T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
937.1 | | TERZA::ZANE | Imagine... | Mon Dec 16 1991 08:25 | 9 |
|
"Wow, you have television, too?"
This question was asked of a European exchange student in an American
high school.
Terza
|
937.2 | | ULYSSE::WADE | | Mon Dec 16 1991 08:33 | 5 |
|
>> ....Europeans do not in any way celebrate Thanksgiving.
Wrong. Many Brits celebrate Thanksgiving - on the 4th of July.
|
937.3 | | KAOFS::S_BROOK | | Mon Dec 16 1991 09:19 | 11 |
| >
>>> ....Europeans do not in any way celebrate Thanksgiving.
>
> Wrong. Many Brits celebrate Thanksgiving - on the 4th of July.
>
Wrong, and wrong again, many Brits celebrate Thanksgiving as Harvest
Festival, promoted in particular by the church. It isn't a public holiday
though ... it falls on a Sunday!)
Stuart
|
937.5 | | KAOFS::S_BROOK | | Mon Dec 16 1991 09:24 | 10 |
| On the subject of disbelief ....
I am an expatriate expatriate Anglo-Canadian. When I went to the UK in
1966 after 13 years in Canada, I remember very clearly in school being asked
speak Canadian. When I stated (proudly) I was, I was told that was English.
So I asked what do you think Canadians speak then ? They couldn't believe it!
I couldn't either!
Stuart
|
937.6 | revised | SSDEVO::EGGERS | Anybody can fly with an engine. | Mon Dec 16 1991 09:27 | 12 |
| I speak with an upper Midwest accent, which is about as "standard
American" as even the TV announcers can make it, so I haven't been on
the receiving end of "Do you always speak like that?" I'll have to
take your word for it that you have been asked that question. I can
easily understand a question such as, "What accent do you speak with?"
but I'm a bit bemused by "Do you always speak like that?"
I find it even stranger for it to happen in Plymouth, Massachusetts.
Between the Dorchester, Boston Brahmin, Kennedy, Harvard-mock British,
and Down East accents, one more slightly different one shouldn't give
rise to that question. I have trouble believing the question is asked
in jest, but I have no other explanation.
|
937.7 | Thanksgiving on July 4th | TELGAR::WAKEMANLA | Donatelo knows Bo | Mon Dec 16 1991 10:04 | 2 |
| Are the Brits celebrating the date they got shed of the
colonies ;-}
|
937.8 | | KAOFS::S_BROOK | | Mon Dec 16 1991 10:57 | 4 |
| I don't think your *average* Brit has the slightest idea of the significance
of the 4th of July ... good or bad! :-)
Stuart
|
937.9 | | ULYSSE::WADE | | Mon Dec 16 1991 12:05 | 6 |
| Re: .7
>> Are the Brits celebrating the date they got shed of the
>> colonies ;-}
Right! Well spotted. :-)
|
937.10 | I was never very good at dates. | PASTIS::MONAHAN | humanity is a trojan horse | Mon Dec 16 1991 23:52 | 9 |
| I must admit that it was only after a couple of years of living in
France that I managed to remember which country celebrated July 4th.
and which celebrated July 14th..
A friend of mine when travelling Europe with a friend was in a
railway station in Paris, and discussing in Swedish the merits of the
various women around them. He was most surprised when he was thanked
for the compliment in perfect Swedish. Mark Twain tells a similar story
from when he visited Paris.
|
937.11 | Holy Days | MARVIN::KNOWLES | Caveat vendor | Tue Dec 17 1991 05:51 | 21 |
| Re .3
The people who, as reported in .0, can't believe that Europeans don't
celebrate Thanksgiving Day, may well take
� ...many Brits celebrate Thanksgiving as Harvest
�Festival, promoted in particular by the church
as suggesting that the British, trying to fill out their holiday
calendar, invented the Harvest Festival on the analogy of TD. I have a
feeling that the Harvest Festival came a little earlier. It's been
kitted out with all the trappings of a church festival (a Holy Day),
but I suspect that - like many holidays that have acquired a Christian
patina (Christmas for example - or the Winter Solstice as it was
celebrated by pre-Christian societies) - Harvest Festival can be traced
back as far as anything _can_ be traced back: thanking the gods for a
good harvest.
