КОМЕНТАРІ •

  • @nrrork
    @nrrork 2 роки тому +790

    We have four directions:
    Up north, down south, out west, and back east.

    • @samanthab1923
      @samanthab1923 2 роки тому +22

      I always thought that was cute when Californians said Back East 😂

    • @kurtjohnson3917
      @kurtjohnson3917 2 роки тому +5

      Exactly!

    • @maryclarafjare
      @maryclarafjare 2 роки тому +3

      😄😄

    • @Abbecskin
      @Abbecskin 2 роки тому +24

      This person understands a map!

    • @warped2875
      @warped2875 2 роки тому +25

      @@samanthab1923
      Preface, me: Born in Texas, basically grew up in Oregon.
      Whenever I meet somebody from Texas, I say, "Oh, you're from back East?", just to see if they get their knickers in a knot over it. ...because, well, Texans consider themselves to be Southerners. Most are polite about it (being southerners, you know), but some get down right indignant over it.

  • @davevandebunte2949
    @davevandebunte2949 2 роки тому +437

    As a lifelong (47 years) Michigan resident, I have never heard "Going up North" to mean just going camping. "Going up North always meant you were traveling somewhere north of where you are, but normally "up North" very generally speaking, usually refers to the top half of the Lower Peninsula (north of Cadillac?), and the U.P.

    • @dannykyle7950
      @dannykyle7950 2 роки тому +37

      Growing up in Detroit, going up north always meant north of Standish. That's when you knew you were out of civilization.

    • @robertl4824
      @robertl4824 2 роки тому +42

      Michigander here too, to me it meant getting away from the city up north and enjoying the outdoors, usually involving water.

    • @JoshColletta
      @JoshColletta 2 роки тому +30

      Also a Michigander. Coming from the southern tier of counties, I've always heard it in relation to anything north of US 10, so roughly a line from Ludington to Bay City.

    • @justinnink2396
      @justinnink2396 2 роки тому +37

      Yup, I've never heard it used to generally refer to camping. It always entails driving north for a while.

    • @jennyprorock
      @jennyprorock 2 роки тому +32

      In traverse it means the UP.

  • @gretchenmyers1279
    @gretchenmyers1279 2 роки тому +228

    As a native Ohioan , I grew up with drunk referred to as being schnockered, and being shnookered as having one pulled over on you/tricked

  • @CarlGorn
    @CarlGorn 2 роки тому +27

    I'm a Minnesotan, born and raised, and I've never heard anybody from this state refer to "stop and go lights." Stoplights, sure. Traffic lights, absolutely. But never stop and go lights.
    Minnesota also used "go up north" to refer to fishing/camping/hunting trips in the state's more wild and wooded northern section, or even a trip to a vacation cabin along one of our many shores.

    • @marywatkins6798
      @marywatkins6798 2 роки тому

      Hot dish? Can you expand on that one, asks the Iowan!

  • @th3b0yg
    @th3b0yg 2 роки тому +29

    Oh man. I don't know how this guy is so consistently funny. He makes it look easy.
    Great channel!

  • @davidyoungquist6074
    @davidyoungquist6074 2 роки тому +85

    Snookered means you've been fooled it taken advantage of. Schnockered is excessively drunk.

    • @bnelson5378
      @bnelson5378 2 роки тому +2

      We have never used snookered for tricking, but schnookered. Perhaps a distant ancestor roaming the great cornfields tricked a drunk and the word was cooped to mean both. I had some really bizarre ancestors, so wouldn’t surprise me. One even became president...he was known for his love of booze.

    • @davidyoungquist6074
      @davidyoungquist6074 2 роки тому +2

      @@bnelson5378 it could be. My grandma used snookered to mean tricked. Schnockered seems to come from the Swedish side of the family. But we were from Western Illinois, so it might have been a regional thing too.

    • @lesterstone8595
      @lesterstone8595 2 роки тому

      I agree. You're right!

    • @maidenminnesota1
      @maidenminnesota1 2 роки тому +1

      Yeah, that's the way I've heard it here.

    • @geebrewer8186
      @geebrewer8186 Рік тому +1

      yep, I grew u p on the west coast and that is exactly how we use them here too

  • @edison700
    @edison700 2 роки тому +133

    I'm from MN and have never heard tough tomatoes, but my mother and grandparent's use the phrase "tough cookies" all the time to mean the same thing. Also when driving us to school my mother would always say "hang onto your cookies" if she was going to accelerate or brake very suddenly. Can also confirm you have not lived until you've had tater tot hotdish.

    • @stephanied6711
      @stephanied6711 2 роки тому

      I’m from Illinois and never heard of it either

    • @spddiesel
      @spddiesel 2 роки тому

      @@stephanied6711 also an Illinois native, and I remember using tough titties as a kid. We also used tits as a replacement for awesome. Like we'd say "dude, those new Craigers look tits!"

    • @LauraEilers
      @LauraEilers 2 роки тому +4

      I don't know tough tomatoes. But cookies, t**ies, yes. And my mom says "hard cheese"

    • @ChrisDreher
      @ChrisDreher 2 роки тому +2

      I grew up with tough tomatoes 🍅 in Minnesota.

    • @craigwillms61
      @craigwillms61 2 роки тому +5

      Concur with the tater tot hotdish, it's a MN staple. Do not call it a casserole!!!

  • @TonyPucci11
    @TonyPucci11 2 роки тому +190

    Minnesota may be the “Land of 10,000 Lakes”, yet most of those lakes are in the northern half of the state. Myself included, I’ve known many people that own a “family cabin” on a lake up north, hence “Going up North” basically equals “going to the family cabin”. I’m very lucky in that my grandparents (who lived in Minneapolis) bought a cabin in 1961; it’s still in the family.

    • @CallMeAL1
      @CallMeAL1 2 роки тому +5

      Fun fact. MN may be the state of 10k lakes but Wisconsin has more lakes than MN. 🤣

    • @beenaplumber8379
      @beenaplumber8379 2 роки тому +13

      @@CallMeAL1 We don't claim all of our lakes on our license plates. There are something like 17k or 18k officially named lakes in MN and tons of unnamed ponds.

    • @artao5
      @artao5 2 роки тому +1

      @@CallMeAL1 You beat me to it LOL

    • @stevedietrich8936
      @stevedietrich8936 2 роки тому +30

      @@CallMeAL1 Even more fun fact, if Minnesota (10 acre minimum) stooped to the same low standards as Wisconsin (2.2 acre minimum) Minnesota would have over 22,000 lakes to Wisconsin's 15,000,

    • @DakotaCelt1
      @DakotaCelt1 2 роки тому +2

      I"ve heard this alot also in ND along with heading to the lakes Or Lake country..... and it's not ones in ND. I"ve also heard Up NOrt also referring to the North Shore.

  • @elizabethhoover4672
    @elizabethhoover4672 Рік тому +15

    Fun fact about the origin of the word hotdish (I learned this only a few months ago): it was birthed from the great depression when people would scrounge together whatever they had in their refrigerator and bake it into something that was at least a hot dish, since people had to budget and couldn't afford to eat elaborate meals or cook varied entrees and side dishes throughout the week.
    I've grown up eating many hotdishes. They bring a smile to my face.
    This channel is very entertaining! Thank you for this wonderful content.
    -an appreciative Minnesotan viewer

    • @ColonelSandersLite
      @ColonelSandersLite Рік тому +1

      We have them in missouri but I have never heard that particular term before. Always just heard them refereed to as a casserole.

    • @elizabethhoover4672
      @elizabethhoover4672 Рік тому +1

      @@ColonelSandersLite Love it. Sometimes we say casserole, too. But we know a casserole and hotdish is one in the same.

    • @kathybouziane5269
      @kathybouziane5269 Рік тому

      Ahhhh.....tater tot casserole ! So satisfying on cold winter nights for supper ;-)

  • @arachnid40
    @arachnid40 2 роки тому +9

    My father was Norwegian, and came from the Midwest, he and his family have always pronounced Uff Da a little different. We said the first part with and "OO" sound

  • @davidray6962
    @davidray6962 2 роки тому +426

    You really missed expressing your mistake in skipping the Midwest by saying "ope".

    • @BenShapirosLowerLip
      @BenShapirosLowerLip 2 роки тому +51

      "Ope, sorry" is something I say on a daily basis lol.

    • @GludiusMaximus
      @GludiusMaximus 2 роки тому +7

      Oops is more what i say

    • @jbs2763
      @jbs2763 2 роки тому +5

      Multiple times a day bro

    • @calicoathena
      @calicoathena 2 роки тому +7

      I don't believe this is a Midwestern word though. I know it's the stereotype but its found elsewhere.

