cool.

    • @rossdav99
      @rossdav99 10 років тому

      I've heard "buggy" before. We call them carts (shopping carts) here I think. Never really heard "flicker". (Short for dooma-flicker?).
      And yes, the Easterners especially pronounce "about" as "aboot". ("Ou" in general is quite "oo"). Do you really say "soda"? Soda to me is definitely "club soda" - a non-flavoured/sweetened carbonated water. The kind you use to water down things like Scotch, or spray from a clown's bottle. Pop is flavoured/sweetened carbonated drinks. The rest is pretty much right on. Fascinating to me given how close we are to the US. If you do this again with the UK, it would be even weirder I'm sure!

  • @MarilynCrosbie
    @MarilynCrosbie 10 років тому

    In BC, we called the new highway in Vancouver to the Fraser Valley the "freeway" in the 1960s when it was new to distinguish it from the old Lougheed highway that ran parallel to it.

  • @andersbreivik6873
    @andersbreivik6873 10 років тому +7

    CANADA ROCKS !!!!!!

  • @ACWW7
    @ACWW7 9 років тому +3

    The first pronunciation of poutine you said was right, because "putain" has another veeery different meaning.

    • @meggyb1161
      @meggyb1161 9 років тому +1

      The second way he pronounced it was French, and the second one is actually right. Poutine is a French word, I believe (from what my mother told me)
      If I'm wrong, I apologize :)

    • @jaredemery3918
      @jaredemery3918 9 років тому +1

      MeggyB11 Of course Poutine is a french word haha The proper pronunciation is "poo-tin", but some English speakers pronounce it "poo-tain" which means whore in French

    • @ItsAGirlThing1961
      @ItsAGirlThing1961 9 років тому +1

      no, he said poutine in the french pronunciation. im canadian, and thats how we say it at school in class bc french school

    • @jaredemery3918
      @jaredemery3918 9 років тому +3

      Hey i'm Canadian as well and I live in Montreal currently, i'm just saying in Quebec "poo-tin" is the correct pronunciation haha If you go to Quebec and ask for a putain you won't get fries.

    • @TheHaibao123
      @TheHaibao123 9 років тому +1

      Lol swear word

  • @hollyjb
    @hollyjb 10 років тому +1

    I am also from Ontario and we use grocery carts, remotes, and running shoes, haha.

  • @thecanadianbastard9019
    @thecanadianbastard9019 10 років тому +2

    The problem with this is the fact that Canada just like the states is that going over 500 to 1000 km you can have a major difference in accents. I'm looking at you Quebec

    • @thecanadianbastard9019
      @thecanadianbastard9019 10 років тому

      Also for people thinking only we say "eh" here is a bunch off of Wikipedia. Armenian, Hokkien Chinese, Japanese, French, Finnish, Italian, Greek, Hebrew, Malay, Spanish, Persian, Portuguese, Arabic, Turkish, Korean and Catalan. en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eh (and no i didnt go and change it)

    • @hunxho.1k
      @hunxho.1k 10 років тому

      Spanish people don't say eh

    • @hunxho.1k
      @hunxho.1k 10 років тому

      French and Italians don't say eh either

  • @Macswaggens
    @Macswaggens 9 років тому +7

    I'm from Edmonton, some of those things you said aren't the same here...

    • @ZeroGD
      @ZeroGD 9 років тому +4

      Same I'm from Calgary and we don't say buggy or flicker

    • @hyyyyydro
      @hyyyyydro 9 років тому +1

      Same here in New Brunswick

    • @je_ss
      @je_ss 9 років тому +1

      same here in ontario

    • @je_ss
      @je_ss 9 років тому +1

      Jess Kalfordactually,ive heard buggy a bit, but mainly its shopping cart

    • @breaghabateman2129
      @breaghabateman2129 9 років тому +2

      +Jacob Code i'm from Alberta and we dot say things like that.....

