Guessing What These US West Coast Words Mean

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  • Опубликовано: 17 июл 2024
  • In which I guess the meaning of fifteen West Coast words from the United States of America.
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Комментарии • 2,9 тыс.

  • @catherinewolf1103
    @catherinewolf1103 2 года назад +1167

    If taking about the animal, yes, it could mean mountain lion. If taking about a woman, it means a lady who romantically gets together with much younger men

    • @elultimo102
      @elultimo102 2 года назад +32

      Where were they when I was 21? (By now, they would all be dead).

    • @violatethemagistrate
      @violatethemagistrate 2 года назад +32

      I've found 'cougar' as the cat, to be used in the midwest-Ozarks area. We always call it mountain lion in CenCal.

    • @tarquincummerbund6997
      @tarquincummerbund6997 2 года назад +30

      Cougar = mountain lion = puma

    • @lairdcummings9092
      @lairdcummings9092 2 года назад +50

      Californian native who lived in Colorado for a long time; cougar is a large wild cat (Colorado).
      Also an older woman with a taste for young men (East *and* West Coast).

    • @a.b.c.6717
      @a.b.c.6717 2 года назад +62

      Yeah, he completely missed the mark on this one!

  • @Beethovenfan12
    @Beethovenfan12 2 года назад +203

    I grew up with the word "duff" to mean one's rear end. To use it in a sentence, I'd say, "Get up off your duff and start helping!"
    Cougar certainly means a big cat native to North America, but the slang version, which is what I thought you were going for in this video, is a woman who has reached middle age who dates younger men.

    • @chrisnemec5644
      @chrisnemec5644 2 года назад +3

      I heard this too, although it tends to imply that one is being lazy.

    • @BoomerTex
      @BoomerTex 2 года назад +6

      I've heard it used that way too all my life, but I think in this case (California) it would be like the movie The Duff where Duff means Designated Ugly Fat Friend - DUFF.

    • @Beethovenfan12
      @Beethovenfan12 2 года назад +1

      @@BoomerTex, you''re probably right about that. I never saw the movie, but I saw it listed on Netflix, and I wondered.
      Makes sense.

    • @pedrolopez8057
      @pedrolopez8057 2 года назад +3

      It's a pretty common forestry word.

    • @GizmoFromPizmo
      @GizmoFromPizmo 2 года назад +3

      Right. Duff means "prat". My mom used to talk about certain comic actors (Jerry Lewis, or whoever) who would do prat falls (meaning they fell on their butts). And duff does indeed mean butt. The butt has a lot of synonyms.

  • @queenmotherbug
    @queenmotherbug 2 года назад +78

    I live in Oregon and have almost my whole life, and only recently realized that "spendy" is a regional word! People say it all the time here.

    • @davidkuznetsov2011
      @davidkuznetsov2011 2 года назад +2

      Flush down Kate Brown is also regional here.

    • @assmaster420
      @assmaster420 Год назад +1

      @@davidkuznetsov2011 that’s what happens when the city(s) controls the state. We have the same problem just north of there.

    • @d4l3d
      @d4l3d Год назад

      That was the first word that gave me pause after moving to WA from IL. Nice to see it included.

    • @KyleDavis328
      @KyleDavis328 Год назад +2

      From SoCal, I've heard of "spendy" and am pretty sure I've used it myself. I didn't realize it's supposed to be a PNW thing.

    • @weebeevillaging587
      @weebeevillaging587 Год назад

      @@davidkuznetsov2011 for methford

  • @danielwendlick784
    @danielwendlick784 2 года назад +129

    "Dank" has an interesting turnaround of meanings. Originally dark, then dark, damp and mildewy, as in "The dank smell of the disused cellar". From there to anything strongly and not particularly pleasantly odoriferous, which was then assigned to a high grade of a vegetable substance not normally eaten in salads. from there it took the meaning of a high grade of anything, and then just generally good.

    • @luelladiaz109
      @luelladiaz109 2 года назад +10

      I have only heard the word dank for the dark damp smelly area. Never heard it to mean anything good. Northern Californian here.

    • @RoxieMarquez_marroxeli
      @RoxieMarquez_marroxeli 2 года назад +9

      @@luelladiaz109 I think because when your herbs are really good, you can smell the moisture on it, meaning high quality. So "dank memes" can by association mean "high quality" memes because high moisture=high quality.

    • @antilogism
      @antilogism Год назад +1

      @@luelladiaz109 So. Cal. for 44 years---same but then I haven't been around pot since high school.

    • @Kamdrimar
      @Kamdrimar Год назад +3

      @@antilogism Yeah, guess you missed it. I'm only a few years younger than you and we (along with people older than us) used "dank" to refer to high-quality botanical arrangements in SoCal back when I was a kid.

    • @TheKjoy85
      @TheKjoy85 Год назад +3

      The original use of this word is what I thought of when he said it.

  • @studlord9970
    @studlord9970 2 года назад +308

    "Gnarly" does not mean "good", it means "intense". Bad things can be "gnarly", as in, "Dude, that wipeout was gnarly!"

    • @paulsander5433
      @paulsander5433 2 года назад +29

      Gnarly can also mean "difficult" or "dangerous" but conquerable. Originating with surfer culture, those things also equate to "great" and "intense".

    • @wilphred
      @wilphred 2 года назад +5

      I 100% agree. It is a word that still is in my vocabulary.

    • @danielwendlick784
      @danielwendlick784 2 года назад +5

      but it can apply as in "took a good fall" and took a bad fall" mean pretty much the same thing, though "good" and "bad" are opposites.

    • @alastairdallas
      @alastairdallas 2 года назад +8

      It also means "complex"--as in Middle East politics can be gnarly.

    • @davidstocker2278
      @davidstocker2278 2 года назад +3

      Gnarly is used to describe a kind of wound. A compound fracture is gnarly, a bruise is not. A wipeout being gnarly means it injured you significantly. Using gnarly instead of intense to describe a wipeout that didn't injure you drives me the same crazy that people who use literally incorrectly

  • @eggman9713
    @eggman9713 2 года назад +75

    I'm waiting for Laurence to discover that the eastern parts of Washington and Oregon are arid semi-desert climates extremely different than the stereotypical rainy and grey Seattle. I seem to recall he's been to Idaho as well, and southern Idaho is very similar.

    • @YourNextStep1234
      @YourNextStep1234 2 года назад +3

      YESSSSSS!! Drives me nuts that the world seems to think the PNW all has Seattle weather

    • @mab6122
      @mab6122 Год назад +10

      Washington state features every type of climate of the continental US all in one place: desert, coastal, the only rainforest in the northern hemisphere… it’s the most amazing place on Earth.

    • @ilenestrong7471
      @ilenestrong7471 Год назад +3

      Some parts of eastern Washington and Oregon are not just semi-desert they are desert. Yakima averages 3 inches of rain annually.

    • @stever3658
      @stever3658 Год назад +2

      @MAB I believe that there is also a temperate rainforest in BC Canada.

    • @stever3658
      @stever3658 Год назад

      @Ilene Strong Finally, someone else who realizes that Seattle doesn't represent the entire state. Weatherwise or in other ways.