b
ps - A Happy Winter Solstice to all our readers
|
937.12 | strange question in my hometown | BUOVAX::DUNCAN | OTC - Off The Charts | Tue Dec 17 1991 13:46 | 8 |
|
I have a Boston (specifically, Dorchester) accent. I've sometimes
been asked by non-Bostonians _in Boston_ if I am British(!). I think
it has to do with the similar pronunciations of "bahth" (bath),
lahf (laugh), hahf (half), cahf (calf) etc. But being asked such
a question in my own city is kinda weird...:-)
- Phil
|
937.13 | | SSDEVO::EGGERS | Anybody can fly with an engine. | Tue Dec 17 1991 14:16 | 1 |
| At least they haven't asked you if you always speak like that.
|
937.14 | | JIT081::DIAMOND | Order temporarily out of personal name | Tue Dec 17 1991 21:58 | 8 |
| Re .0
>I have been disbelieved by Americans when I've said that Europeans do not
>in any way celebrate Thanksgiving.
That's all right. Other Americans don't believe that Canadians fully do
celebrate Thanksgiving. (With a special day set aside for it, a legal
holiday in fact, on the second Monday in October.)
|
937.15 | | MICKY::SIMPSON | | Wed Dec 18 1991 03:45 | 3 |
|
We in England don't give a monkeys for 4th July even though we are
fully aware of the insignificance of the day.
|
937.16 | | SSDEVO::EGGERS | Anybody can fly with an engine. | Wed Dec 18 1991 05:53 | 1 |
| Perhaps England goes directly from the 3rd to the 5th.
|
937.17 | | MICKY::SIMPSON | | Wed Dec 18 1991 06:06 | 2 |
|
That's about the size of it matey!!
|
937.18 | My fave way of baiting the Brits... | RDVAX::KALIKOW | (-: Celebraturi Te Salutamus! :-) | Wed Dec 18 1991 10:09 | 9 |
| ... is to find a particularly USophobic one who knows full well about
American Independence Day, and to ask them rather pugnaciously whether
or not "you folks in Great (snicker) Britain have a Fourth of July."
99% of 'em always respond "Certainly NOT!" :-{
Then I ask 'em exactly the question ::EGGERS asked in .16 ....
Works 100% of the time on Micky Simpson!! :-)
|
937.19 | | MR4DEC::EGRACE | Costumes and Makeup and Kliegs oh my! | Wed Dec 18 1991 10:14 | 9 |
| One thing I never thought I would hear (read) is that anyone *anywhere*
has *ever* mistaken a Dorchester accent for a *British* accent!
(*8
E Grace
|
937.20 | | KAOFS::S_BROOK | | Wed Dec 18 1991 11:21 | 9 |
| re .18
Reminds me of the old kids joke ...
"Do you live on Xyz Street ?"
"Yes"
"Well, you'd better get off, there's a truck coming!"
|
937.21 | | BUOVAX::DUNCAN | OTC - Off The Charts | Wed Dec 18 1991 13:17 | 24 |
|
re: .19
>One thing I never thought I would hear (read) is that anyone *anywhere*
>has *ever* mistaken a Dorchester accent for a *British* accent!
Just imagine my surprise too. They really aren't alike, but it's
happened to me at least three times!
Again, I think its the cahnt for can't, hahf for haff (half) that
must make them think it might be British. Those are the only word
types in the "dot" accent I can think of that come close to sounding
British...
- Phil
ps, for anyone wondering where "dot" fits in, it's the short-hand
of the sometimes-pronounced "Dotchestah" (the other is "Dawchestah").
