eatcerealwithwater:

theatlantic:

The Invisible Borders That Define American Culture

One of the clearest regional differences in the U.S. can found by tracking the words people use to refer to soft drinks, which is in fact the map you saw at the top of this story. Pop or soda, or even Coke, these small linguistic differences are not as small as we might think. While “soda” commands the Northeast and West Coast (green) and “pop” is in between (black), “Coke” reigns in the south (turquoise). These small distinctions can often act as touchstones for larger cultural differences.
Read more. [Image: Samuel Arbesman]


I had a roommate from Nicaragua and he’d call everything Sprite. Like, he’d order a Coke Sprite at a restaurant.


Green: civilized beings
Black: Meth heads
Turquoise: Inbred hicks

eatcerealwithwater:

theatlantic:

The Invisible Borders That Define American Culture

One of the clearest regional differences in the U.S. can found by tracking the words people use to refer to soft drinks, which is in fact the map you saw at the top of this story. Pop or soda, or even Coke, these small linguistic differences are not as small as we might think. While “soda” commands the Northeast and West Coast (green) and “pop” is in between (black), “Coke” reigns in the south (turquoise). These small distinctions can often act as touchstones for larger cultural differences.

Read more. [Image: Samuel Arbesman]

I had a roommate from Nicaragua and he’d call everything Sprite. Like, he’d order a Coke Sprite at a restaurant.

Green: civilized beings

Black: Meth heads

Turquoise: Inbred hicks