  • @angiebee2225
    @angiebee2225 2 года назад +105

    Considering how Laurence approached the cougar question, I think he is familiar with the slang, and was legitimately unfamiliar with the actual animal. It's a mountain lion to me.

    • @reneed.1648
      @reneed.1648 Год назад +7

      We call them Mountain Lions in California. Cougar is more of a Rocky Mountains thing.

    • @ApocalypseSoldiers
      @ApocalypseSoldiers 10 месяцев назад +1

      @@reneed.1648I live in Colorado and no one uses cougar. They are mountain lions.

    • @Ellen-ru2fr
      @Ellen-ru2fr 5 месяцев назад +1

      Whatever one wants to call them, remaining unfamiliar with them is optimal, at least on an up-close-and-personal while out hiking, jogging, or bicycling basis...

  • @TheKjoy85
    @TheKjoy85 Год назад +34

    I have lived my entire life in Washington and a term that I have always used and thought everyone knew was "buck." When I was 22 I worked in a pet store and sometimes had to help customers figure out what size dog collar or harness would fit their dog, so I went next door to the craft store and bought a retractable seamstress measuring tape. When I showed to my coworkers, they asked me how much it was and I told them that it was 3 bucks. One of the managers wasn't originally from here and apparently had never heard that word used that way. I don't know why dollars are called bucks or where that use of the word came from, but my whole family uses it.

    • @theboyisnotright6312
      @theboyisnotright6312 Год назад +12

      One dollar=one buck comes from the colonial fur trade. One buckskin was worth one dollar for trade purposes.

    • @kathygreer2097
      @kathygreer2097 Год назад

      We use it here in the northeast too.

    • @birdermufagain
      @birdermufagain Год назад +5

      I'm from Wisconsin. I've said buck for dollar all my life.

    • @katherinegarlock2249
      @katherinegarlock2249 11 месяцев назад +6

      "Buck" has been around since at least the 1740s and refers to the animal. Buck skin was sought after and was used as a currency measure. When the dollar was first coined in 1792, people weren't trading buck skins, but the slang still stuck around. "Buck" is definitely not a regional thing.

    • @Ashley-xu1lk
      @Ashley-xu1lk 11 месяцев назад +4

      I've lived in CA my whole life and I'm aware that buck could mean dollars.

  • @TeresaDorey
    @TeresaDorey 2 года назад +532

    I thought “Cougar” was definitely going to be woman who goes after much younger men. Now I want to know the origin story behind this meaning.

    • @CaptainHightop
      @CaptainHightop 2 года назад +94

      Cougar as term for older women going after younger men comes from being on the prowl for prey like the cat cougar.

    • @andrewthezeppo
      @andrewthezeppo 2 года назад +46

      Being from L,A, that is most definitely the meaning we call the cats mountain lions.

    • @devorahacts
      @devorahacts 2 года назад +9

      @@CaptainHightop No, it comes from the notion that her body is hot and her face is scary. It's an insult. I wouldn't repeat it to women unless they bring it up in a positive way.

    • @davesunhammer4218
      @davesunhammer4218 2 года назад +21

      Again, with reference to the cat name and not the woman slang, cougar comes from French. Makes total sense that it would spread down from French Canadian trappers into Washington, then Oregon, which had a long "trapper" history.

    • @stuartsutherland2840
      @stuartsutherland2840 2 года назад +87

      @@devorahacts That is not a cougar. That's butterface. I have never heard anyone use it that way.

  • @Cross3DG
    @Cross3DG 2 года назад +163

    Having grown up in southern California, I've definitely heard gnarly used in a positive sense, but it's also used to describe quite the opposite, something that's revolting or disgusting.

    • @wisecatwillis1
      @wisecatwillis1 2 года назад +8

      I've never heard 'gnarly' used in a positive sense, only negative, or at least saying something was 'intense' as in: those waves were pretty gnarly. That band's music was too gnarly, we had to leave. The snow was gnarly today, we had to take the boards off and take a break.
      I grew up in Seattle and lived in LA half my life, as well as a bit in San Francisco

    • @TysonGiffordME
      @TysonGiffordME 2 года назад +3

      @@wisecatwillis1 in the case of music, I have only heard it as a positive... In the same way you might say "that riff is nasty" or "that breakdown was brutal"

    • @pXnTilde
      @pXnTilde 2 года назад +7

      gnarly means something is gnarled, which is like twisted in a disorganized way, like a gnarled root. It's easy to extrapolate that to waves, then to someone conquering a "gnarly" wave, then to the act itself being gnarly

    • @Chahlie
      @Chahlie 2 года назад +2

      Up in BC, the old usage of gnarly (generally by loggers) was something twisted and tough. But now it's a positive thing especially to boarders, which confuses my old brain all to bits!

    • @UserName-ts3sp
      @UserName-ts3sp 2 года назад +1

      ive heard gnarly before... but almost always in a negative sense. im from the midwest though

  • @RoxieMarquez_marroxeli
    @RoxieMarquez_marroxeli 2 года назад +57

    Native CA millennial and I have heard of (and used) all of the CA referenced words. I also thought that bear claws were pretty ubiquitous but maybe they started here. Also a lot of confusion for the word "dank" which has been a stoner term in use since the mid nineties at least. I always took it to mean dank (as in moist) so that your herbs are moist enough to be "dank" meaning they are that fresh.
    Also I have been known to combine many of the phrases into a sentence (which I still get teased about by my native NV partner). So you could viably say something like "Yo this June Gloom is hella dank right now, Imma post up with this bear claw before swooping on the cafe spot, yadadamean?" and Californian could probably understand you.

    • @Essy311
      @Essy311 Год назад +6

      Bear claws has definitely spread. I'm surprised that he hasn't heard it before living in Indiana and Chicago because I grew up in Indiana, and it's very common there.
      I recently lived in the SF area for 5 years, and hadn't heard some of these. Yadadamean? Nope.
      But what I heard a TON was the word structure. Play structure, parking structure. My brother live in Seattle for a while and apparently they say it there, too, but I haven't heard it used like that other places. I've always used parking garage and playground (even to talk about the actual play equipment as a whole).

    • @JenevieveDeFer
      @JenevieveDeFer Год назад +3

      @@Essy311 I have lived in the SF Bay Area for 56 years and have never heart Yadadamean.

    • @christopherfittro1900
      @christopherfittro1900 Год назад +2

      Same, been in the Bay area for decades (not 56 years, but a while) and never heard yadadamean.

    • @u140550
      @u140550 Год назад +2

      i know we use this slang, but man its been a while since i've seen someone use it all in a sentence. thank you for representing us!!!

    • @imChauy
      @imChauy Год назад +1

      @@Essy311 I was confused by yadadamean too, but then I realized that my friend group does say "you know what I mean" a LOT, and often very quickly too.
      Which, because of our tendency to pronounce "t" sounds as "d," can actually kind of sound like yadadamean lol

  • @kendallholcomb987
    @kendallholcomb987 Год назад +9

    I'm a born and raised Oregonian. I've mostly heard the term Sunbreak by meteorologists on the news, but I hear potato bug, spendy, and cougar frequently. I mostly hear gnarly in reference to really nasty, gag-worthy wounds. I've not heard the term Duff ever.

  • @ladyduffield
    @ladyduffield 2 года назад +90

    Animal Cougar = Mountain Lion. In society, it's a woman who's about 10+ years older than her male lover.