    • @gilliganallmighty3
      @gilliganallmighty3 2 роки тому +5

      or "oof"

  • @spacecowboy2957
    @spacecowboy2957 2 роки тому +111

    In Minnesota, "going up north" means literally traveling north. One can go up north to go camping or to go fishing or to visit one's relatives, etc. It's distinct and specific to Minnesotans to use specific words when describing directions. Those words are up, down, over/out and they refer to north, south & east/west, respectively. For instance, Duluth is "up north" as it is geographically north of where I am. Reflexively, Faribault is "down south" while east & west can be described as being either over or out. If one is traveling east or west, then he/she is going over to Wisconsin (east) or over to South Dakota (west). Although, this usually implies that one is only traveling to a bordering state, specifically to an area that is still close to the border (or within the state if traveling a shorter distance). If one is traveling "out east" or "out west," it is implied that he/she is traveling a good distance further. But, when describing where someone or something is in relation to where one is, it's described as being "out east/west."
    Example: "I'm planning to go fishing up north this weekend but I have to get my brother's boat at his house down in Rochester and I have to drop my dog off at my friend's house over in Stillwater first."

    • @flyingkitty67
      @flyingkitty67 2 роки тому +1

      Yes, exactly.

    • @bluesoup1240
      @bluesoup1240 2 роки тому +8

      Lived in Indiana, Ohio, Wisconsin and Utah. Everywhere I’ve lived I’ve heard up, down, over and out used in the same way you have described. I’m not even sure it’s specific to Midwest.

    • @thevirtualtraveler
      @thevirtualtraveler 2 роки тому +5

      I moved to GA from MN when I was 14 and it always annoyed me so much when people in GA would say they were going 'down to ____" when the thing they were going to was north, east, or west of us.

    • @spacecowboy2957
      @spacecowboy2957 2 роки тому +3

      @@thevirtualtraveler I, too, often get tired of everyone else being wrong

    • @rickposter3534
      @rickposter3534 2 роки тому +2

      I grew up in Iowa and when we went to Minnesota, and nowhere else, we said we were "going up north." I'm not sure it was an Iowa thing, per se, but it was something our family said.

  • @davidray6962
    @davidray6962 2 роки тому +208

    In Arkansas, getting "snookered" means you were fooled, conned. (I can see this being related to the British version, as pool hustling is a common con.)

    • @janinestearns7288
      @janinestearns7288 2 роки тому +28

      Schnookered or snookered meant fooled, conned, cheated in Illinois as well.

    • @DougVanDorn
      @DougVanDorn 2 роки тому +13

      Same here, and I'm from Illinois.

    • @markholm7050
      @markholm7050 2 роки тому +13

      Same here. Grew up in suburbs of St. Louis, college in Wisconsin, lived a decade in Chicago suburbs. Pretty sure “snookered” as conned was idiom in those places. Now live near Pittsburgh, PA. Can’t say I’ve heard it here.

    • @Ulysses_DM_
      @Ulysses_DM_ 2 роки тому +6

      The same, from South Dakota.

    • @pandachickenmama
      @pandachickenmama 2 роки тому +34

      Schnookered and "sh-knock-erd" are two different things in Missouri. Schnookered is to be fooled or taken advantage of and "sh-knock-erd" is drunk.

  • @Bazzookie
    @Bazzookie Рік тому +13

    I think the thing that's unique to the term "Up North" is that, at least in Michigan, and I imagine it's similar in Minnesota as well, 95% of the time the term will involve water. If you're going up to a cabin it's probably on or near a lake and if you're camping similar story. It's pretty interesting because most people born and raised in Michigan grow up with some for of connection to the water as there isn't a single part of the state really devoid of it, and much of the state is surrounded by coastline.

    • @CyGea
      @CyGea Рік тому

      I'm from Wisconsin, and I've always connected "Up North" with Lake Superior.

  • @ungrave5231
    @ungrave5231 2 роки тому +13

    I live in Alberta Canada, and I find that a lot of our fun vocab is just from the midwest. Surprised that "gym shoes" is not a normal way to refer to the shoes you'd use in a gym.

    • @ungrave5231
      @ungrave5231 2 роки тому

      Also, yeah they are called stop lights and go lights. "ope, it's go light."

    • @Blondie42
      @Blondie42 Рік тому +1

      I live in Washington state and to us that is the exact definition that we use, any shoe worn only in a gymnasium are gym shoes. And sneakers are type of shoe.

  • @peterzavon3012
    @peterzavon3012 2 роки тому +98

    The term "gym shoes" was widely used in the 1950s,1960s and perhaps before. The term refers to the shoes that were permitted/required for use during gym class (i.e. physical education). They were also sometimes called "sneakers" but "tennis shoes" are/were slightly different. "Gym shoes" was a term in use before all those specialty shoes came along (walking shoes, running shoes, tennis shoes, etc.)

    • @BirdTube83
      @BirdTube83 2 роки тому +15

      I just commented about this, you couldn't wear dress shoes on the gym floor. You needed your gym shoes.

    • @lairdcummings9092
      @lairdcummings9092 2 роки тому +12

      Sneakers, gym shoes, and tennis shoes were interchangeable in my experience (California, Colorado, Maryland). Basically, non-marring* grippy shoes with rubber soles and canvas uppers. It was in the later part of my highschool years that more specialized shoes started becoming commonly available.
      * Can't be leaving black streaks on the gym floor, or the janitor (custodian) would all over your case.

    • @samanthab1923
      @samanthab1923 2 роки тому +1

      It’s always been sneakers for me but different ones for different sports. Adidias SuperStars for basketball & Stan Smith’s for tennis. Track shoes for CC.

    • @mariateresamondragon5850
      @mariateresamondragon5850 2 роки тому +5

      @@lairdcummings9092 I totally agree with you (grew up in California). The term "tennis shoes" long predates the more specialized "running shoes", "walking shoes", etc.

    • @O2life
      @O2life 2 роки тому +2

      @@baronvonslambert We did, too, in the Mountain West. Though I don't think I would refer to any shoes as gym shoes outside of jr high/high school.

  • @flyingkitty67
    @flyingkitty67 2 роки тому +113

    As a Minnesotan I usually just hear stop light not stop and go light. Also, I find uff da is used most when you're caught off guard by temperature, weight, amount, etc. Ex: Picking up a small child or pet: "Uffda, you're getting big." Going outside from an air conditioned space and getting slapped in the face with hot humid air: "Uffda, it's hot out." Checking a price tag: "Uffda!"

    • @calessel3139
      @calessel3139 2 роки тому +11

      Honestly, I grew up in the mid-west (St Louis, Mo), and have traveled extensively across the US for many years, and have only ever heard of them being call "stop lights" or "traffic lights." I've never heard anyone, anywhere call them "stop and go lights." I'm not saying there aren't some small regions that call it that, but I think it's pretty uncommon.

    • @flaffer69
      @flaffer69 2 роки тому +2

      @@calessel3139 Seconded. No one in Chicago calls it that either.

    • @oliviaerror4203
      @oliviaerror4203 Рік тому +2

      I’m from northern Wisconsin and we use the term stop and go lights all the time, it’s probably the main term that we use for that

    • @angiwaggoner9865
      @angiwaggoner9865 Рік тому +2

      Over here on the West coast that translates to "Damn!" but pronounce it "day-am" to remove the anger factor that often goes with the word.

    • @TheDEM1995
      @TheDEM1995 Рік тому

      Seconding the STL bit (STL County). I would never call them traffic lights or "stop-and-go lights". I would only call them stoplights.

  • @marilynparmelee
    @marilynparmelee 2 роки тому +40

    I've lived in Michigan most of my life, going "up north" is not a term I've ever used for going camping. For us, it means going to the upper half of Michigan or over the bridge.

    • @jonc4403
      @jonc4403 2 роки тому +2

      Whereas here in the Southeast it means anywhere north of Kentucky.

    • @marilynparmelee
      @marilynparmelee 2 роки тому

      @@jonc4403 LOL

    • @shirleybalinski4535
      @shirleybalinski4535 Рік тому +5

      I was raised in the UP of Michigan . Never heard the term " UP North" until I married & moved to Detroit area!! We always said we were going " down below"!! Go figure!!

    • @marilynparmelee
      @marilynparmelee Рік тому +1

      @@shirleybalinski4535 LOL. Depends on where ya live in Michigan I guess.

    • @Nyx773
      @Nyx773 Рік тому +2

      I grew up in Mid-Michigan. "Up North" means the northern half of the lower peninsula. If someone was going to the U.P., they always said "going to the U.P.", not "up north".
      I think because going across the bridge seemed like a monumental feat. Plus it's a totally different culture.

  • @jonathanvanderpol1435
    @jonathanvanderpol1435 2 роки тому +18

    "It turns out the Midwest extends beyond just Indiana and Chicago." That one, sir, made me laugh out loud. Also an "impenetrable fruit". Having grown up and lived in Wisconsin most of my life, my female friends and relatives called what you called a "hair binder" a hair clip. The large hair elastics are called scrunchies. The normal small hair elastics I've called hair elastics or hair bands.