Ergo, Dorchester Ave. is almost always called "Dot Ave.", the
old Dorchester Theatre (long gone) was the "Dot Theatah", etc.
Dorchester itself is sometimes referred to as "dirty dot" (it
really isn't so dirty though, in fact it has some pretty nice
sections ...)
|
937.22 | We Americans confuse the British too | SUPER::MATTHEWS | | Thu Dec 19 1991 12:48 | 6 |
| When I visited England a few years ago, a British traveling companion
and I overheard a tourist, evidently from Texas, talking on the phone
in a hotel lobby. As soon as the Texan was out of earshot, my puzzled
companion asked me, "What planet was she from?"
Val
|
937.23 | | ULYSSE::WADE | | Fri Dec 20 1991 01:38 | 13 |
|
Then there was the snooty Bostonian visiting Texas. The hotel
check-in clerk offered a friendly "Hi, where are you-all from?".
The wife said "*We* are from a place where we do not - evah -
end a sentence with a preposition!".
The clerk paused before she replied "OK. Where are you-all
from .. bitch?".
Jim
PS I know two Boston-relateed jokes. Wanna hear the other?
|
937.24 | | SSDEVO::EGGERS | Anybody can fly with an engine. | Fri Dec 20 1991 10:57 | 1 |
| Not after that one.
|
937.25 | Don't even _try_ to underestimate 'em | SELECT::BEAIRSTO | | Mon Dec 23 1991 09:38 | 41 |
| Forgive me for branching back to the original topic -- I'll try to
start another sidebar before I finish :-)
My wife and I are WASP from way back, and we carefully considered the
effects of adopting a baby from India before my Calcutta-born daughter
arrived here at age 2 months. We hadn't thought of everything, though.
For instance, we hadn't thought about what to say when someone learned
where Caitlin was from and asked "What language will she speak?" After
it happened a couple of times, though, I developed a stock answer: "I
hope it's English. I want to ask her what that pink dot on the forehead
means."
By the time Caitlin was a toddler my reaction time had improved. She
was playing at my feet one day as my mother-in-law and her friend
chatted with us. After commenting on how beautiful Cait's black hair
and brown skin were my mother-in-law's friend looked at my blond white
self and asked, conspiratorially, "Are you going to tell her she's
adopted?" I clapped my hands over Cait's ears, said "Shhhhh!" with
distress and urgency, then turned the conversation to other topics
while my wife tried to keep her composure and my mother-in-law tried to
pretend she hadn't brought this dimwit into our house.
To progress down a new path: which of you is willing to admit to
misleading the credulous as cruelly as the time I explained the true
facts about kiwi fruit to a coworker. Specifically, that "kiwi fruit"
was a marketing term invented because no one would eat them if they
knew these fuzzy green things were in fact kiwi eggs. (It was two days
before she learned what I'd done to her, from the third person she
related this new knowledge to. That was a tough group.)
Rob
P.S. My Alberta-born accent has been changed by 20+ years in
Massachusetts into something that has been identified by imaginative
listeners as coming from England, Ireland and Virginia, to name just a
few. And everything that has been written in previous replies about
natives who ask "Do you have TV there?" and so on happened to me when I
first moved here :-( It's great fun to pretend you're seeing it for the
first time :-)
|
937.26 | | MR4DEC::EGRACE | GET THIS STUPID SONG OUT OF MY HEAD! | Mon Dec 23 1991 13:08 | 10 |
| Oh, yes! A friend of mine and I once had another kid (high school age
here!) convinced that we had been Siamese twins, joined at the hip.
My friend is black, and I am not! (*8
E Grace
|
937.27 | Believe it or not, it works! | SHALOT::ANDERSON | The Agony of Unfundedness | Mon Dec 23 1991 13:09 | 12 |
| > To progress down a new path: which of you is willing to admit to
> misleading the credulous as cruelly as the time I explained the true
> facts about kiwi fruit to a coworker. Specifically, that "kiwi fruit"
> was a marketing term invented because no one would eat them if they
> knew these fuzzy green things were in fact kiwi eggs. (It was two days
> before she learned what I'd done to her, from the third person she
> related this new knowledge to. That was a tough group.)