    • @EricaGamet
      @EricaGamet 2 года назад +5

      Ahem... or female lover. Being "on the prowl" for a younger person is the key.

    • @mikep8080
      @mikep8080 2 года назад +4

      Based on a woman's age, this scale classifies women (who prey on younger men for their sexual appetite) as felines.
      The scale is as follows:
      Age 0-12: Housecat
      Age 13-17: Bobcat
      Age 18-21: Wildcat
      Age 22-29: Lynx
      Age 30-39: Puma
      Age 40-49: Cougar
      Age 50-59: Jaguar
      Age 60-68: Panther
      Age 69: Pussycat
      Age 70-79: Cheetah
      Age 80-89: Leopard
      Age 90-99: Tiger
      Age 100+: Lion

    • @alanjameson8664
      @alanjameson8664 2 года назад +1

      I think the social meaning must be a recent neologism. I am unfamiliar with it, and definitely never heard it when I was young. (Currently 75.) Or maybe I just kept good company.

    • @EricaGamet
      @EricaGamet 2 года назад +3

      @@alanjameson8664 The term has been around for a good 25 years at least. I learned it in my early 20s or so. (54 here)

  • @dawngw26
    @dawngw26 2 года назад +55

    I'm a Californian and we tend to call the puma a mountain lion. At least, in Southern CA. As for 'cougar' we all know it's another term for mountain lion, the word is generally used for an older woman dating or looking to date a much younger man.

    • @anthonygreen7763
      @anthonygreen7763 2 года назад +6

      Same, in the Bay Area its almost always referred to as a mountain lion

    • @luelladiaz109
      @luelladiaz109 2 года назад +6

      Northern California and up here have heard cougar as that or puma, mountain lion and panther. Also the slang for older lady after younger men. Men get called cradle robbers.

    • @Mirokuofnite
      @Mirokuofnite Год назад +3

      Central Valley here. I always heard mountain lion when referring to the creature. But cougar occasionally popped up.

    • @wta1518
      @wta1518 Год назад +4

      Sacramento here, only ever called it a Mountain Lion.

    • @truckerkevthepaidtourist
      @truckerkevthepaidtourist Год назад

      Yes the creative term on the word sugar mama
      Although there is no animal for the mail it's just sugar daddy LOL.

  • @solracer66
    @solracer66 2 года назад +41

    I think when it comes to the west coast you really need to separate California from the Pacific Northwest, there isn't as much sharing of words as you would expect. Also in the Northwest, or at least in Washington a fair number of Canadian words and phrases sneak in, maybe because we get Canadian tv (I've watched around 99% of the Olympics on CBC because of their superior round the clock coverage).

    • @kitcutting
      @kitcutting Год назад +7

      Late reply, but I agree. Even here in California we distinguish northern slang from our southern half.
      As someone who has spent a good amount of time living in both halves of California, SF slang is more restrictive than LA slang.
      I even had a friend come in from the PNW when I was living near LA (she was from near Bellevue) and she underwent a slight culture shock when we toured downtown LA

    • @RyukyuStyle
      @RyukyuStyle 11 месяцев назад +3

      I can assure you that the majority of cali words are in the seattle-tacoma area. Definitely don't have canadian things lol.

    • @solracer66
      @solracer66 11 месяцев назад +5

      @@RyukyuStyle Only because there are too many Californians moving up here!

    • @josephsilva9403
      @josephsilva9403 6 месяцев назад

      @@solracer66 just like the east moving out west crazy right lol

    • @Myrtlecrack
      @Myrtlecrack 4 месяца назад

      As a Ex-Californian with strong ties still there, I disagree, there is lots of overlap in accent and vocabulary.

  • @Accentor100
    @Accentor100 2 года назад +8

    Growing up in the San Francisco Bay Area, I never thought of "hella" as anything unusual. That is until I moved to San Diego as the word wasn't used here at that time though it is now. As far as Cougar goes, I think that's more common in Washington and Oregon. In California, the preferred name is actually Mountain Lion. News reports and state agencies use Mountain Lion and it appears on any official signs warning they may be in an area.

  • @blakdeth
    @blakdeth 2 года назад +88

    In my area of California gnarly has a somewhat negative connotation. Someone could say "I saw a gnarly car wreck today" or "look at this gnarly gash on my leg". We typically use it for things so bad you can't look away.

    • @Author.Noelle.Alexandria
      @Author.Noelle.Alexandria 2 года назад +12

      It's in the inflection. Can be good, can mean bad, can mean weird. It's like Dude. :D

    • @bobatron2639
      @bobatron2639 2 года назад +7

      Yeah there is definitely an awe attached to it. Like a gnarly wave isn't a totally good wave, it's a wave that is rough and hard to ride but probably really big.

    • @ZakhadWOW
      @ZakhadWOW 2 года назад +8

      gnarly is a form of intensifier as well, usually meaning extreme or severe, so it can be used in both positive and negative situations

    • @kylegilmore3810
      @kylegilmore3810 2 года назад +3

      @Apsoy Pike Have you seen footage of surgeries, especially those regarding bones? lol I'd say power tools and hammers are pretty gnarly

    • @isweartofuckinggod
      @isweartofuckinggod 2 года назад +4

      I think we're from the same "area" of California because that was my thought exactly.

  • @Jarekthegamingdragon
    @Jarekthegamingdragon 2 года назад +70

    As an Oregonian, Duff is definitely not used widely. I've gone camping once a month my whole life and never heard duff used like that. That said the rest of the PNW words are used very commonly. The Californian words haven't made it up here though. Very different cultures.

    • @GH-oi2jf
      @GH-oi2jf 2 года назад +10

      I’m an Oregonian and I never heard it. It isn’t a local term used casually, it’s a technical term used by foresters. It isn’t just the loose stuff on the surface, but a dense layer of organic matter built up over time. This is jargon, not slang.

    • @DaRozeman
      @DaRozeman 2 года назад +6

      Having grown up in Washington, I have never heard Duff as anything other than the beer in the Simpsons or in the Redwall books referring to "Skilly and Duff", a type of food.

    • @stevenzeeck955
      @stevenzeeck955 2 года назад +1

      Guess it's more of a forestry term. Sometimes work finds me deep in the woods trying to set up a tri-pod but that fine needle floor litter can be feet thick and like walking on a sponge.

    • @justjane1639
      @justjane1639 2 года назад

      @@DaRozeman Or the guy who makes cakes on TV.

    • @roxannwatson8896
      @roxannwatson8896 2 года назад +6

      @@DaRozeman
      Have you heard "get off your duff..." As usage of duff?

  • @rygregory
    @rygregory Год назад +11

    Native Californian here (grew up in LA but have lived in SF for 22 years), I’ve never heard of a potato bug either. “NoHo” is only really known by LA locals. “June Gloom” is only really used to refer to June in Southern California. What you were witnessing in SF is not just June, it’s the fog that happens in San Francisco pretty much any time of the year but especially in the Summer months (“Fogust”). And even then, it’s often just something that happens in SF and not even the entire Bay Area.
    And I’ve only ever referred to that cat as a mountain lion.