    • @vortexathletic
      @vortexathletic Рік тому +1

      I’m also from Wisconsin, and we called a car with a broken light a “one-eyed Jack.” But I’m not sure if that’s most Wisconsinites or just my family.

  • @dtlongrifles
    @dtlongrifles 2 роки тому +5

    'Up North' is used a lot in Michigan. When I was a kid in the 60s and 70s "Up North" was anywhere north of St. John's, Michigan but over the years we have had to travel farther and farther north in order to find, "Up North." Houghton Lake and all points north of there are definitely Up North and, of course, the entire U.P. (the Upper Peninsula) is Up North. And, yes the phrase is often used in conjunction with camping, hunting, and fishing depending on what time of year it is.

  • @kennethcook9406
    @kennethcook9406 2 роки тому +44

    I just had an "Ah-Ha!" moment when you mentioned "schnookered"
    It's likely from the Yiddish "Fershnickered"
    Like Mel Brooks' Rabbi Tuckman in "Robbin Hood: Men in Tights"
    Rabbi: "This is sacramental wine, it's only used to bless things. . . Wait a minute! There's things here, there's trees, there's birds, there's rocks, there's squirrels; let's bless them all until we get fershnickered!"

    • @derekwright2388
      @derekwright2388 2 роки тому +3

      Fershnickered became "fish knickered" for me due to being Fershnickered and trying to say I was Fershnickered and instead I said I was fish knickered

    • @kynn23
      @kynn23 2 роки тому +1

      This was EXACTLY what came to my mind as soon as "schnookered" appeared in Laurence's video!

  • @michaelw8262
    @michaelw8262 2 роки тому +38

    I've heard schnockered as a term for getting drunk, but never schnookered.

    • @McLeod2022
      @McLeod2022 2 роки тому +8

      agreed. schnockered is drunk... schnookered is cheated/fooled.

    • @joywest7297
      @joywest7297 2 роки тому +2

      Agree. Schnockered=drunk.
      Schnookered refers to cheating or beating someone out of something. SE Kansas

    • @kathywiseley4382
      @kathywiseley4382 2 роки тому

      Agree!

    • @justanotheranimeprofilepic
      @justanotheranimeprofilepic 2 роки тому +2

      No if you live in Wisconsin you go up north with the buds and get schnookered on a few brewskis with buds

    • @McLeod2022
      @McLeod2022 2 роки тому

      @@justanotheranimeprofilepic ill buy first round. loser pays bail. winner buys second round.

  • @rebeccabauer792
    @rebeccabauer792 2 роки тому +75

    Minnesota-“Up North” refers to the cabin, as in “Yeah, we’re headin’ up north for the weekend.” Nobody asks where. It’s understood-going to a lake cabin.
    Also, we use the infamous hot dish. A Minnesota hot dish might also contain wild rice for regional authenticity.
    Uff-Da. Also, a Minnesota thing along with Ole and Lena jokes.
    We also have some strange grammatical idiosyncrasies. For example, we often drop the indirect object of a prepositional phrase. Instead of “Do you want to go with me?” It’s, “Do you want to go with?”

    • @hauptmann6
      @hauptmann6 2 роки тому +1

      And in the Northern Lower Pen, in Michigan it's usually shortened even more to: "Wanna go?"

    • @lmagoddess
      @lmagoddess 2 роки тому +3

      We also do the "go with" thing in Iowa

    • @lmagoddess
      @lmagoddess 2 роки тому +4

      Or "Ya wanna go with?

    • @beenaplumber8379
      @beenaplumber8379 2 роки тому +4

      We don't really drop the object of the preposition. I prefer to think we use the word "with" as an adverb. That way it's not laziness - it's a new usage :D

    • @brendagrimm2964
      @brendagrimm2964 2 роки тому +1

      Go with. I thought my Aunt Rachel was the only one who said that.

  • @kongchingpow
    @kongchingpow 2 роки тому +8

    I am subscribed to 2 channels that are pretty much dedicated to these terms...and many more.
    "Watch out for deer, and tell your folks i says "hi"".
    Lol...you should really keep going on this one. There are a lot more midwest terms that need to come to light! We are funny people :)

    • @kathybouziane5269
      @kathybouziane5269 Рік тому +1

      Funny that that's what I tell company when they leave our country home in SC WISCONSIN . Love how elegant the deer look but they seem to have a death wish at night when you're driving !

  • @rebekahtowers7130
    @rebekahtowers7130 2 роки тому +5

    Lifelong Chicago suburbanite here; yes on the gym shoes and pop. We always say casserole; I'd never heard hot dish till I met my husband who's from Northern Minnesota, where they indeed say uffda (pronounced oof-da) a-plenty. Minnesotans also say "oh, ish" which is a charming little way of saying something is icky. I grew up saying ponytail holder til I heard hair tie and thought, heck....that's easier to say. I was 50 the 1st time I heard a soul refer to stop & go lights.

    • @marye.fox-grimm6541
      @marye.fox-grimm6541 Рік тому +2

      Chicago burbs here. Had completely forgotten about "ish" til you mentioned it. In teen years lots of us girls said "ooh ish" instead of the Minnesotan preference for "oh ish." Boys tended to say "yuck" instead.

  • @beatlebrarian
    @beatlebrarian 2 роки тому +15

    I'm a Hoosier (almost to the Kentucky line) who now lives in North Carolina. I have always used ponytail holder instead of hair tie. My father grew up on a dairy farm and I have never heard of holler tail. To us to holler was either yelling or a hollow.

  • @danielbible3654
    @danielbible3654 2 роки тому +11

    Another variation of tough tomatoes that I remember hearing back when I was in school many years ago in NE Ohio was tough tamales.

    • @Hans293
      @Hans293 2 роки тому

      I heard that a couple times in Illinois. Also, tough noogies.

    • @danielleking262
      @danielleking262 Рік тому +1

      I think any variation of "tough ____" means the same thing. I've heard "tough noogies" or more Rated R is "tough titties" lol. Also "tough cookies" or even just "tough luck" You could really throw any word in there!

  • @robinchesterfield42
    @robinchesterfield42 2 роки тому +47

    I used to live in the Midwest (Iowa, to be precise) and I did indeed know people who said "warsh" and "crick". To this day, I use "sneaker", "tennis shoe", and "gym shoe" interchangeably for those kinds of shoes, and sometimes switch between "pop" and "soda" for fizzy drinks.
    (Also I always thought it was "shnockered", with ONE o, and apparently that's a legit version.)
    I also blame the fact that I spent my early school years in the midwest for my pronouncing those wax sticks you make colors on paper with as "crans". :P

    • @ohioalphornmusicalsawman2474
      @ohioalphornmusicalsawman2474 2 роки тому +2

      Worsh in lower Midwest and Western PA, Warsh in Wisconsin😁

    • @jeffreybell436
      @jeffreybell436 2 роки тому +2

      Warsh is much more common along the Ohio River valley that it is on the Great Lakes watershed.

    • @alkaliwreck2474
      @alkaliwreck2474 Рік тому +3

      I second crans. Also candy apples are covered in carmle and pancakes get sir-up on them. :D

    • @chrisparr9230
      @chrisparr9230 Рік тому +1

      I'm in Missouri and right with you, including "schnockered" with one o. Interesting stuff.

    • @rottingpotatoes2483
      @rottingpotatoes2483 Рік тому +1

      I live in Wisconsin. Nobody here says warsh/worsh. I have imported it though, trying to start the trend.

  • @nathantowns2043
    @nathantowns2043 Рік тому +3

    Lived 35 years in the US Midwest and I've NEVER heard padiddle

  • @pwbmd
    @pwbmd 2 роки тому +1

    Uff da = oy vey
    It's surprise but in an overwhelmed, usually neutral/negative way.
    "Uff da, I ate too much." "Uff da, this headache is killing me." "Your term paper has a 10-page minimum? Uff da."

  • @goomy02
    @goomy02 2 роки тому +56

    Lawrence, as an Alaskan I so appreciate your background map that actually places my state in a somewhat northern location! 😀

    • @nariu7times328
      @nariu7times328 2 роки тому +6

      Now if it were only true to size, but take what we can get, right? (I don't live in Alaska now, but grew up there.)

    • @heathhanz842
      @heathhanz842 2 роки тому

      True dat. Another Alaskan here :)

    • @jenniferpearce1052
      @jenniferpearce1052 2 роки тому +3

      Always funny when its off in the side with Hawaii...and Hawaii is above it!

    • @angiebee2225
      @angiebee2225 2 роки тому

      Oh, you don't like being next to, and the same size as, Hawaii?

