Pop vs Soda

dunclock

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Dec 22, 2001
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I have always just said what I was drinking, ie, Mountain Dew, have NEVER said soda or pop, and only call a coca cola a coke:shrug:
 

3 Seconds

Fcuk Frist
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Jan 14, 2004
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Soda for me. I thought Pop died out in the 60's some time?

Although I never drink it unless it has some form of alcohol in it anyways...so I guess it doesn't matter much.
 

PharoahUB

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Soda here.....never heard it called anything different around here!!

from the same area as you. I could not believe what I was hearing when I went away to school. At first, I thought they were joking or gay! Saratoga county is definitely 100% soda.
 

smurphy

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Jul 31, 2004
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what would 7up or sprite be uncoke :shrug:
Clear sodas/pops are not Coke. They are all called Sprite. Sorry 7-Up and Sierra Mist.:nono: I have to keep it simple - I get frightened and confused by too many choices.
 

The Judge

Pura Vida!
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Aug 5, 2004
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Any carbonated beverage without alcohol is a coke in Texas, regardless of the flavor.
 

SixFive

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Any carbonated beverage without alcohol is a coke in Texas, regardless of the flavor.

same here. My county was 81% coke.

If somebody around here say s pop or soda, I definitely know their roots are not from around here.

My wife is from Wisconsin, and they say 'soda'.
 

Old School

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1080298123_d9a4b621f0_o.gif
 

Old School

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Soda or Pop? Journal of English Linguistics

Soda or Pop? Journal of English Linguistics

I moved around a lot, and have always used ?pop? to refer to soft drinks. When you are a kid, you don?t really notice when someone uses a different term for the same thing, but growing older, you begin to notice these linguistical hiccups. Different regions of the english speaking world use different terms for the same thing ? soft drinks.

The word soda comes from soda-water (sodium bicarbonate with acid to create fizz). Its original meaning was sodium carbonate, Na2CO3, but has evolved into one of the generic terms for a soft drink.

Pop was introduced later in 1812 by Robert Southey,

A new manufactory of a nectar, between soda-water and ginger-beer, and called pop, because ?pop goes the cork? when it is drawn.

Trailing soda and pop in popularity is coke, which has influence in the south likely due to the location of the Coca-Cola plant in Georgia. ?I?ll have a coke,? ?What kind of coke??, ?Root beer please?.

While this paper does numerous small surveys on the ubiquity of soda/pop/coke, this newer map is a more comprehensive view of the linguistic divide of people in the United States (via popvssoda.com),

(click to enlarge)



Soda is more popular in the southwest, northeast, and St. Louis area; pop is used more in the northwest and midwest; coke is used in the south.

Other terms for soft drinks from other counties (via wikipedia):

Canadians and the British say ?pop?
Some Brits even say ?fizzy drink?
In Western Scotland, they use ?ginger?
Aussies and New Zealanders say ?soft drink?
Some Australians call it ?lolly water?
So where did the term soft drink come from? It was chosen because a hard was used to describe alcoholic beverages, hence the antonym soft was the obvious choice for non-alcoholic beverage. And beverage came from the Old French root word beivre (to drink) during their conquest of England in 1066.



Von Schneidemesser, L. (1996). Soda or Pop? Journal of English Linguistics, 24(4), 270-287.
 

Old School

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Trailing soda and pop in popularity is coke, which has influence in the south likely due to the location of the Coca-Cola plant in Georgia. ?I?ll have a coke,? ?What kind of coke??:shrug: , ?Root beer please?.
:mj07:


Americans'..we are even lazy when ordering a beverage.:scared
 

kellyindallas

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I've always used pop, I grew up in the midwest. People in Texas look at me like they've never heard the term, nor do they understand what it means. It's quite funny...

I always ask them why they're asking for a Coke if they want a Sprite? Very weird, to me.
 

vinnie

la vita ? buona
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Sep 11, 2000
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I've always used pop, I grew up in the midwest. People in Texas look at me like they've never heard the term, nor do they understand what it means. It's quite funny...

I always ask them why they're asking for a Coke if they want a Sprite? Very weird, to me.

FDC thinks Samuel Adams is coke :scared
 
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