    • @reneed.1648
      @reneed.1648 Год назад +2

      Yeah never heard potato bug. That’s a “Rollie Pollie” which is an admittedly weirder name but it is descriptive given how they roll up into little balls.

    • @shasta_le_bab
      @shasta_le_bab Год назад

      @@reneed.1648 potato bugs are different and a lot bigger, i have no idea why they used that bug (roly poly/pill bug) as an example. they are beetles and they have tan bodies that are striped usually. also a california resident

    • @Excalion88
      @Excalion88 6 месяцев назад +1

      ​@@shasta_le_bab as a Pacific Northwesterner, the video is spot on. We call the wood louse' a 'potato bug'

    • @Kerberlos
      @Kerberlos 5 месяцев назад

      @@shasta_le_bab Yeah, what I know as a 'Potato Bug' is apparently called a 'Jerusalem cricket' and what was shown, as you said, is a 'roly poly/pill bug'. Also a California resident

    • @TheGuindo
      @TheGuindo 4 месяца назад

      thanks for mentioning that june gloom is from socal, i've never heard it before and i was baffled as to what area that one was from. in the part of norcal i grew up in, the idea of having gloomy weather in june is unthinkable.

  • @StAmander
    @StAmander 2 года назад +11

    potato bug in spanish is "el niño de la tierra" or child of the earth. I'm also glad that other people are mentioning both definitions of "cougar", in my part of the West Coast, we call the animal a Mountain Lion more often than not, so it was kind of confusing.

  • @davedill680
    @davedill680 2 года назад +49

    I lived on the Oregon coast for a year where "spendy" was the equivalent of "pricey". But if you think about it, it flips the responsibility. If something is pricey, the other guy is being greedy. If something is spendy but you buy it anyway, it's on you bud.

    • @cloudsn
      @cloudsn 2 года назад +8

      I've lived in Washington state my whole life and had no idea the word spendy was a West coast thing. We don't say it all the time, but enough that the meaning is commonly known.

    • @abbylarkspur
      @abbylarkspur 2 года назад +1

      We say it in Minnesota too

    • @GreatBigRanz
      @GreatBigRanz 2 года назад

      during the winter Newport and Lincoln City are dank.

  • @amarellaharte574
    @amarellaharte574 2 года назад +42

    I'm just so impressed that Laurence pronounced Oregon correctly.

    • @extofer
      @extofer 2 года назад +8

      He gets more points than most people living on the east coast that almost willfully pronounce it wrong.

    • @tahoemike5828
      @tahoemike5828 2 года назад +5

      I believe he has been instructed in previous videos. I think he did a video about it. I think he has even learned not to put an "Ah" in the middle of Nevada, which he gets extra credit for given his English accent.

    • @pXnTilde
      @pXnTilde 2 года назад +2

      Eh, the first O was a bit more Ah than Oh, but definitely he did better than most people in the US

    • @extofer
      @extofer 2 года назад +7

      @@pXnTilde I think that's more owed to his accent than pronunciation. as long as he didn't say and put emphasis on "GONE" at the end we should be happy.

    • @JoeHamelin
      @JoeHamelin 6 месяцев назад

      @@tahoemike5828 Orygun

  • @duncanadelaide4054
    @duncanadelaide4054 2 года назад +32

    In the Pacific Northwest, I've never heard the phrase "June Gloom", however, "June-uary" is what we call that weather pattern, as it's essentially January weather in the month of June.
    Edit: I've been informed below that "June Gloom" may or may not be similar to June-uary

    • @dansanger5340
      @dansanger5340 2 года назад +2

      June Gloom I thought was California coastal fog.

    • @hiddenagenda4910
      @hiddenagenda4910 2 года назад +3

      Actually it's just an overcast morning in late May, June

    • @jjcc2221
      @jjcc2221 2 года назад +5

      We have June-uary in BC as well

    • @SelanneFan8
      @SelanneFan8 2 года назад

      May Gray and June Gloom are CA based lol

    • @annehersey9895
      @annehersey9895 2 года назад

      June Gloom is definitely a San Diego word as May, June and half of July are totally foggy until about 5 pm. We therefore, also have May Gray!

  • @alexdaugherty7472
    @alexdaugherty7472 2 года назад +6

    Many California words are not used in the NW. Some of those words are even familiar to me. There are similarities between the west coast's politics but culture is a different thing. In the NW we have our own words that are unique. Many of these words are ones used by younger people, who have many slang terms not familiar to older people.

  • @perpetualnerd4388
    @perpetualnerd4388 2 года назад +37

    Lawrence you could do a years worth of material just on Kentucky, and appalachia and the relationship to Britain... LOL

  • @pgray5223
    @pgray5223 2 года назад +215

    I grew up in California a long time ago and I was terrified of potato bugs. They were not the little pillbug or roly poly. They were awful, big nasty looking things. It was only after I moved to Idaho that I found out what a real potato bug was. Also not a pillbug. And I found out that what I had always called a potato bug was actually a Jerusalem cricket. They generally measure in at 2 inches, with a freakish big head. The Spanish speakers would call them Nino de la Tierra " child of the Earth." And they were called " the old bald man" by some Native American tribes. You should look up Jerusalem cricket....

    • @Dahnlor
      @Dahnlor 2 года назад +37

      I also grew up in California and "potato bug" immediately made me think of the Jerusalem cricket. Every time this comes up during my adult life I still need to be reminded of their more-correct name. Pillbugs were also "sowbugs".

    • @pgray5223
      @pgray5223 2 года назад +12

      @@Dahnlor Some of the Spanish speakers would call them Devil's Children, too. Did they in your area? Yeah, the pillbugs were never potato bugs, but they had several other names including sowbugs.

    • @invaderliz
      @invaderliz 2 года назад +14

      In the PNW, we call the wood louse (rolly-poly bug) a potato bug. I never heard of or saw a Jerusalem cricket until I moved to CA, where people told me it was a “potato bug”.

    • @PJ818
      @PJ818 2 года назад +17

      Yeah. In So. Cal I don't think we really typically call pill bugs potato bugs. I def. think of the Jerusalem cricket as potato bugs. Looking it up, Jerusalem crickets and wetas in New Zealand belong to the same larger superfamily of insects.

    • @IanOrmistonMusic
      @IanOrmistonMusic 2 года назад +14

      Yes! In California I’ve only ever heard potato bug used for Jerusalem crickets.

  • @RexFuturi
    @RexFuturi 2 года назад +24

    When I was living in La Jolla, May Gray and June Gloom were very real. Go a few miles from the coast, and it is not as pronounced. But, ironically, in that super-expensive area with the popular beaches, it is gray and gloomy practically non-stop through what are two of the nicest months almost everywhere else.

    • @Kayin2626
      @Kayin2626 2 года назад +5

      I grew up in Santa Monica (in the late 80s/early 90’s before it was super ritzy, just average middle class people). We were so close to Venice Beach that we had June Gloom too. And the fog would roll in, even during the spring and summer nights and it would get cold as soon as the sun went down.

    • @Eric__J
      @Eric__J 2 года назад +3

      In San Diego, May Grey and June Gloom affects all the lower-lying area west of the first mountain range to roughly 600' of elevation every day. It usually burns off by noon down to about 400'. There are some lower inland areas that rarely get it, like El Cajon, Santee, and Escondido.