    • @stargazer-elite
      @stargazer-elite Рік тому

      I ain’t from there I just am a bit of a geography nerd it bugs the heck out of me like you could just use a regular map of North America with the USA outlined or colored lol

  • @angelaCB1415
    @angelaCB1415 2 роки тому +32

    I'm from Chicago and I do say "pop" and "gym shoes". I also thought about "washroom" vs "bathroom ". I remember when I first moved to California and one time asked someone where I could find the "washroom". The person smiled and asked, "Where are you from?" I told her and she proceeded to tell me where what she called the "bathroom" was located.
    On a side note, I'm a new subscriber and enjoy watching your videos.

    • @tiffanysandmeier4753
      @tiffanysandmeier4753 2 роки тому +1

      I use bathroom, but it doesn't really fit when you are looking for a toilet.

    • @pou618
      @pou618 2 роки тому

      Canadians say washroom

    • @lordofthemound3890
      @lordofthemound3890 2 роки тому

      In Illinois, it’s “restroom” unless it has an actual bath.

    • @MsMary-mg3ho
      @MsMary-mg3ho Рік тому

      We said bathroom at home, but the teachers at school said "washroom." I wonder why.

  • @lisapop5219
    @lisapop5219 2 роки тому +59

    Up north is definitely a thing in lower Michigan, even if you're only talking about going 100 miles away. When I was growing up, a lot of people had a cabin they would go to for summer vacation and/or hunting/fishing. Even if you didn't, chances are you knew someone who did. I've even heard the term used by family friends who were going home to visit their parents. They had left Vassar for Detroit and going back they would say they were going up north even though they were staying at the parents house. We were sent up north from Detroit to the traverse area to stay with our grandparents during the summer. So it definitely doesn't have to be used re camping etc

    • @YourWaywardDestiny
      @YourWaywardDestiny 2 роки тому

      This phrasing gets a little bit more dumb in MN where you can go "up North" or really even just "up" even if you're not actually going the direction North, but the meat of the saying is also "I'm taking some time off to relax" without any camping/cabin activity really needing to be involved. It'd be more accurate to call it a break than camping, and it's not a vacation, because those are special ordeals.

    • @MarvinLikoPuha
      @MarvinLikoPuha 2 роки тому

      Thanks for sharing your experience with "Up North". So helpful.

    • @DakotaCelt1
      @DakotaCelt1 2 роки тому

      Northern Minnesota also.. Up Nort!

  • @tommunyon2874
    @tommunyon2874 Рік тому +2

    My Aunt Trudy always exclaimed "Good Gravy" in her distinctive Minnesota accent. It was worth the trip from New Mexico just to hear it.

  • @talevita
    @talevita 2 роки тому +3

    I’ve never heard of a lot of these terms. Then again I’ve lived in Utah and Montana my whole life. But still, some of these surprise me and I’ve learned a lot here.

  • @lorinjacobs2917
    @lorinjacobs2917 2 роки тому +53

    I grew up in central and northeast Wisconsin. What we called gym shoes were an old pair of tennis shoes that you left at school, in your gym locker, so that you wouldn't scuff up the gymnasium floor with any sand or grit you may have tracked in from outside. I don't remember people using the term outside of that context.

    • @JacksonOwex
      @JacksonOwex 2 роки тому +6

      And then they make EVERYONE gather in the gym for an assembly thing COMPLETELY killing the reason behind the other pair of shoes in your locker?!

    • @barbaramelone1043
      @barbaramelone1043 2 роки тому +3

      Same here. Also probably so you couldn't conveniently keep forgetting tennis shoes at home.

    • @loris1620
      @loris1620 2 роки тому

      Same in southern MN, well at least 40 years ago.

    • @ohhmesohungry584
      @ohhmesohungry584 2 роки тому +2

      I’m from Cincinnati and we say gym shoes in reference to any sneaker or tennis shoe lol. So this is real 😅

    • @joda7129
      @joda7129 2 роки тому

      same in duluth

  • @carolynhotchkiss4760
    @carolynhotchkiss4760 2 роки тому +51

    We called beers brewskis when I went to college in Iowa. Or, I should say, the frat boys called them that, lol. Growing up in the Chicago area, I immediately knew what gym shoes are, though I have not called them that for years beyond count now (I am with Team Tennis Shoes for those). My Minnesotan husband was very amused at your attempts to identify hotdish and uff da (terms he is intimately familiar with, naturally). I will say the one I had never ever heard (and neither had he) was holler tail.

    • @lairdcummings9092
      @lairdcummings9092 2 роки тому +3

      To be complete, in Maryland the term 'Brewskis' is also used, and again, generally by the more boorish types.

    • @beenaplumber8379
      @beenaplumber8379 2 роки тому +3

      When I was a kid in Minnesota, they were Tennis shoes, tennies, and sheakers, in that order. I don't think anyone has called them tennies here in a long time, but sneakers is still used.

    • @mariaaguadoball3407
      @mariaaguadoball3407 2 роки тому +3

      I thought "brewskis" was just a general dudebro/fratboy thing. I've definitely heard it said in Hollywood-made films.

    • @billolsen4360
      @billolsen4360 2 роки тому +1

      Heard the same thing at college in Nebraska.

    • @heatherevert274
      @heatherevert274 2 роки тому +6

      Ya, where 's the holler tail from? I also am from MN and don't know that one. Never heard it in WI, ND or northeast Iowa either.

  • @pigpjs
    @pigpjs 2 роки тому +11

    My grandma was from Ohio and even though she lived on the west coast continuously for 70+ years, she still said pop instead of soda.

  • @roxanneconner7185
    @roxanneconner7185 2 роки тому +3

    I'm from Wisconsin, born and bred. I have never heard the term 'stop-and-go-lights,' but I can confirm that 'go up north,' is indeed used ubiquitously to mean go on vacation, to a cabin, lake, or campsite, even if the locale in question is actually south. For instance, I've got a summer job in Minneapolis, but this labor day I'm 'going up north' to my dad's family cabin, which is technically south-east of where I am.
    Also, having grown up in Wisconsin public schools, it actually blows my mind that 'gym shoes,' is a colloquialism. I thought that was what they were called everywhere. Thanks for the learning!!

    • @MsMary-mg3ho
      @MsMary-mg3ho Рік тому

      I am also from Wisconsin, and we called them "tennis shoes" or "tennies." Gym shoes were shoes that you had to save for gym class like bowling shoes are only used in the bowling ally. We did, incidentally call the class "gym" not "P.E." like others I've heard.

  • @xione0825
    @xione0825 2 роки тому +3

    4:20 I think "crick" is also considered generally smaller than a "creek". a "crick" might even flow into a "creek", too. At least that is the meaning I learned growing up.

    • @MsMary-mg3ho
      @MsMary-mg3ho Рік тому

      I remember we used to pronounce it "crick" when referring to a specific one, like "Pike's Creek" is "Pike's Crick" but the body of water is a creek. Not sure why, though. Maybe that was just my family...or maybe because we learned one way at home and the other at school. My mom used to tell a joke about a couple of lazy people sitting by the creek, and the woman would say, "Crick's risin', Paw." And he'd reply "Yup. Guess we're goners, Maw." (Too lazy to actually get up and move away from the water...) 😄

  • @kurtjohnson3917
    @kurtjohnson3917 2 роки тому +15

    Grew up in Iowa. Drunk is "schnockered", or even "snockered"; trapped or fooled is "snookered" like the pool game, but it's not prounounced oo like tube, it's like book. I've also never heard the phrase "stop and go lights". People do say "stop light", singularly, but not once have I heard "go light", it's just a green light. "Hotdish" is definitely a word, kinda old fashioned now, but doesn't have to be nearly as specific as your description. It's usually something that you're bringing to an event, rather than a cold dish. "Gym shoes", in their day, meant specifically shoes you could wear in the school gym so as not to scuff up the floor. You usually left them in your locker. I've never heard "tough tomatoes" in my life. "Tough cookies" was used; not to be confused with a "tough cookie", as in a tough person.

    • @melissagoings1
      @melissagoings1 2 роки тому

      Tough Nuts, comes to mind.🤔

    • @robinchesterfield42
      @robinchesterfield42 2 роки тому

      Yep, I spent part of my childhood in Iowa and all this sounds about right. "Stop light" I've heard about everywhere, but "stop and go light" sounds like what Homer Simpson would call them after he forgets all his vocabulary. :P

  • @tayocham1
    @tayocham1 2 роки тому +52

    If you haven't done so yet, I'd love to see you try to guess what some Hawaiian slang terms mean. Keep up the good work!

    • @samanthab1923
      @samanthab1923 2 роки тому +2

      Oh that would be hard. Just that bruh thing gets me

    • @MarvinLikoPuha
      @MarvinLikoPuha 2 роки тому +1

      @Terry Yocham We can help make the list of Hawaii words (not necessarily Hawaiian language only).

    • @Kelnx
      @Kelnx 2 роки тому +2

      Good idea. I'd like to see him tackle "da kine".