  • @melissathibodeau1423
    @melissathibodeau1423 10 років тому +5

    who the fuck says curfuffle .. I don't know ANYBODY or met ANYBODY In Canada who ever said that. ive been to every single province. and stayed for more then 2 weeks at a time.

    • @kenzierose2547
      @kenzierose2547 10 років тому +3

      Well you just met one... because i do.

    • @OneWeekTime
      @OneWeekTime 10 років тому

      And now there's TWO! I say that all the time, alone with canoodle, another favourite of mine :)

    • @edieford710
      @edieford710 10 років тому

      almost every teacher i've ever had, and myself.

  • @weronikaswierk9762
    @weronikaswierk9762 8 років тому

    I'm totally addicted to this video!

  • @5CapriCe5
    @5CapriCe5 10 років тому +1

    In Saskatchewan we are not cool enough for milk in bags. Just super expensive plastic jugs and cardboard that likes to fall apart

  • @davidbroughall3782
    @davidbroughall3782 9 років тому +4

    That is NOT a toque.

  • @paigequinn1871
    @paigequinn1871 10 років тому +3

    I live in Saskatchewan and we don't have bagged milk

    • @mikeallain8709
      @mikeallain8709 10 років тому

      I think we only have them in Atlantic

    • @CANADAWOOOOOOOOO
      @CANADAWOOOOOOOOO 10 років тому +3

      We don't either in BC. It must be an ontario thing, and they seem to think all of Canada has it.

    • @samanthawang2594
      @samanthawang2594 9 років тому

      Yeah I'm from Alberta and I've NEVER seen a bag of milk

    • @meggyb1161
      @meggyb1161 9 років тому

      I live in Ontario, and when I was younger, my parents would have milk bags. Now we have jugs, but some of my friends and family still have bags. :)

    • @CANADAWOOOOOOOOO
      @CANADAWOOOOOOOOO 9 років тому

      MeggyB11 bags are so stupid, I can't even understand how anyone would possibly use them.

  • @NorCalCubsFan
    @NorCalCubsFan 10 років тому +1

    Thanks for posting this video. I love Canada. I have toured all through British Columbia and the Yukon Territory. My best friend and I are planning a trip to Toronto and Montreal next summer. I can't wait. this American will be glad to spend my money in a friendly nation. :-)

  • @ChristopherLaRock
    @ChristopherLaRock 10 років тому +2

    Our accents are similar. But I'm from Michigan, and that's close to Canada. I call icing frosting. And most Americans use ketchup on fries. Potato bug? Rolly polly.

    • @abbagailedington1168
      @abbagailedington1168 10 років тому

      Oh my gosh I love that word you use for potato bug! Rolly polly...it's so much more fun!

    • @the1andonlykid123
      @the1andonlykid123 10 років тому

      in BC we call them wood bugs

    • @ashleyleblanc7140
      @ashleyleblanc7140 10 років тому +2

      the1andonlykid123 So that's what other people are taking about when they say "Rolly Polly" and "Potato Bug" ITS A WOOD BUG.

  • @lifeoflexia4557
    @lifeoflexia4557 9 років тому +1

    I am from Australia and we are sooooo similar! I love Canadians!

    • @eyecomeinpeace2707
      @eyecomeinpeace2707 5 років тому

      OH please do not say that!!! I am Canadian. And if anything, I would rather be similar to Americans than Aussies and Britts. Ewwwwww…….

  • @cayley7783
    @cayley7783 10 років тому +1

    Milk does not come in a bag in Alberta. Also, proper poutine is with cheese curds.

  • @chrissayah
    @chrissayah 9 років тому

    I'm sorry, but I'm from Montreal, Canada, and we use the etymology "aluminium". Most likely because we have both French and English as official languages and speak both. Aluminium is used in French etymology so we use it in English as well. Other than that we do say shopping cart and trolley depending on the sub cities in Montreal.

