BunchOBull
Active member
I always assumed "have a catch" is just antiquated, archaic language, not specific to a region. But it does sound awfully Canadian to me, eh?
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I always assumed "have a catch" is just antiquated, archaic language, not specific to a region. But it does sound awfully Canadian to me, eh?
I live in southern Illinois, and people say soda here. From my experiences people I’ve met from the northern part of the state say pop.
Bubbler? Never heard that beforeFunny because cross that Wisconsin border it’s mostly soda and those who say pop claim it’s because their family came from the south.
But we all agree that it’s bubbler and not drinking fountain
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Bubbler also confused me, my Rhode island neighbors seem to use that one a lot
Funny because cross that Wisconsin border it’s mostly soda and those who say pop claim it’s because their family came from the south.
But we all agree that it’s bubbler and not drinking fountain
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If you drink pop you probably play catch, if you drink soda you probably have a catch.