    • @MarvinLikoPuha
      @MarvinLikoPuha 2 роки тому +1

      @@Kelnx Some suggestions: Choke, Cherreh, Rajjah, Holoholo, Mop, Slippah, Pound, Mauka, Makai

    • @Kelnx
      @Kelnx 2 роки тому +4

      @@MarvinLikoPuha And if he's visited, we'll see if he knows "Mahalo" doesn't mean "trash" just because it's printed on all of the trash receptacles lol

  • @melissagoings1
    @melissagoings1 2 роки тому +35

    I was hoping to hear "persnickety." LOL My grandmother used it alot. Wisconsinite, here.😁

  • @runningdrisk7
    @runningdrisk7 Рік тому +1

    Haha the stop and go lights, I was like ya I think I did and then your like maybe Minnesota and I was like ya I must have lol

  • @michellewilson6249
    @michellewilson6249 Рік тому

    I love your thumbnails with that bewildered deer-in-the-headlights look!

  • @Chicagomostly
    @Chicagomostly 2 роки тому +4

    Greetings from the South Loop - yep, gym shoes (& gym shorts - not to be confused with Jim Shorts a Chicago radio sportscaster in the 1980s)

  • @maryclarafjare
    @maryclarafjare 2 роки тому +20

    I'm from the Midwest and use Uff dah (many spellings accepted) daily, my mom was from Norwegian stock, and used it all the time. It's quite useful!
    Can be used for almost any expression of surprise, dismay, disgust, sadness, based on your tone of voice and facial expression.

    • @TJMiller86
      @TJMiller86 2 роки тому +4

      100% agree. My Mom was also of Norwegian decent, and from Northern Iowa. We said this all the time!

    • @maryclarafjare
      @maryclarafjare 2 роки тому

      @@TJMiller86 😃

    • @angiebee2225
      @angiebee2225 2 роки тому

      My mom is from Wisconsin, her dad was Norwegian, and she didn't say it at all.

    • @craigwillms61
      @craigwillms61 2 роки тому +1

      yes, even plopping down in a chair at the end of a long day...uff da.

    • @LaurelT1948
      @LaurelT1948 Рік тому

      Yes, I guess it’s ‘Oy Vey’ in Norwegian.

  • @maryannebrown2385
    @maryannebrown2385 2 роки тому +23

    I am in Chicago, and I was raised saying, “Go up North”. It does indeed mean Wisconsin! Specifically, the North Woods (which we also say) around Minoqua, Rhinelander, etc. In fact, my whole family is going up North to a cabin on a beautiful lake in just a few weeks. Hope the fish are biting!

    • @brock9380
      @brock9380 2 роки тому +1

      From southern Wisconsin and we refer to going to northern Wisconsin as going up north, just like y'all, and when folks say where are you from up north you say, down south.

    • @maryannebrown2385
      @maryannebrown2385 2 роки тому +1

      @@brock9380 Exactly! That is the way I have always known it.

    • @shirleybalinski4535
      @shirleybalinski4535 Рік тому +1

      UP NORTH....Very prevalent in lower part of lower penninsula of Michigan. It signifies any place above mid lower peninsula( northern lower, UP,etc. ). Yep, vacation, lake, camping, cabin. .

    • @rottingpotatoes2483
      @rottingpotatoes2483 Рік тому

      I live in central wisconsin. We also talk about going up north. It’s mostly because northern Wisconsin is largely uninhabited and many people own cabins up there.

  • @SecretSquirrelFun
    @SecretSquirrelFun Рік тому

    Absolutely loving that the very first advert is for Uncle Toby’s Oats. I’m in Australia by the way (I have an American father), and we love uncle Toby’s porridge oats on a cold winter’s morning.
    Thanks again for sharing your thoughts and adventures. Much appreciated.
    🙂🐿🌈❤️

  • @mathsalot8099
    @mathsalot8099 Рік тому +1

    Having grown up in Wisconsin, I had so much fun listening to this video!! I'll have to look at your other video specifically for bubbler, because that is something I've never heard anyone else use in a video.

  • @janach1305
    @janach1305 2 роки тому +32

    Here in Washington State, we pronounce uff da as “oof-ta,” emphasis on the “oof.” I define it as a Norwegian version of “oy vey!”
    Here we generally say “stop light,” but never “stop and go light.”
    To be schnookered is to be cheated, and someone who gets schnookered is a schnook. I confess I was in college before I realized the term came from Yiddish rather than being a variant of chinook.

    • @clarencesmith9580
      @clarencesmith9580 2 роки тому

      And they where called gym shoes in my Portland Oregon grade school back in the 1970's. Oh and we have Benson Bubblers on random street corners and we call them stop lights too.

    • @schreds8882
      @schreds8882 2 роки тому +2

      I believe schnookered is of Yiddish derivation and yes, it means a person who has been cheated or duped. It can also mean someone who is drunk to the point of being stupid and therefore easily duped.

    • @gwjchris
      @gwjchris 2 роки тому

      I grew up with oof dah as well as ish dah. Oof dah does serve a similar function as the Yiddish Oy vey. It is also a Swedish expression. Ish dah as an expression of disgust is a combination of ish (or more eesh) an Ojibwa term of disgust mixed with dah from Scandinavian uff dah.
      I suspect ish dah is pretty specific yo Minnesota where the Ojibwa and Scandinavians both live.

  • @ginarose8183
    @ginarose8183 2 роки тому +13

    So very very happy that you are now putting the word up in the left corner as you are talking about it!!!! It saves me rewinding all the time to figure out what you’re talking about! Thank you so much!!!!

  • @Arlecchino_Gatto
    @Arlecchino_Gatto 2 роки тому +14

    We use "go up north" here in Minnesota. I have said it, friends and family have. My three sisters and my mom all use the phrase "hair tie". Now I think my 7 nieces do too.

  • @bigshagg3815
    @bigshagg3815 Рік тому +1

    I live in central Illinois. The northern half of the state says pop and gym shoes while the Southern half of the state says soda and tennis shoes. 😄

  • @suzannesellers7383
    @suzannesellers7383 Рік тому +1

    Laurence I’m so glad how your channel is growing. Looking forward to your reaching 500k subscribers then just a skip to 1 million.

  • @richdobbs6595
    @richdobbs6595 2 роки тому +10

    Growing up in Minnesota, Up North is where you go on the weekends for fishing, cabins, camping, etc. It's where the lakes and forests are. Pretty much the same in Wisconsin and Michigan too.

    • @Ulysses_DM_
      @Ulysses_DM_ 2 роки тому +2

      In South Dakota nobody goes north for vacation, we go west.

    • @billolsen4360
      @billolsen4360 2 роки тому

      My dad called Going Up North as "Going on a mosquito hunt"

    • @richdobbs6595
      @richdobbs6595 2 роки тому

      @@Ulysses_DM_ I'm guessing that you headed for the Black Hills, which is mostly Up North from where I live in Colorado!

    • @Ulysses_DM_
      @Ulysses_DM_ 2 роки тому

      @@richdobbs6595 For the most part or a little farther into Wyoming, still up North to you I guess.

  • @nrrork
    @nrrork 2 роки тому +37

    Actually, I think my dislike for saying "pop" came from my dad's insatiable urge to tell dad jokes, well past it being appropriate.
    I'd be a kid and ask "Can I have some pop?"
    "I'm right here!" dad replied every damn time.... even if he wasn't the one I was asking.
    "SODA pop"
    "I'm not _soda_ your pop, I'm all the way your pop!"...
    Cute ONCE maybe, but imagine an entire childhood of having to guess the exact right way to phrase a simple question so I can get a REAL ANSWER!!!!
    I did not then nor do I now want to have to answer some sphinx riddle just to get a fricking SPRITE!!!!

    • @stacyrussell460
      @stacyrussell460 2 роки тому +1

      My dad was the same way. "How are you feeling, Dad?" & he'd always say "With my hands". He was full of zingers & groan-able dad jokes. I learned early on to word questions carefully just like you 😂.

    • @Great_Wall_of_Text
      @Great_Wall_of_Text 2 роки тому +2

      That is the first logical reason I have ever heard for calling pop "soda"
      Soda is carbonated water. Pop is what you get when you mix it with sugary/corn syrupy goodness.
      I keep some actual soda on hand for people who argue with me when I call pop "pop".
      If they want "soda" they get carbonated water. I do this because I'm a dad, and all dads are jerks. Not soda jerks, just the regular kind.
      You officially get a pass. You earned the right to call it what you like as far as I'm concerned. Dad jokes are supposed to be bad, but that qualifies as abuse.

    • @MargaritaOnTheRox
      @MargaritaOnTheRox 2 роки тому +1

      @@Great_Wall_of_Text Soda sounds nicer. People who use the word "pop" tend to sound very nasally when they say it. Displeasing to the ear. The soda you're talking about is soda water. It's what's used to make soda.