  • @emilylong2270
    @emilylong2270 9 років тому +1

    My family used to buy the cartons of milk but when I was little it was so heavy for me and I spilled it so my mom decided to by the bags of milk XD

  • @Legoninjaassassin990
    @Legoninjaassassin990 9 років тому +2

    I've noticed that a lot of these words are the same in Canadian as they are in Scottish English and English English (if that makes sense)
    Give u a shout
    Chocolate bar
    Drinking age
    Kurfuffle
    Metric system
    The whole ay thing (with questions)
    Vinager on chips

  • @lyndahope1567
    @lyndahope1567 10 років тому

    Me and my family and everyone - basically - in my area call the bug that rolls into a bug when you touch it, a "rolly polly"

  • @DeNihility
    @DeNihility 10 років тому +2

    Coming from BC, I can tell that the west side is totally different from the rest of Canada...

    • @AfKman101
      @AfKman101 10 років тому +1

      believe me, im canadian living in ontario, and i have friends which have deep roots in Canada, and they sound completely different from this, they dont sound like newfies but sort of like Alberta, and so forth, For me i speak just with a "Average north american" accent, though sometimes, i get some canadian words shot out.

  • @AhmadElsayedM
    @AhmadElsayedM 10 років тому

    Nice video Dude ! loved it :) Greetings from Sudan

  • @TheUnicorns21
    @TheUnicorns21 10 років тому

    I think they put the "water fountain" thing in there because in certain parts of america, people say "bubbler" instead

  • @2needtoknow
    @2needtoknow 10 років тому

    I'm from Victoria and we say cart or buggy, couch or chesterfield, we do not get milk in a bag but in a one or two litre cartan or a 4 litre jug. We do say things like if it is barley raining "it is spitting out" and in Victoria if some one is out they are "out and about" and if we are north of Victoria on the Island we are "up Island"

  • @NyanKitty01Kawaii
    @NyanKitty01Kawaii 10 років тому

    It's interesting to see something you thought was so natural in your country seem so bizarre to someone else. Nice video dude :p

  • @pauline-yf3km
    @pauline-yf3km 10 років тому

    My husband was born and raised in B.C....Campbell River, Vancouver Island and Vancouver. He did have a few words that made him disclose his heritage. LOL Aboot, runners, pop, buggy, clicker, you guys, washroom, zed, hydro. One last one that came up was decal. He pronounced it as deck-cul. We pronounce it Dee-cal. He didn't care for poutine either. Mayo on fries? Yuuuuccck! Vinegar? YES! Milk in a bag? What kinda bag? Never heard of that. Oh yeah, and duct tape. He called it gaff tape. I'm a Floridian and I now say EH all the time. And the word Ya in place of the word Yes is used in B.C. a lot too. Liked the vid. Eh

    • @AdrianaPatricioxo
      @AdrianaPatricioxo 10 років тому

      Milk in a bag.. Mostly in Ontario. It's a plastic bag filled with milk that you put in a milk container so it doesn't spill. You cut one of the top corners of the bag to pour milk. Search up "Milk bag container" on google images and you should get a good example of what it looks like. Also searching "How to use a milk bag" on youtube could also give you a good example of how it looks like and how it works. Hope this helped you :)

  • @kinah1815
    @kinah1815 8 років тому +1

    I also call a "clicker" a remote and a "buggy" a cart

  • @xpg2011
    @xpg2011 10 років тому

    I'm Canadian. Torontonian
    all you said is so true!

  • @jamaicasky
    @jamaicasky 9 років тому

    that was pretty accurate... i had fun listening to you!!.... you covered a lot of stuff. tyty!

  • @ThiiefGirl
    @ThiiefGirl 10 років тому

    You're accent is so awesome! I'm Aussie =) Thanks for showing this video!

  • @samanthajacobs1588
    @samanthajacobs1588 10 років тому

    Hey I am from Newfoundland and I now realize how different we are from Canada. Thanks for the video!

  • @KarmicOmen
    @KarmicOmen 7 років тому

    I'm from New England and you say a lot of the same things that we do, pronunciations and all.

