Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I can top that (for outdated sayings). My grandmother referred to the refrigerator as "ice box" (it was once a container that held a square chunk of ice) and purses were always "pocket-bags". Love it. Wore a girdle and hose until the day she died (97).
Mother in law called the microwave, "the radar range" and sometimes called the car, "a machine." (Along with all those other old lady words like pocketbook, icebox, market, dungarees, luncheon, parlor, galoshes, and the front stoop.). Oh, and "Bully for you!"
Anonymous wrote:I can top that (for outdated sayings). My grandmother referred to the refrigerator as "ice box" (it was once a container that held a square chunk of ice) and purses were always "pocket-bags". Love it. Wore a girdle and hose until the day she died (97).
Anonymous wrote:Do you refer to the evening meal as "supper" or "dinner"?
Dinner, because we are not farmers.
Do you refer to the evening meal as "supper" or "dinner"?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I say dinner. My mom calls it supper and she is from Boston and is highly over educated!
16:21 here (pp also with a mom from Boston who says supper)
Were your mom's parents very educated (my maternal grandparents were not--grandfather didn't even graduated high school and was a police officer with the city of Boston, Grandmother graduated from high school but that's it)?
What part of Boston did your mom grow up in? My mom grew up in Dorchester--her parents were from South Boston.
I have no idea where she grew up in Boston, just Boston![]()
Her mother was a daughter of Irish Immigrants that were straight off the boat and her father was a Austrian Soldier, fresh off the boat after WW2 and they were a bi-lingual home. I know her father was drafted to the German Army when he was 16 and served 3 years and nearly starved to death on the Russian Front, a miracle that he survived that that I'm here today....with that said, I would say he might have graduated high school at best. That did not stop him from becoming a widely successful American business owner and is still alive and retired filthy rich. My mother had a pretty affluent upbringing, hence her opportunity to be highly over-educated at fine New England institutions. Her mother even graduated college, which is quite an accomplishment for a daughter of Depression Era Irish Immigrants. I doubt they were New England society, especially considering her father's ethnicity, but they were most definitely not anything close to working class Boston.
She still says supper and calls the grocery store "Market" and calls PJs jammies. All of which annoy me.
Anonymous wrote:Dinner, soda (not 'pop), 'aunt' (not pronounced 'ant'), eye-ther not pronounced eee-ther (either).
Supper is the evening meal. Dinner is after church - basically a hot, sit down version of lunch.
Any kind of soft drink is Coke.
Aunt is pronounced either ant or ain't
either = ee-ther.
I love regional differences. I am from Mississippi. My roots are showing.![]()
Anonymous wrote:I can top that (for outdated sayings). My grandmother referred to the refrigerator as "ice box" (it was once a container that held a square chunk of ice) and purses were always "pocket-bags". Love it. Wore a girdle and hose until the day she died (97).
Dinner, soda (not 'pop), 'aunt' (not pronounced 'ant'), eye-ther not pronounced eee-ther (either).