    • @RexFuturi
      @RexFuturi 2 года назад

      @@Eric__J I lived in SD for 15 years. I don't think I ever noticed May Gray or June Gloom when I lived near Sports Arena, but that was fairly long ago. I lived in City Heights for a while, and there was never anything like an actual gloom. It was only the 2 years I lived in La Jolla that I experienced the Gray and Gloom. And it was stark. Cool, wet fog that hung around practically all month.

    • @teamcougars
      @teamcougars Год назад

      And June Gloom 😮

    • @brandonrodgers2479
      @brandonrodgers2479 Год назад +1

      I absolutely love La Jolla. Apart from the shear amount of people and houses its a paradise!

  • @aspenbark
    @aspenbark 2 года назад +7

    Duff is basically nature's mulch. It protects and enriches the soil underneath it. It could have been so many other things, though. Even as a 4th gen Californian and daughter of a member of the U.S. Forest Service, I didn't know what it meant in the context of this video until you defined it. Perhaps that is because I always assumed it was universally used that way by anyone who had any reason to talk about duff. I don't imagine it's used much by those who aren't involved in protecting the ecology of the forests.

  • @WeirdSoIL
    @WeirdSoIL 2 года назад +290

    That “Potato Bug” is actually a Roly-Poly. Or a Pill bug. So much fun to play with!

    • @Lisared023
      @Lisared023 2 года назад +13

      Oh yeah! I heard them called pill bugs. But, not as often as potato bugs. It was always fun to watch the curl up when you touched them. Their backs would look like metal slabs side by side. Looked very protective!! Lol

    • @jeffking4176
      @jeffking4176 2 года назад +19

      Roly poly is what I remember, too , in Missouri.
      📻🙂

    • @tinnagigja3723
      @tinnagigja3723 2 года назад +2

      His name is Uncle Carl.
      If anyone gets that reference, I will eat a bug.

    • @aprilrich807
      @aprilrich807 2 года назад +20

      Also referred to as a sow bug. I don’t know how they get confused with the horrendous potato bug!!

    • @davidbrick6325
      @davidbrick6325 2 года назад +13

      I grew up in Washington state calling them potato bugs.

  • @rclaughlin
    @rclaughlin 2 года назад +16

    I've lived in California all of my 64 years, and some of these words are new to me.

    • @marktracy1721
      @marktracy1721 2 года назад

      Most of these are new to me
      I was surprised that most people dont know the true meaning of cougar

    • @luelladiaz109
      @luelladiaz109 2 года назад

      Same here 72 years and some very new and some used differently like duff meaning you rear end. Swoop as in swoop in and grab it first.

    • @thehapagirl92
      @thehapagirl92 26 дней назад

      A lot of these terms are not something older people your age would know. I’m 32 and while I know these words there is some slang I don’t know and I’m a young millennial who has lived here my whole life

  • @SchemeTintFocus
    @SchemeTintFocus Год назад +2

    "I don't know many Cougars in Chicago", LMAO

  • @sunflowervibes3041
    @sunflowervibes3041 Год назад +2

    West coast life-long dweller here, some of these words are really familiar! Like bear claw, hella, and potato bug for sure. I personally use spendy lol. Gnarly seems like outdated lingo. This is outdated now, but when I was in high school ten years ago we used the word epic instead. EVERYTHING was epic. I have never heard of duff and I've lived in California and Oregon my whole life haha.

  • @laurietanigawa7373
    @laurietanigawa7373 2 года назад +35

    When I was little growing up in California we called those little bugs, pill bugs because they would curl up into a little ball or pill when they were scared.

    • @fermisparadox01
      @fermisparadox01 2 года назад +10

      We called them rolie polies

    • @arikwolf3777
      @arikwolf3777 2 года назад +3

      Growing up in Ohio, we called them Pill Bugs too, for the same reason as well. However, I have heard them called Rolly Pollies. Never heard of them being called Potato Bugs, until now.

    • @briankirchhoefer
      @briankirchhoefer 2 года назад +2

      @@fermisparadox01 we did too in southern Illinois

    • @valeriemerrill601
      @valeriemerrill601 2 года назад +4

      What we call Potato bugs in California are not what was shown in the video (those were rollie pollies). Potato bugs are 2-3 inches long and have big heads burrow in the dirt. Some people call them Jerusalem Crickets.

    • @pXnTilde
      @pXnTilde 2 года назад

      This is literally the first time I've understood why people call them pill bugs. I've always envisioned a generic "pill" to be an oblong shape, not a round one so to me they look less like "pills" when they're rolled up :P

  • @OMGitsaClaire
    @OMGitsaClaire 2 года назад +35

    Duff is a forestry term. It’s used extensively in the forestry and wildland fire industries. As in “Make a fire line; you need to rake off the duff.” As a former Forest Service employee, it was one I picked up. Duff is very important in wildfire prone areas because it’s the first stuff to catch and it can burn like crazy if it’s dry. That’s why people out west keep their yards well raked, or hose down their lawns if a fire is coming. Wet duff won’t burn.

    • @alindasue
      @alindasue 2 года назад +1

      Here in Washington, I have not heard "duff" widely used except from naturalists, forest rangers, and mountaineers. I knew the word because I come from a family of mountaineers.

    • @bradleywalker8468
      @bradleywalker8468 2 года назад +2

      In 2015 there was a teen comedy called "The DUFF," which stood for "Designated Ugly Fat Friend." (This being the movies, the "ugly" girl is very pretty and not really fat.) It's on Netflix.

    • @andyfletcher3561
      @andyfletcher3561 2 года назад +1

      @@bradleywalker8468 And that's most likely what was meant because how many call dead leaves on the ground "duff".

    • @y_fam_goeglyd
      @y_fam_goeglyd 2 года назад +1

      In the UK it means a failure, even "rank" (really rough). "It was a duff beer" - the beer wasn't a nice one to drink.

    • @christinestockman7042
      @christinestockman7042 2 года назад

      We, just regular people, used forest duff in the northeast. Also we ate bear claws.

  • @ScoutSilico
    @ScoutSilico Год назад +5

    I'm from the Seattle area and I've never heard anyone refer to leaves and ground debris as "Duff." The other PNW words and phrases were spot on. Spendy is fun to use in place of expensive in casual conversations.

  • @foogod4237
    @foogod4237 2 года назад +3

    I did indeed grow up (in California) with "potato bug" meaning the insect you pictured (I guess the official name is "woodlouse", they're like pill bugs, but aren't able to fully roll into a ball). However, there are apparently many other people who use the term "potato bug" to refer to Jerusalem crickets, which are very much not the same thing at all, leading to some confusing miscommunications on occasion..
    I'm pretty sure NoHo is very much only an LA-area thing. Nobody outside of that area (even on the rest of the west coast) ever uses that term, AFAIK.
    And I've lived in the SF bay area pretty much my entire life (and I'm not that young) and I've never even once heard anyone say "yadadamean". I think that's just someone pulling your leg...

    • @JonathanLedbetter
      @JonathanLedbetter 5 месяцев назад

      Oregonian here. Growing up, the bugs Laurence showed were indeed called "potato bugs" here. An episode of the Simpsons mentioned them, so I just assumed the name was more widespread.