    • @jenniferpearce1052
      @jenniferpearce1052 2 роки тому +1

      @@MargaritaOnTheRox My college roommate pronounced pop "pap". As in smear. Just...no. I'll have a soda, please!

    • @Great_Wall_of_Text
      @Great_Wall_of_Text 2 роки тому

      @@MargaritaOnTheRox Soda water is used to make soda pop, and people who say soda when refering to pop always get a little insulting when defending their indefensable stance. Thay's why I call them soda jerks : )

  • @annidrea06
    @annidrea06 2 роки тому +7

    I’m from Illinois and there were a few I hadn’t heard before. I’m a little disappointed ope wasn’t in this one. Love your videos. They always give me a good laugh!

  • @warriyorcat
    @warriyorcat Рік тому +1

    another good midwestern-(ish, we use it in michigan anyway) word is 'cottage' which, depending on the cottage, ranges from "dilapidated shack in the middle of the woods" to "mansion on the lake with its own marina". Usually used as a vacation home, you never know what you're getting when you go to someone else's cottage.

  • @jimpolk
    @jimpolk 2 роки тому +3

    Great great videos. I lately will binge watch your videos. Massive humour. I'm from the US but have spent some time in the UK and developed a love if most things British and most especially British humour. Great stuff!

  • @hectorsmommy1717
    @hectorsmommy1717 2 роки тому +28

    Going "Up North" in Wisconsin means going north of a line that roughly goes from Green Bay to Wausau to the Twin Cities. Lakes, cabin resorts, fishing, eating at supper clubs, etc. are all activities you do "Up Nort" According to a few FIBs I know, if you are in Chicago going Up North basically means going to Wisconsin, especially the Dells.

    • @StephKajpust
      @StephKajpust 2 роки тому +3

      FIB. There's a good one. Hate it though, being that I'm from Chicago

    • @beeragainsthumanity1420
      @beeragainsthumanity1420 2 роки тому

      Anywhere north of Hwy 8.

    • @TheGregEgg
      @TheGregEgg 2 роки тому +2

      I use "FIB" all the time 😬

    • @shawgeasland2096
      @shawgeasland2096 2 роки тому +2

      Yep, I have lived and worked most of my life in the Dells and FIBs is definitely a part of my vocabulary when not in a professional capacity.

    • @johnfritz1164
      @johnfritz1164 2 роки тому +2

      I was not familiar with FIB but I have heard Illinoisances.
      I also remember the billboards in Kenosha that said Faster than a car with Illinois plates.

  • @jackielinde7568
    @jackielinde7568 2 роки тому +11

    Funny, when you said "Hot Dish", I thought you were talking about women like Aisling Bea, Maggie Gyllenhaal, and Roisin Conaty. (Hey, you have your definition of a hot dish. I have mine.)

    • @billolsen4360
      @billolsen4360 2 роки тому +1

      I'd take Roisin Conaty over any cassarole.

  • @aidanb.c.2325
    @aidanb.c.2325 2 роки тому +24

    When I was a kid, I'd go visit my cousins in upstate NY and always noticed how nasally they sounded. And how they'd say words like crick instead of brook and aant instead of ahnt. When I got older, I realized it's because they sounded decidedly Midwestern and not Northeastern (the Boston to NYC spectrum) at all. The odd thing was that they lived barely an hour from me, and we were all rural, country kids. But those Taconics were a real linguistic barrier, apparently.

    • @MeadeSkeltonMusic
      @MeadeSkeltonMusic 2 роки тому

      The Northeast accents are pretty nasal , imo. I'm from Virginia and we speak from the back of the throat and more relaxed.

    • @MsMary-mg3ho
      @MsMary-mg3ho Рік тому

      Yes, we all say "ant" instead of "ahnt" in my family. Though I do recognize that it's spelled like "ahnt." 🙂

  • @sarahdoyle3126
    @sarahdoyle3126 2 роки тому +2

    Growing up in mid-Michigan, “Up North” just ment going to the northern part of the lower Michigan if we were going over the Mackinac bridge we said “We’re going to the U P” . We said Jeez all the time but also added “Jeez Louise!” ( but that might have just been my friends and I 😁). Traffic lights were just “Stop lights”.
    So many mid-west states have their own term it’s crazy 😜

    • @MsMary-mg3ho
      @MsMary-mg3ho Рік тому

      We used to say "Jeez Louise" too, but I always thought it was spelled "geez."

  • @Nonna3xs
    @Nonna3xs Рік тому

    I was born and raised in Missouri and at 47 I have never heard many of these. I thank you for your videos I watch them for hours when I need a lift

  • @jamus1340
    @jamus1340 2 роки тому +21

    Laurence as you know the American Midwest is a big place and some of these terms are specific to an area of the Midwest and not used universally. Some of these things vary state to state and even take on a different pronunciation depending where you are in the Midwest.

    • @UrbanPanic
      @UrbanPanic 2 роки тому +1

      I feel like Brewski is a college bro way of trying to affect a California surfer/Colorado ski bum “I’m chill, we should totally hang if you’re down” vibe.
      And Hair Binder? I would have thought that was British if I had to guess. Just sounds… a bit more “proper” than hair tie. Maybe I’ll start using it if I ever get schnookered again.

    • @craigwillms61
      @craigwillms61 2 роки тому

      Like bubbler, which he mentioned was a WI thing. MN being right next door we did not say that.

  • @cmarie1357
    @cmarie1357 2 роки тому +5

    Grew up in North Dakota, now live in South Dakota, I say Stop Lights, but I’ve never heard anyone say “Stop and Go Lights.”

    • @jcamp7421
      @jcamp7421 2 роки тому

      Yes, I guess I have said stop lights too, but never go lights lol. stop n go is a gas station to me! 😂

  • @lloovvaallee
    @lloovvaallee 2 роки тому +9

    I've lived in Nebraska, Minnesota and now Wisconsin and I've never heard "stop and go light".

    • @robertl4824
      @robertl4824 2 роки тому

      or Michigan. i thought at first he meant a flashing red

    • @EaginFoodie
      @EaginFoodie 2 роки тому

      @@robertl4824 same. I was thinking flashing red or yellow

    • @maryclarafjare
      @maryclarafjare 2 роки тому

      Seems it's pretty local to rural Indiana?

    • @janellegodin2934
      @janellegodin2934 2 роки тому

      As a Canadian living in MB I thought it was the strange lights seen at yields to get on the highway in places like Minneapolis and not just standard traffic lights.

    • @CK-tz8ek
      @CK-tz8ek 2 роки тому

      A stop and go light is what they call a regular traffic light in much of the Midwest. It’s more generational in my opinion than location.

  • @ltodd79
    @ltodd79 Рік тому +2

    I'm a fifth generation Californian, my father grew up on a ranch. He and his contemporaries used the term "crick" to describe a small creek. I don't hear it used commonly anymore.
    On the West Coast you would get "tough noogies."

  • @nicholaskarlson9526
    @nicholaskarlson9526 Рік тому +2

    I'm from the Chicago/ Northwest Indiana region, and I've never heard of padiddle. My wife, however, grew up in Connecticut and played it as a child. I didn't believe her at first when she told me about it, it sounds ridiculous, around the Chicago area we played slug bug.

    • @ponyxaviors4491
      @ponyxaviors4491 Рік тому +1

      I grew up in Ohio. I've never heard of "padiddle" either, but we also played slug bug as kids as well as "woodie."

    • @jeanetteshawredden5643
      @jeanetteshawredden5643 Рік тому

      Iin Texas slug bug meant that the first person to see an old VW Beetle car, yelled "slug bug" and slugged someone else on the arm.

  • @saraross8396
    @saraross8396 2 роки тому +53

    Schnookered can also mean "cheated" or "fooled". I'm pretty sure I've also heard it used in reference to being plastered (drunk). Funny how there's so many words and phrases for when one is on the sauce. That might make for an interesting video if you haven't done it yet.
    I had a feeling "hotdish" was potluck related given that casseroles, which is essentially what it is, are common at them.

    • @tawnyprovince-ward2353
      @tawnyprovince-ward2353 2 роки тому +1

      Drunk AF is mostly what I heard schnookered as lol

    • @beenaplumber8379
      @beenaplumber8379 2 роки тому

      My Minnesota mom used the word schnook to mean a rascally or impish little kid - like a term of endearment. I wonder if there's actually a specific German origin?

    • @mizztab3677
      @mizztab3677 2 роки тому +3

      The word schnockered (verified spelling) is one I’ve heard in Indiana for drunk. Schnookered meant conned or tricked to me as well.

    • @Kelnx
      @Kelnx 2 роки тому +2

      I've heard "schnookered" to mean drunk, exhausted, worn out from a workout, and also used like the word "bamboozeled" or "hoodwinked". It's just one of those versatile nonsense words that changes with context.