Did this coworker know that the word "gullible" is NOT in the
dictionary?
-- Cliff
|
937.28 | | NOTIME::SACKS | Gerald Sacks ZKO2-3/N30 DTN:381-2085 | Tue Dec 24 1991 06:45 | 2 |
| Nobody would buy kiwi fruit if they knew the origin of the term "kiwi fruit."
They're called that because they resemble kiwi turds.
|
937.29 | (another tangent starts here) | SIMON::SZETO | Simon Szeto, International Sys. Eng. | Tue Dec 24 1991 15:30 | 7 |
| Well, I dunno why the Kiwis thought that "kiwi fruit" would be a good
marketing name, but before the fruit was transplanted to New Zealand,
it was known as "monkey fruit" in China. (I guess the Chinese knew as
much about marketing as Digital did.)
--Simon
|
937.30 | | VMSMKT::KENAH | Fleas Navidad | Thu Dec 26 1991 06:43 | 10 |
| >(I guess the Chinese knew as much about marketing as Digital did.)
This reminds me of a crack I heard about Digital at a conference
recently:
Digital was the first to market sushi in this country.
Trouble is, they marketed it as "dead, raw fish."
andrew
|
937.31 | | I::STOCKS | Ian Stocks | Sat Dec 28 1991 12:55 | 15 |
| > <<< Note 937.29 by SIMON::SZETO "Simon Szeto, International Sys. Eng." >>>
> -< (another tangent starts here) >-
>
> Well, I dunno why the Kiwis thought that "kiwi fruit" would be a good
> marketing name, but before the fruit was transplanted to New Zealand,
> it was known as "monkey fruit" in China. (I guess the Chinese knew as
> much about marketing as Digital did.)
>
> --Simon
>
Well, twenty or thirty years ago, it was called "chinese gooseberry" in New
Zealand. The name "kiwi fruit" was chosen for marketing it in the States, but
now seems to be in general use in New Zealand as well.
I
|
937.32 | | BLUMON::QUODLING | Mup - mup - mup - mup - mup - mup - mup | Sat Dec 28 1991 19:36 | 8 |
| ANd then you have the enterprising New Zealand Farmer, who has taken
the common possum, more of a pest than anything, and is breeding them.
He feeds them on bruised KiwiFruit, which the growers will just about
give away. He sells the furs, sells the meat as "Kiwi Bear" to the
south east asian market.
q
|
937.33 | Fastest broad bean in the West | MARVIN::KNOWLES | Caveat vendor | Thu Jan 02 1992 06:48 | 16 |
| � <<< Note 937.31 by I::STOCKS "Ian Stocks" >>>
�
�Well, twenty or thirty years ago, it was called "chinese gooseberry" in New
�Zealand. The name "kiwi fruit" was chosen for marketing it in the States, but
�now seems to be in general use in New Zealand as well.
I had a job with a greengrocer's firm in 1968 in London
(England), and the name for kiwi fruit was always - on the
delivery notes - Chinese Gooseberry. But the people who came
and bought them didn't know any different; so we kept
calling them kiwi fruit. I guess the people at head office
had heard about the `turd' derivation, and were trying to
get a euphemism into circulation before the punters found
out.
b
|
937.34 | | MICKY::SIMPSON | | Fri Jan 03 1992 01:34 | 4 |
|
Are you sure you weren't referring to Lychees? After all, London in
1968 was "hip and swinging" and I'm sure after a few "herbal" fags a
Kiwi fruit could look like a gooseberry, almost...
|
937.35 | sure 'nuff | MARVIN::KNOWLES | Caveat vendor | Fri Jan 03 1992 08:01 | 7 |
| In 1968 I hadn't even _heard_ of lychees. It'd be imputing
Byzantine tricksiness to the marketing department of T. W. Walton,
fruiterers, Ltd, to suggest that they hi-jacked a pre-existing
New Zealand name for a New Zealand fruit [or were they grown in
South Africa, hmm...] and tried to pass off lychees under the new
name.
|
937.36 | Back on topic. ? | REGENT::BROOMHEAD | Don't panic -- yet. | Tue Jan 07 1992 09:53 | 21 |
| Once upon a time� there was a World Science Fiction Convention in
Toronto.