  • @sschmidtevalue
    @sschmidtevalue 2 года назад +34

    I've seen Bearclaws in bakeries in Minnesota. Probably elsewhere too. They are usually shaped more like a bear's foot than the one you showed.

    • @kateburk2168
      @kateburk2168 2 года назад

      Also seen them in Fl

    • @GeorgeVCohea-dw7ou
      @GeorgeVCohea-dw7ou 2 года назад

      Bear Claws have definitely made it around North America within the past century and are not a regional exclusive product these days. Pretty much any donut shop will have them for sale. Of course, many donut shops that most people are familiar with happen to be national chains as well.

    • @soniashapiro4827
      @soniashapiro4827 2 года назад +1

      In Canada it's sometimes called a beaver tail

  • @timothycook2917
    @timothycook2917 2 года назад +15

    "I think I did pretty good on that. Don't get me wrong, I did dreadfully" Mr. Brown, you have a lovely way with words

  • @michaelrauff734
    @michaelrauff734 Год назад +2

    Duff is also a word specific in Wildland fire fighting or forest service because it specifically address the dead leaf and needle layer that hasn't rotted to mineral soil. It's particularly difficult to put out when on fire because its like a thick sponge that can smolder for days.

  • @salyluz6535
    @salyluz6535 2 года назад +5

    Thanks for doing this! It’s very entertaining and educational. I think we also might enjoy you asking midwesterners if they could identify or properly translate regional UK words! I’d love to see that. 🙏🏽

  • @candygram4435
    @candygram4435 2 года назад +14

    Mountain lion is what we called them when I lived in California

  • @raynemichelle2996
    @raynemichelle2996 2 года назад +25

    I grew up in British Columbia, and we speak the same as the rest of Cascadia (Oregonand Washington), but with some specific Canadianisms and pronunciations. We call an elephant ear a beaver tail. But we definitely call them potato bugs, cougars, and we say pop, like they do in Washington.

    • @alanjameson8664
      @alanjameson8664 2 года назад +1

      I am also a native Cascadian, albeit from the southern reaches [Eel River drainage, later coastal Mendocino County, all in the range of the Douglas Fir]. I wondered about pop, as in the carbonated beverages, and am gratified to learn my native word for it is common farther north. Thanks!

    • @ashleydanielson3222
      @ashleydanielson3222 2 года назад +1

      We say soda in Washington.

    • @raynemichelle2996
      @raynemichelle2996 2 года назад +2

      @@ashleydanielson3222 Washington state? I was born in Washington state. Everyone I know says pop. My entire (paternal side of the) family says pop and they have grown up in Puyallup for generations.

    • @stevenwagner983
      @stevenwagner983 2 года назад +1

      @@raynemichelle2996 seattle native as a kid and teen used pop but as got older switched to soda,

    • @raynemichelle2996
      @raynemichelle2996 2 года назад

      @@stevenwagner983 Yeah, I used to live in Utah for 2 years as a teen and they beat the pop out of me, even though I live in Canada and literally no one says soda here, I still sometimes say it. Or I say soda pop and people really look at me like I'm from another time.

  • @oneeyethedrd
    @oneeyethedrd Год назад +1

    I grew up near San Francisco and I remember June Gloom. It ties into the old Mark Twain quote that was something like “the coldest winter I ever spent was a summer in San Francisco “

  • @tiffanyvantine3322
    @tiffanyvantine3322 2 года назад +11

    I don’t know about all of these terms being in wide usage, but certainly as a native to SoCal, NoHo and June gloom are pretty widely used. You’ll hear June gloom during weather forecasts in the news all the time here. The other one my husband thinks is funny (he grew up mostly along the gulf coast) is marine layer. When there’s fog rolling onshore, they always call it “the marine layer” on the news, and he thinks that’s odd.
    Lawrence, not sure if you’ve covered this before, but could you talk about how different places refer to their highways? In SoCal, we usually say “the #”, like “the 5”, or maybe “the 5 freeway.” All my in laws think the “the” is weird.

    • @Kayin2626
      @Kayin2626 2 года назад +4

      I get poked fun at relentlessly by my husband for my reference of freeways and highways. I grew up in California and live in Texas and married a Texan. So I would always use “the” in front of the numbers. I had to learn to say I-whatever when I was in Texas in order to not confuse people. And then when I go back to California to visit, I go back to “the”. My husband will say “so we’re taking I-5 South?” Nope, that’s doesn’t exist! Lol

    • @angiebee2225
      @angiebee2225 2 года назад +1

      I grew up in Whittier and had no idea what NoHo was. Clearly I was on the wrong side of the county. I did, however, know all about June Gloom, and even though I left CA in 2005, it still influences how I perceive hazy or foggy weather. It'll burn off. Marine layer is what causes June Gloom and doesn't necessarily involve fog - if a marine layer is rolling in, it's a pocket of cooler air moving inland.
      I am also married to a Texan but now live in Missouri, although I spent several years in NY state. I refer to major roads by whatever the locals use. Interstate 64 is "64" or "40" (because the old highway was a different number. Interstate 90 is "the Thruway". Interstate 5 is and always will be "the 5".

    • @kirstenlandon3043
      @kirstenlandon3043 2 года назад +2

      You nailed this. I’ve never lived in SoCal (been in the Bay Area all my life) but I’ve spent a lot of time there and know very well that, when down south, you say “the 405,” or “the 5” or what have you. Up here, it’s just “5,” or “80,” etc.
      California has so many different “languages” and cultures-it’s truly like going to different countries without ever having to go outside our borders. Though I love leaving the US, too! ;)

    • @someonespadre
      @someonespadre 2 года назад

      I grew up in Bakersfield, we never said the 5 or the 99 or the 58, that’s an L.A. basin habit.
      California…freeway
      The other 49 states…the interstate.

    • @jeanmm2996
      @jeanmm2996 Год назад

      Oh good one, highways. And other traffic differences. In the northeast, we just call them their number, no "the". Or once in a while in a more rural area, might call it "the interstate, " but not that common.
      A busy and lengthy north- south highway here for much of its length is "5 & 10," when the routes 5 and 10 run together for the distance.

  • @judycolella5554
    @judycolella5554 2 года назад +33

    "Duff" also means you're derrière, as in, "Get off your duff and get back to work!" Then again, I'm from the East Coast, lol. Another hilarious offering - thanks so much, Lawrence!

    • @seantlewis376
      @seantlewis376 2 года назад +1

      55 years old, I've lived almost all my life on the West Coast, "Get off your duff!" is the only context I've ever heard it in. I did not know that the dictionary definition was "woodland detritus".

    • @jlt131
      @jlt131 2 года назад

      @@seantlewis376 i know it as both, up here in BC, but then again I did work in forestry for awhile back in my 20s.

    • @pbjman5809
      @pbjman5809 2 года назад +1

      your*

    • @jlt131
      @jlt131 2 года назад

      @@pbjman5809 did that make you feel better?

    • @pbjman5809
      @pbjman5809 2 года назад

      @@jlt131 yes

  • @boobah5643
    @boobah5643 2 года назад +41

    "Cougar" as in the cat isn't slang; it's just that the same cat has more than one name. "Cougar" meaning older woman hunting younger men for sexytimes is actual slang.

