โFeb-20-2014 01:04 PM
โFeb-23-2014 03:17 PM
michigansandzilla wrote:Sound a little like a NJ "Jug handle", no left turns, you have to go right if you want to get onto the road on the left. :S :h Totally freaked me out the first time I saw it.Rice wrote:
Also crazy is the "Pittsburgh Left," where the first car turning left at a stoplight jumps the green (or relies on oncoming cars to yield because they know about the convention) to turn left before the oncoming traffic starts coming straight through.
That sounds scary.
In Michigan we oftentimes give directions saying, "Make a Michigan left," which really means that to turn left onto a road, you first have to turn right onto the road you want to get onto, then turn around at the boulevard.
โFeb-23-2014 07:53 AM
โFeb-23-2014 06:56 AM
โFeb-22-2014 11:18 PM
โFeb-22-2014 07:19 PM
โFeb-22-2014 06:40 PM
Rice wrote:
Also crazy is the "Pittsburgh Left," where the first car turning left at a stoplight jumps the green (or relies on oncoming cars to yield because they know about the convention) to turn left before the oncoming traffic starts coming straight through.
โFeb-22-2014 06:30 PM
hotbyte wrote:Padeena wrote:michigansandzilla wrote:
Only thing I've noticed is the difference of the use of the term coke, pop or soda.
In Michigan we don't say soda at all. Unless it's baking soda. We say pop, which can be any kind, coke, sprite, pepsi, etc.
Went to Florida once and asked for a pop and the cashier didn't know what I wanted!
Interesting... I've always equated the term 'soda', with Americans. We're east cost Canadians, and always use 'pop'. Maybe it's only eastern seaboard Americans that say 'soda'?
Here in GA, they used to all be "Coke." Not unusual to go into fast food place and order a coke and be asked what kind. Now, soda seems to be coming into favor.
โFeb-22-2014 06:25 PM
โFeb-22-2014 04:14 PM
spoon059 wrote:I was hoping it was only from the Lake Woebegone folks but I guess you're right.westend wrote:
Here's the wierdness: If you're driving slower than everyone, why drive in the left most lane? It's not a PDL-Personal Driving Lane, it's the PASSING lane. Get out of the Rapture and get to the right!
Unfortunately that's not a regional thing. That's a pretty universal thing from coast to coast. I guess some people still think the US Gov't is giving away land to homesteaders... if they occupy it long enough, the government will give it to them.
I still believe that slow pokes in the left lane are the leading cause of slowing traffic, dangerous driving, road rage and collisions.
โFeb-22-2014 08:46 AM
jdog wrote:
Living in Northern California, we hear people from other states refer to San Francisco as "FRISCO". No one around here calls San Francisco "FRISCO".
โFeb-22-2014 05:47 AM
spoon059 wrote:No it is not, milk tastes best cold, hot as in coco, or fresh from the cow. As for peanuts in coke, the salt reduces the carbonation making it easier to drink without burping. Ketchup finds its way on french fries, eggs, hamburgers, beef, hotdogs etc. It is away of hiding the taste of the food. It probably makes some of those foods edible.2012Coleman wrote:
I put ketchup on mac and cheese - top that!
I put ice in my glass of milk. Apparently that's weird...
โFeb-22-2014 04:34 AM
westend wrote:
Here's the wierdness: If you're driving slower than everyone, why drive in the left most lane? It's not a PDL-Personal Driving Lane, it's the PASSING lane. Get out of the Rapture and get to the right!
โFeb-22-2014 04:29 AM
โFeb-21-2014 08:23 PM
โFeb-21-2014 07:23 PM
Francesca Knowles wrote:
My husband grew up in Louisiana, and the weirdest thing he does that he blames on regional influence is putting peanuts in his Coke bottle before he drinks it.
I myself have lived in the Pacific Northwest all my life and therefore HAVE no weird regional habits. :B