The membership people had managed to lose the file boxes� containing
the V-W preregistrations.
My dear friend Tony Lewis worked Registration, and explained to an
unfortunate woma that she would have to go to the Problems Desk,
because her last name started with "V", and there was no "V" in the
Canadian alphabet. She was surprised, but understanding�.
It was later remarked that Tony's information undoubtedly came as
a surprise to Canadians "from Noa Scotia to Ancouer".
Ann B.
� Twice, actually, but this problem only showed up for the second
convention.
� This was in 1973. No one would have been caught dead trusting
a computer with on-line registration in those days.
� Read as "docile".
|
937.37 | | SSDEVO::EGGERS | Anybody can fly with an engine. | Tue Jan 07 1992 13:39 | 1 |
| Well, that does sound like Tony.
|
937.38 | York Minster | WELLIN::NISBET | Dougie Nisbet@WLO - DTN: 853 4334 | Mon Jan 27 1992 05:46 | 13 |
| At York Minster a few weeks ago, I decided to pay up and climb to the
top of the tower. York Minster is not a new building. Most observers
would realise that it definitely is in the Really Old stakes.
As I waited in the queue to pay for a ticket, I heard a female American
voice behind me say,
"You mean, there's NO ELEVATOR!".
At this realisation, she changed her mind about visiting the tower.
Dougie
|
937.39 | | SSDEVO::EGGERS | Anybody can fly with an engine. | Wed Feb 05 1992 14:22 | 4 |
| Re: .-1
Ugh! I condemn her to walk up the Washington Monument in August.
And she won't have to pay for the ride down.
|
937.40 | | DTIF::RUST | | Mon Sep 07 1992 15:39 | 11 |
| I was somewhat surprised to find that Evan Kemp, the chairman of the
U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission, has been accusing the
Muscular Dystrophy Association (for which sometime actor, comedian,
and - in some locales - cultural icon Jerry Lewis heads an annual
fund-raiser) of "using tragic stories to evoke pity and wring money
from telethon viewers".
Just what part of the concept of a "telethon" did Mr. Kemp not
understand, such that he's so terribly surprised about what they do?
-b
|
937.41 | | COOKIE::EGGERS | Anybody can fly with an engine. | Mon Sep 07 1992 18:57 | 3 |
| I think Mr. Kemp understands the concept of a fund-raising telethon,
and I doubt he is surprised. He just doesn't like it: in some quarters
it is no longer politically correct.
|
937.42 | the times they are a changin' | NSSMAC::BONNELL | Save me, Powdered-Toast Man ! | Tue Sep 08 1992 07:29 | 13 |
| I've also seem some complaints - from people with MD, or other
diseases-related disabilities. They feel that events such as the
telethon perpetuates an image of the disabled (or "differently abled"
in Newspeak) as deserving of pity. Also, that telethons focus on
buying leg-braces or other treatments at the expense of research to
cure or prevent the illness.
I *think* I read a news-item last week that a number of former "poster
children" had published a statement to this effect.
regards...
...diane
|
937.43 | "Pay, and I put back the bandage..." | VALKYR::RUST | | Tue Sep 08 1992 08:03 | 9 |
| Yes, I'd heard bits and pieces about the other protests being waged,
and am certainly in sympathy with those who don't like telethons,
and/or those who don't want themselves held up as "pity icons".
However, I find it very hard to imagine a way to ask for public
subscriptions to fight some ailment or other _without_ pointing out the
consequences of the lack of such support, and that's what the tone of
the article suggested to me.
-b
|