    • @TheBLGL
      @TheBLGL 2 года назад +1

      That’s why I was confused! I didn’t think it was slang, I use that term and I’ve never lived in the PNW.

    • @TheBLGL
      @TheBLGL 2 года назад

      I meant for a mountain lion. I don’t talk about cougars too much unless I watch “Breakfast at Tiffany’s” but know what they are.

    • @boobah5643
      @boobah5643 2 года назад

      @@TheBLGL I spent that whole section waiting for Lawrence to drop the bit. Then he didn't.
      Then again, it's worth pointing out that his thumbnail features that word with the West Coast states highlighted, so maybe he's just playing us for engagement metrics. In which case, well played.

    • @Mokiefraggle
      @Mokiefraggle 2 года назад

      To be fair, much of what was being discussed in the video _was_ slang, but the intent wasn't _just_ to examine slang. It's just looking at specifically West Coast American localized words, and what they mean/how they are used. After all, if you're from Florida, "cougar" doesn't typically mean the cat. You'd more likely be calling it a Florida panther.

    • @Blondie42
      @Blondie42 2 года назад

      Until Terry Fator debuted his puppet Vicky the Cougar, on AGT a few years back, I had never hear that word being use for anything other than the cat.

  • @loismiller2830
    @loismiller2830 2 года назад +7

    I've heard "post up" as a basketball term. It refers to an offensive player establishing a position below the foul line. I didn't know it was in common use with another meaning.

    • @mattnsac
      @mattnsac 2 года назад +2

      Thats where it comes from lol. When you post up, you stay in place. Perfect usage of two of his words would be like Post up at your girls and Ill swoop you up in a few

    • @pyrovania
      @pyrovania Год назад

      I thought it meant publishing something on the internet.

    • @sassanada
      @sassanada Год назад

      I would think that this term dates back to more cowboy, old west days - as in, tying your horse up at a hitching post.

  • @compoundfracture4661
    @compoundfracture4661 10 месяцев назад +1

    I grew up in rural Northern California in the mountains and mountain lion was what we called a cougar. Also, the photo you showed for potato bug we called a roly-poly. What we called a potato bug looks like a mutant cricket and apparently is also known as a Jerusalem cricket.

  • @jackgilchrist
    @jackgilchrist 2 года назад +42

    I was born in SW Washington in '67 and raised here and in NW Oregon. I've never heard most of the California terms. Though "gnarly" made it up here in the '80s I only heard "hella" when my brother married my sister-in-law almost 20 years ago - she's a SoCal transplant. I've never heard anyone say "duff." I've heard "forest litter" or just "(dry) leaves" or "needles."
    There's also a lot of words particular to the Pacific Northwest and BC that come from the old trade language known as "Chinook Jargon" or simply "the Jargon." Words like "potlatch" and "skookum." You might want to look that up.

    • @pXnTilde
      @pXnTilde 2 года назад +3

      Growing up in the 90s in PDX I've always been aware of hella (or heckin for children) and still hear it to this day. Duff I've understood to mean forest topsoil, but I wouldn't say it's an every-day speech word; probably just relevant to very backwoods people and hunters

    • @glcglc123
      @glcglc123 2 года назад +3

      I was born in the Willamette valley and live in Central Oregon. Have always used the term Duff for forest floor litter, perhaps more commonly used in Coniferous forests. I asked my wife what she called the forest floor litter her immediate response was Duff. Of Course I'm over 70 and have spent a major portion of my life in and around the forests

    • @A2nthop
      @A2nthop 2 года назад +10

      The PNW, perpetually annoyed at being tied into a unwilling marriage with California.

    • @jackgilchrist
      @jackgilchrist 2 года назад +1

      @@glcglc123 Strange. I've spent all my life in the woods too, though I'm only mid-50s and so not quite the old timer you are. Don't quite remember hearing the word, though it seems vaguely familiar the more I think of it. Maybe I have heard it and just forgot. Probably not a word that comes up in conversation very often unless you are a hunter, and I was fishing and other stuff a lot more often than hunting.

    • @michaelm.1947
      @michaelm.1947 2 года назад +3

      @@A2nthop "The PNW, perpetually annoyed at being tied into a unwilling marriage with California."
      I remember 30 years ago when people were complaining about Californians coming up and buying up all the good property, making places crowded, etc. Thirty years on, not much has changed, eh. :)

  • @lmoore3rd
    @lmoore3rd 2 года назад +9

    Lived in both WA and OR for combined 25 years and one regional term I love is "Skookum".

  • @judithkimmerling770
    @judithkimmerling770 Год назад

    You are a hoot! You’ve got this funny comedic style where you make the odd pauses, almost like “stubbing” your tongue before you finish a phrase. I rather like that quirkiness.

  • @solracer66
    @solracer66 2 года назад +3

    My favorite regional word is the term for the cover you put on the back of your pickup truck to make it more like a van. In the northwest we call that a "canopy" but elsewhere it's called a "cap", "topper" or "shell" and usually the other terms are completely unknown outside of each region. Heck there may be more terms then these, those are just the ones I've been exposed to in my travels.

  • @angelmage99
    @angelmage99 2 года назад +31

    A lot of those were Californian words. Washington and Oregon has their own unique set of words that are way different. We can kind of tell who's one of us by the way they talk.

  • @eastbaymauiboy
    @eastbaymauiboy 2 года назад +15

    Yup, here in 'The Bay', "hella" does mean "very"...as in..."It's hella (very) hot in here".
    It also means "a lot of"...as in..."I bought hella (a lot of) groceries today".
    Edit: Also, "hella" is derived from "hell", obviously, and can be made more PG (or G?) rated by saying "hekka" instead. Seriously, we say that too 😆

  • @kazkaythedragon
    @kazkaythedragon Год назад +4

    I really want to see your wife's reactions to some of your guesses 😆 they are hilarious

  • @treesyjo
    @treesyjo 2 года назад

    Yay, you gave a shoutout to my hometown, Springfield! I spent a *lot* of time in that library you showed. 😁

  • @justmeannie1956
    @justmeannie1956 2 года назад +26

    In San Diego, 'June Gloom' pertains to the marine layer off the coast that causes the 'gloom' but it's usually gone by 12 noon -- in May, it's called 'May Gray' but no complaints from me...just as long as the sun ☀️ eventually comes out.
    It was in the 80's today... sunny with nary any gloom in sight. 🌞
    Love all your gnarly videos, dude! 🏄‍♀️

    • @hoodmistressreloaded
      @hoodmistressreloaded 2 года назад +1

      Same in Los Angeles; we have "May Grey" and "June Gloom". And then there's "July Fry"

    • @justmeannie1956
      @justmeannie1956 2 года назад +1

      @@hoodmistressreloaded
      "July Fry"? That's a new one for me but it certainly applies to SoCal's hottest month, indeed!

    • @WendellSexson
      @WendellSexson 2 года назад +1

      Some years either September or October are hotter. It depends.

    • @WendellSexson
      @WendellSexson 2 года назад

      Mid 80s today in Long Beach, too. I was not amused.