    • @charleskwiatkowski8380
      @charleskwiatkowski8380 2 роки тому

      Agreed. Schnookered means fooled, deceived, or cheated. Schnackered means drunk, roughly equivalent to “pisssd”.

  • @johannaverplank4858
    @johannaverplank4858 2 роки тому +13

    I've lived in Indianapolis most of my life and I've never heard the majority of those terms, so don't feel bad. Fun video.
    Thanks!!

    • @timmmahhhh
      @timmmahhhh 2 роки тому +4

      From Kokomo and went to Ball State, apart from brewski and one or two others I haven't heard of them either. Glad Laurence covered these!

    • @lixak6307
      @lixak6307 2 роки тому +2

      Indianapolis native too! But I grew up in fortville so some of these more hick sayings like crick got used around me

    • @ashwalksharp
      @ashwalksharp 2 роки тому +1

      Agree!

  • @cspat1
    @cspat1 2 роки тому +6

    I have said stop light , but not go light . I am from the Midwest

  • @marshallegan527
    @marshallegan527 Рік тому +3

    I grew up in a Norwegian family in the region of eastern North Dakota where most people are descendants of Scandinavians and in my experience of hearing and using "Uffda" is that it can have multiple meanings depending on the context:
    Dismay: Someone has told you about their hard day at work or bad personal news, you reply with "Uffda"
    Surprise : Someone has played a practical joke on you or you have received shocking news , you respond with "Uffda!"
    A retort to something funny: Someone has told you a funny story: you reply with "Uffda!"
    Contentment: "Uffda, that was a good time we had at Jerry's last night"
    Expressing physical exertion: *while lifting a 50 lbs. bag of dog food or fixing your car * you exclaim "Uffda!
    The closest I could approximate to it's meaning in American english is the phrase "oh boy" because it has similar multiple meanings depending on the context of the conversation.

  • @ohioalphornmusicalsawman2474
    @ohioalphornmusicalsawman2474 2 роки тому +1

    Youngstown, Ohio area uses "skooch" for moving over or sliding over, usually physically moving out of the way for another person. I've also heard skooch in the Cincinnati area😁

    • @co7314
      @co7314 2 роки тому +1

      My hometown ❤️

  • @CallMeAL1
    @CallMeAL1 2 роки тому +10

    “Go UP North” applies to IL, Wisconsin and MN too. Except in IL and southeastern Wisconsin it means specifically to go either to Door County (come visit us!) or to go up the the UP where the endless forests still exist.

    • @stevepalmberg5905
      @stevepalmberg5905 2 роки тому

      In MN it means Northern MN or Wisconsin
      North direction

    • @bluesoup1240
      @bluesoup1240 2 роки тому +2

      Being from Waukesha county, going “up nort” generally meant going anywhere more rural for camping, fishing, hiking or hunting or even just visiting family. I even heard relatives saying they were going “up nort” when the exact location was a hunting spot that was actually west of us. And no one ever questioned it, lol!

    • @bonesaw17son
      @bonesaw17son 2 роки тому

      You forgot eagle river!

  • @mrspock2al
    @mrspock2al 2 роки тому +12

    I'm heading "up North" to visit the Yoopers, swim in the "crick", and enjoy a bottle of pop. A pasty with a brewsky would also hit the spot. Guess my state.

    • @nekk-ra7080
      @nekk-ra7080 2 роки тому +3

      Is it safe to assume you're a Troll?

    • @keithkearns93
      @keithkearns93 2 роки тому

      A state of mental instability

    • @R.M.MacFru
      @R.M.MacFru 2 роки тому +1

      @@nekk-ra7080 ...I would think it's a safe assumption.

    • @timmmahhhh
      @timmmahhhh 2 роки тому +2

      I learned of a pasty in Mackinaw City where the waitress politely corrected me that it is NOT pronounced with a long a...oof. Very tasty meal.

    • @bethhentges
      @bethhentges 2 роки тому +1

      MI

  • @veronicajaeger3604
    @veronicajaeger3604 2 роки тому +19

    I'm from Milwaukee, and I always thought "bubbler" came from the fact that, back in the late 50s when I was tiny, most water fountains flowed continuously, or "bubbled." Apparently nobody worried about wasting water then. If one of my classmates was taking too long at the bubbler, the thirsty kid next in line would be likely to say, "Hey! Are you going to drink the whole lake?"

    • @CallMeAL1
      @CallMeAL1 2 роки тому +5

      “Bubbler” was a trademarked name for a specific model of drinking fountain made by Kohler Company that was discontinued in the 60s. Predictably, most structures that were built with drinking fountains in them in the region used Kohler products and that specific model name Stuck. I will never give up my “bubbler” no matter how many people I need to explain it to lol

    • @amrys_argent
      @amrys_argent 2 роки тому +1

      When I was a kid and someone was taking too long at the water fountain, we'd tell them "don't drink Texas dry."

    • @barbaramelone1043
      @barbaramelone1043 2 роки тому +4

      We said "Save some for the fish!"

    • @angelal1607
      @angelal1607 2 роки тому

      I am from northwestern Wisconsin and never heard “bubbler” until I moved to southern Wisconsin.

    • @Khronogi
      @Khronogi Рік тому

      From wisconsin. Got tired of the debate and call it a "water refreshment station"

  • @tc2882
    @tc2882 2 роки тому +2

    Tough tomatoes = tough luck = tough noogies = tough beans = tough darts = tough s**t.

  • @MsLynnabelle
    @MsLynnabelle Рік тому +3

    Growing up, we not only knew the word “padiddle” we played it in a game. The first sister that called a padiddle when we were on a road trip got to painfully pinch the sister of her choice. I think my Dad, who grew up in northern Minnesota and not only used most of the phrases you mentioned but included other colorful ones like “that guy drives like he has a paper a**hole”, started the game because it kept us occupied and quiet. As far as “pop” instead of soda, I’ve heard people say that only we Minnesotans call it that because each of us has had the experience of leaving a beverage can in the back seat of our car in wintertime. Once that baby gets all froze up, “pop” is what happens to the can and you end up with frozen Coke or whatever all over the place……

  • @R.M.MacFru
    @R.M.MacFru 2 роки тому +6

    Michigan. I haven't heard the term "stop and go lights" since the sixties.
    Go up north does not mean camping. It means exactly that: you're going somewhere north of where you live, generally north of Saginaw. If you're going camping, then you say, "I'm going camping up north." 🙄
    Gym shoes are also in Metro Detroit.
    Tough Tomatoes was never a thing here. It was usually Tough Luck, but if you wanted the alliteration, then it was Tough T*tties.

    • @melanezoe
      @melanezoe 2 роки тому

      I remember responding to a sibling saying “tuff (sic) titties” with “…said the kitty, but it’s sure good milk.” Got a whuppin’ for that.

    • @hauptmann6
      @hauptmann6 2 роки тому +1

      Michigan here as well, "stop light" is the usual term I hear. Or "the light" As in Head down to the light and hang a left.

  • @Phishi
    @Phishi 2 роки тому +11

    I grew up in a smaller south Wisconsin town pre-internet, and we called them "stop and go lights". It doesn't seem to be as common now though!
    Also "going up north" was a common idiom for going camping or to a family cabin type situation, since often those were north, in the Dells and beyond.

    • @bluesoup1240
      @bluesoup1240 2 роки тому +2

      Former cheesehead, can confirm on both accounts.

    • @barbaramelone1043
      @barbaramelone1043 2 роки тому

      I would have guessed stop and go lights were the ones at an intersection, that blink red or yellow, indicating that one should stop and then go, depending on traffic, or procceed with caution.

    • @billolsen4360
      @billolsen4360 2 роки тому

      But "Going South" means failing, not something fun like going to Mardi Gras in New Orleans.

  • @thelandofopie
    @thelandofopie 2 роки тому +7

    Up north? In Michigan it’s synonymous with vacation taken in the northern part of the state. Our population is largely in the southern most portion, so for us to go “up north” is away from population density. Sometimes we go as far as the U.P. Pronounced (you pee) to designate the upper peninsula.

  • @brendamitchell4915
    @brendamitchell4915 2 роки тому +2

    As a life long Michigan resident and we use “go up north” “brewski” and “pop” “gym shoes” all the time. A lot of the others Ive never heard before.

  • @immgrntsrus
    @immgrntsrus Рік тому +3

    I’m from southern Minnesota (yes, it makes a difference) and we say hair binder/hair tie almost interchangeably but I think it’s like 60/40 if you want a ratio. You seem like a person who could appreciate a ratio.
    We use to say “schnockered” with a short O, so that’s interesting. I’d also forgotten all about padiddle!! Maybe it was an ‘80s/‘90s thing?
    Never heard “holler tail” or “stop and go lights” so those must be from Wisconny or something because-and I still can’t believe this-they often say “time machine” for ATM!! But I guess the machines are made or operated by a company named Tyme (have seen this on the front myself) so they just call it by its name. That really threw me for a loop when I first heard it in college. “Is there a time machine around here?” 👀
    I have to say “uff da” is more like an expression of exertion rather than dismay, but it has a lot of uses, I guess.
    Thanks for another fun video! I’ve lived in Abu Dhabi for the past 4+ years so I miss hearing my people talk. All my native-English speaking friends are, well, English. I rarely even hear American English at all here; it’s such a thrill when I do! Uff da, that was a lot of typing.