  • @TheChickenlittle11
    @TheChickenlittle11 8 років тому

    i have a friend from Lower Sackville and i definitely noticed something when she would say "About" but really its like any word with ou that i hear the difference between American accent and a canadian accent.

  • @MrKilt99
    @MrKilt99 10 років тому +1

    And I love to put mayonnaise on my fries. I'm from Ontario and I love that hat

  • @lolidays27
    @lolidays27 11 років тому

    Being from Québec, I smiled like a maniac when you said poutine! XD

  • @am34
    @am34 8 років тому +2

    buggy and flicker? I've never heard that in Ontario ever

    • @KarmicOmen
      @KarmicOmen 7 років тому

      delfiglio I'm from New England and we say carriage/cart and clicker.

  • @charlottethomsen8076
    @charlottethomsen8076 9 років тому

    Milk in a bag: the milk comes in a 1.5 litre bag, and you put it in a little milk bag holder and you snip the corner off so you can pour it into your glass, or on your cereal.

    • @oilersridersbluejays
      @oilersridersbluejays 8 років тому

      That sounds like a lot of hassle. Our jugs and cartons out west work remarkably well.

    • @charlottethomsen8076
      @charlottethomsen8076 8 років тому

      oilersridersbluejays It actually isn't a lot of hassle at all! It's very easy to hold and the bags are recyclable and small.

  • @theOneGuy113
    @theOneGuy113 7 років тому

    EastTexan here, we call carbonated beverages like sprite coke here. Washrooms are restrooms and no milk bags ;)

  • @thatguythatsagoalie
    @thatguythatsagoalie 10 років тому

    Massachusetts they call the water fountain a "Bubbler", that maybe why the question was sent.

  • @oilersridersbluejays
    @oilersridersbluejays 8 років тому

    There is regional differences in Canada. I'm from Saskatchewan and never heard of Devil's Night, a buggy, a flicker, or hydro. Here they are called October 30th, a shopping cart, a remote control, and power company/power bill. Interesting to know!

    • @MrMurph-fg2wn
      @MrMurph-fg2wn 8 років тому

      Actually I'm from Ontario and have never head any of those terms before ether

  • @danaraed
    @danaraed 10 років тому

    I grew up in Ontario and moved back to Saskatchewan when I was 12. I can always spot an Ontario accent.

  • @ramiroandresec
    @ramiroandresec 10 років тому +1

    Great video man!

  • @johnthom2910
    @johnthom2910 9 років тому +1

    Ya know that what you call some things in Ontario are called something else in the in the Atlantic Provinces, and no doubt something else again on the west coast.

  • @Hobosvilliaz
    @Hobosvilliaz 10 років тому

    this year, in my town, we had snow till the end of may (i'm from Canada btw)

  • @willychrispin1093
    @willychrispin1093 10 років тому

    I live in florida but half of my family lives in Matinoba and Ontario and I have that type of accent . I think it sounds cool .

  • @TheFruitbatMusic
    @TheFruitbatMusic 10 років тому

    ahh me and my bf are planning to move to ontaria within the next 3 years... Were originally welsh and its nice to know that a lot of the terminology is the same!

  • @123benny4
    @123benny4 10 років тому

    Eh replaces a question tag. You like coffee, don't you? Instead people would say, You like coffee, eh? Or another example. He is a good guy, isn't he? = He is a good guy, eh? So we use EH to replace the grammatically correct way to change a statement into a confirmatory question. I say ZED, pop, and I speak French only because I made an effort to learn it. Now I live in Quebec. Thanks for this. I enjoyed your video!

  • @esdckid
    @esdckid 10 років тому

    I have to say, you are as Ontarian as you can get. :) I'm from bc and in bc we use a lot of American phrases and meanings. Milk bags are used in Ontario Quebec and some other province out east. We use cartons.. :D a lot of phrases are also said differently which was funny to see. Great work! :)

  • @JinxyVision
    @JinxyVision 10 років тому

    They are called cement bugs in MB, we also have drive thrus where you can buy beer usually or coolers. They dont really sell hard alcohol. It's like last call but you can drive with it if it's not open. The one I remember going to was called The SPike,

    • @JinxyVision
      @JinxyVision 10 років тому

      Milk in jugs not bags xD you know the works.

  • @lyndahope1567
    @lyndahope1567 10 років тому

    Me and my family in Canada call the "tv remote" a "clicker" :)
    Fun facts, the more you know, huh? 😊

  • @13djou
    @13djou 9 років тому

    Omg!! We have a drive thru liquor store across the bridge in Québec. You pull up to the window and order your case of beer. You pop your trunk and they bring it out to your car.

  • @kinah1815
    @kinah1815 8 років тому +1

    I'm from British Columbia and I call "potato bugs" wood bugs idk

  • @cassandrac938
    @cassandrac938 8 років тому +1

    I'm from niagara falls Ontario and I don't call it a flicker and I call it a shopping cart but most of the other ones r what I say! I say check lol. most Canadians do say Zey instead of Zed

  • @PackCorey
    @PackCorey 10 років тому

    Some scrambled egges, Canadian Bacon, and maybe syrup! Man, you don't know what you missin'!

  • @moondreamer7
    @moondreamer7 10 років тому

    Canadian from Ontario here and this guy is pretty accurate from my experience. Only thing I disagreed with is that we call it yard sales, not garage sales. Garage sales are for rainy days and also it's usually on a Saturday but also on Sundays. Also the milk in bags is not Canada wide either. I also say Zee not Zed but that is probably a habbit picked up from being close to the American border and watching their tv.

  • @blueberrykiss124
    @blueberrykiss124 10 років тому +1

    Not all Canadians get their milk in bags. Pretty sure Ontario is the only province that gets milk that way. Not 100% sure but I know that British Columbia and Alberta get it in jugs and cartons.

  • @yezill
    @yezill 9 років тому +1

    1) a shopping cart
    2) a remote / clicker
    From Ontario, Canada

  • @TheUnicorns21
    @TheUnicorns21 10 років тому +1

    And also the mayonnaise on fries is more of a european thing but i know that because I'm german

  • @aimsters101
    @aimsters101 10 років тому

    Whenever I need someone to repeat something I don't say "eh?" I say "pardon?" haha. Also I LOVE poutine. I also say sorry way too much. Like, someone will bump into me and I'm the one to say sorry and I usually say it multiple times. I'm American but my mom and her mom is from Canada. The rest of the line on my mom's side is German.

  • @tobi8220
    @tobi8220 9 років тому

    I've lived in America my whole life (born as as well as raised) and I seem like I am more Canadian than American. Now isn't that weird.

  • @cutejessieboo321
    @cutejessieboo321 10 років тому

    Mockingjay pin necklace.
    Man, I love you so much right now

  • @ahumanname8414
    @ahumanname8414 10 років тому

    In Alberta, we have jugs for our milk. I'm pretty cure bags are only in the eastern part, the western, and probably eastern too, have jugs and cartons. I haven't seen a bag of milk any time I've gone shopping, except in Ontario when i'm visiting an uncle

  • @Raine600
    @Raine600 10 років тому +1

    I'm Canadian and ive actually never had milk in a bag we get it in a jug in Alberta

    • @billopi9352
      @billopi9352 10 років тому

      Im in saskachewan and we do in jug too :)

  • @MarblesFromSpace
    @MarblesFromSpace 10 років тому

    I am canadian as well, from Ontario, and use such different words! Like buggy... and couch... Track pants are not the same as sweat pants. I use napkins... washroom isn't always a bathroom. Public is a different category from elementary. Public vs Private vs Catholic, usually. Elementary is often called Primary in other countries though. I think you just missed the word. and ALL the slang I've never heard. This is fascinating.

  • @luizaawecka8207
    @luizaawecka8207 10 років тому

    Haha cool video, enjoyed it a lot!

  • @cannack
    @cannack 10 років тому

    it depends on cultural backround and region, people from the Atlantic provinces talk alot like people from Scotland and Ireland.