    • @MsMary-mg3ho
      @MsMary-mg3ho Рік тому +1

      I forgot we used to call them Tyme machines! 🙂🙂 I'm getting homesick...

  • @BlasphemyBaby
    @BlasphemyBaby 2 роки тому +7

    As a lifelong resident of Minnesota, I've never heard most of these, but hotdish, "go up north," and "uff da" (see also: "ope") are very common. I honestly thought "go up north" was mostly a Minnesota and Wisconsin thing, since many more affluent people in the Twin Cities or lower Wisconsin cities (Madison, Milwaukee) have a cabin or preferred camping ground in the lake-covered woodlands of the northern parts of those two states, often used for short summer retreats.

  • @janv4897
    @janv4897 2 роки тому +8

    Wisconsinite here. Have always heard it as soda. Never heard anyone say pop.
    Yes we have pointed out seeing padiddles when on the road.
    I am guilty of calling it a bubbler. Now that I looked it up I understand why. Makes all the sense.
    We grew up in southeastern Wisconsin and have relatives near Eagle River, so have always said we're going up north.
    A hot dish sounds like a pot luck dinner to me.
    Uff da is a part of the Ole and Lena jokes that my Norwegian friend loves to tell.
    Haven't heard the term stop and go lights since I was a kid. Makes me feel nostalgic for the simpler times.
    I have always called them my tennis shoes, or simply, my tennnies.
    Snookered is drunk.
    I kinda think that I say creek and crick. Creek is more formal, and crick when speaking quickly or informally.

    • @mariowalker9048
      @mariowalker9048 2 роки тому +2

      Intresting, a lot of Wisconsinites like saying pop for soda

    • @NathanMN
      @NathanMN 2 роки тому

      Yes, Wisconsin is an oddity like that. The map in the video showed it as the only state in the Midwest where soda is prevalent, plus parts of Missouri and Illinois around St Louis. Wisconsin is the only place I've heard people use bubbler, and Tyme Machine for ATMs, which was apparently what a regional bank called them.

    • @user-ii3vn8tn3q
      @user-ii3vn8tn3q 2 роки тому

      Boo-yah

    • @angelal1607
      @angelal1607 2 роки тому

      You’re from the southeastern part of the state. Things are different in the northwestern part of the state, where I grew up. I’d never heard “bubbler” until I moved to the southern part of WI. And where I’m from, we said “pop”.

  • @StephKajpust
    @StephKajpust 2 роки тому +7

    Living in Michigan for 15 years, I dispute "go up north". It can be for camping but specifically to go to northern Michigan or the UP to do so.

    • @NathanMN
      @NathanMN 2 роки тому

      I think it has different connotations in different parts of the Midwest: In Michigan it refers to the UP. In Chicago it refers to Wisconsin. And in Minnesota it refers to lake cabins in northern Minnesota.

  • @Cormacogrady1
    @Cormacogrady1 Рік тому +1

    I'm from CT and we say "scnockered" to mean drunk. You could say plastered, wasted, crocked, black out, crunk (rarely), etc.

  • @Rocketsong
    @Rocketsong 2 роки тому

    I have certainly heard a Traffic Light called a "Stop Light" before. "Stop and Go" is of course, simply madness.

  • @oscar_wildecat6208
    @oscar_wildecat6208 2 роки тому +7

    I've heard and used the term "gym shoes" here in southeast Kentucky as well as the term "tennis shoes". This could be related to the fact that there is (or was) a tradition (of sorts) of people from this area moving to the Cincinnati area to work in the factories and then retire back to the place they left -- bringing back the term with them.

    • @lesliehermanns615
      @lesliehermanns615 2 роки тому +2

      Sneakers too!

    • @destinisneath693
      @destinisneath693 2 роки тому +2

      I grew up in Michigan, so I heard gym shoes frequently....but only in a school context

  • @frankisfunny2007
    @frankisfunny2007 2 роки тому +5

    "Crick" isn't just unique to the Midwest. It's commonly used in small towns throughout the US. I hear it here in central Pennsylvania, and I've heard it in rural Washington state

    • @samanthab1923
      @samanthab1923 2 роки тому

      Same here, I watch a hiking channel & the guy is from Scranton & says crick

    • @randalmayeux8880
      @randalmayeux8880 2 роки тому +1

      Crick is also used throughout the rural South.

    • @marye.fox-grimm6541
      @marye.fox-grimm6541 Рік тому

      First heard "crick" in Chester County PA. Have never heard it in the Chicago-land area.

  • @jnmsks6052
    @jnmsks6052 2 роки тому +13

    I grew up on Southwest Michigan, and now live in Southeast Michigan, and "Going Up North" is just a thing on the East side of the state. I don't ever remember anyone saying they were "going up North" when I was on the West side of the state. Not that they never did, but if it happened, it was more of a vacation, and not a "nearly every weekend in the Summer" thing like it is for so many people in Southeastern Michigan. Honestly, the two sides of the Lower Peninsula are sort of like completely different states.

    • @christineearl6669
      @christineearl6669 2 роки тому +2

      Completely wrong. I grew up in Western Michigan and everyone I knew talked about going Up North. It’s an all over Michigan thing.

    • @jnmsks6052
      @jnmsks6052 2 роки тому +1

      @@christineearl6669 Maybe nobody in my town was wealthy enough to have a place "up North". Literally never heard one person mention it until I moved to the other side of the state.

    • @pou618
      @pou618 2 роки тому

      Most people saying up north are usually going somewhere on northbound I-75.

    • @christineearl6669
      @christineearl6669 2 роки тому

      @@pou618 or 131 on the West side.

    • @christineearl6669
      @christineearl6669 2 роки тому

      @@jnmsks6052 I’ve known many people with hunting/fishing cabins Up North. We didn’t have a permanent place, but went Up North to vacation many summers.

  • @shanahanaman1
    @shanahanaman1 Рік тому +1

    Ive heard bubbler (Wisconsinite dad) and water fountain used, but it's always been called a "drinking fountain" to me

  • @markworden7425
    @markworden7425 2 роки тому +1

    My less-than-thorough research leads me to believe that a major midwest (Detroit-based) manufacturing company named "Faygo" was the primary reason we in the MW refer to pop as "pop" -- apparently in imitation of the cork being pulled out of the bottle...

    • @janebrown3587
      @janebrown3587 2 роки тому +1

      I don't know if that's true or not, but I sure love that explanation! * *POP!* *

  • @jugatsu23nichi
    @jugatsu23nichi 2 роки тому +4

    I like how you mentioned 'break the seal' as I'm not sure where that phrase came from but learned from my American drinking buddies while living in Japan

    • @NathanMN
      @NathanMN 2 роки тому +2

      That's from the book of Revelation in the Bible, specifically chapters 5-8. There are 7 seals on a scroll, and various events of the apocalypse happen when each seal is broken.

    • @juliefore
      @juliefore 2 роки тому

      While in the college in Madison Wisconsin, I heard it referred to as breaking the damn.

  • @grosseileracingteam
    @grosseileracingteam 2 роки тому +4

    Growing up in Metro Detroit, going up north always meant going north of metro Detroit. Usually north of Lansing. Everyone had a cottage or cabin, usually by a lake. Getting away from the city-even for a weekend, was the best. Boating,swimming,camping,fishing,hunting.bonfires at night. Still love living in Michigan. Gotta go get some pop at the party store.

  • @generalZee
    @generalZee 2 роки тому +5

    I can confirm coming from the northeast (Specifically Northeast New Jersey) that "Jeeze" has at least some legs outside of Chicago, as it's used heavily in the New York area, however when I moved to the south the word almost entirely vanished from my life.

    • @samanthab1923
      @samanthab1923 2 роки тому +2

      I can see that. Grew up in NJ as well. Everyone’s parents were from the city. Lots of Jeez or Jesus, Mary & Joseph 😂

  • @vortexathletic
    @vortexathletic Рік тому +2

    I don’t know if it’s a Wisconsin thing or just my family, but we didn’t call a car with a burnt out light a padiddle, we’d call them a “one-eyed Jack.”

    • @MsMary-mg3ho
      @MsMary-mg3ho Рік тому

      I actually don't recall my family in SE Wisconsin ever saying anything except "that guy's tail light is burned out." 😂

  • @tubbybeaver4471
    @tubbybeaver4471 2 роки тому

    My mate from Philly says "crick" for creek as well. Winds me up...like when they pronounce Craig as "Creg"