    • @justmeannie1956
      @justmeannie1956 2 года назад

      @@WendellSexson
      Sometimes September is hotter than July especially when there's a Santa Ana but I think August is the most humid month of all.
      80 degree weather doesn't amuse you?
      I'd rather have weather that's sunny and warm versus east coast weather where freezing your patootie off is the norm.
      To each his/her own, I always say, cuz soon enough we'll have the May Gray.
      HAPPY SUPER BOWL WEEKEND, Y'ALL!
      G🏈 BENGALS! 🐅
      Sorry LA Rams fans -- I'm still a disgruntled SD Chargers fan. 🙁

  • @gordoofdoom
    @gordoofdoom 2 года назад +29

    June gloom is in wide use in San Diego. It seems to be a weather phenomena that is very coastal. A few miles in from the Ocean and you don't really experience it.

    • @elultimo102
      @elultimo102 2 года назад +6

      June Gloom happens the month after "May Gray." (25 years in San Diego, most of the time watching John Coleman's weathercasts).

    • @gemoftheocean
      @gemoftheocean 2 года назад +8

      Whole phrase is May Gray, June Gloom

    • @gordoofdoom
      @gordoofdoom 2 года назад +1

      @@elultimo102 I am wondering if May Gray June Gloom is specifically a San Diego thing. I don't remember it when I lived in the Bay Area. I don't think my wife who grew up in LA used it before she moved to San Diego.

    • @veo_
      @veo_ 2 года назад +9

      @@gordoofdoom I've lived in every major city on the west coast and it's a LA Basin -> OC -> SD thing only. SF gets gloomy year-round. Meteorologically June Gloom is kind of the reverse of the Santa Ana Winds.

    • @veo_
      @veo_ 2 года назад

      @@gemoftheocean What about "no-
      sky july"? :)

  • @bobjohnson7963
    @bobjohnson7963 2 года назад +1

    8:13 you don't know how much shock I expended just going through RUclips and then suddenly there is my small towns library on screen

  • @GeologyDude
    @GeologyDude 5 месяцев назад

    In Seattle and Portland, term "the mountain is out" relates to good weather, that allows you to see the top of either Mt. Rainier or Mt. Hood. Most of the time (especially in winter), clouds block the view of these very scenic mountains (which dominate the horizon).

  • @TheDevler23
    @TheDevler23 2 года назад +11

    I'm from Washington State and we have pretty much the same weather as England. Sunbreak definitely came from here in Seattle. California may have "June Gloom" but WA has "Junuary". We get a beautiful April-May and inevitably gray sky and rain most of June. When we got the crazy heat wave last year with over 100 degrees in June, it traumatized all of us. Dank started with marijuana. Good weed = dank weed. Sometimes, we use gnarly as the opposite of its meaning here. you might have a gnarly piece of wood, one with a ton of knots and twists and not easy to split. You might be in a gnarly car accident, with the metal all twisted up and it looks really bad from the outside.

    • @stever3658
      @stever3658 Год назад +2

      In Western Washington, it's said that summer doesn't begin until July 5th. In part due to Seattle's infamous rainy spring and a dose of June Gloom, which somehow wafts its way from California. Gnarly weather dude

  • @PockASqueeno
    @PockASqueeno 2 года назад +34

    I’ve been American all my life, and I thought that pumas, cougars, and panthers were all different animals.

    • @jeremyday9056
      @jeremyday9056 2 года назад +2

      Dude, me too.

    • @QuadCloudNine
      @QuadCloudNine 2 года назад +7

      They can be. Panther is more of a general term for a few types of big cat, including jaguars, which are different than mountain lions.

    • @angiebee2225
      @angiebee2225 2 года назад +6

      Most panthers are a separate genus from puma/cougar, but the Florida Panther (not to be confused with the hockey team) is just a cougar, so there's that.

    • @Mokiefraggle
      @Mokiefraggle 2 года назад +7

      @@QuadCloudNine Not exactly. I think you're more thinking of "panthera," which is the genus for big cats within the family Felidae. A lion, for instance, is panthera leo, while panthera tigris is a tiger. "Panther" is a term often used to describe specifically melanistic variants of the jaguar and leopard: those of the species with a mutation that makes them produce too much melanin, coloring their coat a dark brown/black shade (these animals do still have spots, though. Just a subtle variation in shades of black-on-black). However, in that regard, it's just a nickname for that variant. It's not actually describing a species.
      "Panther" in regard to a mountain lion, is more of a regional variant. The "Florida panther," in particular, which had briefly been considered a subspecies of the puma concolor cougar (the North American subspecies, separate from p. c. concolor, the South American cougar), but has since been folded in with the North American subspecies. The name, like the rest of the cougar's names (currently there are 40 different terms for a cougar known), are regional variations, dialectical variations ("panther" and "painter" for example, likely came from dialectical shifts), and the like.
      Fun fact, despite being called a "panther," mountain lions are a completely individual genus from "panthera." They're not even a big cat, despite males reaching up to 220lbs. They're considered a small cat, alongside the cheetah, which is primarily indicated by the fact that neither of them can roar. A puma is capable of meowing, purring, and making basically the same vocalizations as a house cat, just on a much larger scale, but their larynx structure makes them physically incapable of roaring.

    • @stever3658
      @stever3658 Год назад

      @Mokiefraggle I know the cougar is classified among the "small" or purring cats. The scream that they are known for, apparently in some areas, they are called "screamers," isn't a form of roar, but is akin to the long wail that a house cat may make when it's trying to intimidate another cat. Or, the ear splitting screach that occurs when you when you accidentally step on your cat's tail.

  • @odiebryer2144
    @odiebryer2144 Год назад +1

    Laurence, did you know that the cougar / puma / mountain lion is the largest cat that can purr? We see mountain lions in Kansas from time to time -- mostly not in the city but a couple of years ago, there was a video on the news from a woman who caught sight of a mountain lion walking by her window one early morning around 4 am or so. It was in a neighborhood that is near the river which there a lots of wooded areas. She said she probably wouldn't have ever seen it if she hadn't gotten up to get a drink of water.

  • @trubadorphotography2541
    @trubadorphotography2541 Год назад +1

    Depending on how long the foggy weather lasts, there can be May Gray, June Gloom, No Sky July, Fogust, and Souptember. 😆

  • @amandahiteshew7604
    @amandahiteshew7604 2 года назад +75

    I’ve lived in CA my whole life and I’ve never said the words duff, or yadadamean, a potato bug is definitely different than a Roley poley and a cougar means what everyone else said.

    • @ZippityDont
      @ZippityDont 2 года назад +4

      Same here, but I have heard yahmean

    • @kaybouie1972
      @kaybouie1972 2 года назад +7

      I live in OAKLAND and we say'd it all the time, plus its' in most of the late 80's, early 90's Rap Music primarily bay area base artist: Tell Me When to Go
      E-40 or Get Stupid
      by Mac Dre.

    • @will2993
      @will2993 2 года назад +3

      Duff and potato bug are Pacific Northwest terms. I’ve heard them many many times

    • @ZippityDont
      @ZippityDont 2 года назад +4

      @@will2993 I’m sure you have but that doesn’t necessarily make them of NW origin. Potato bugs were plentiful in So Cal were I grew up. Duff is used by foresters everywhere. It is not a slang or regional term.

    • @reginafromrio
      @reginafromrio 2 года назад

      Same!

  • @keikekaze
    @keikekaze 2 года назад +41

    As a Californian, I've been eating "bear claws" all my life, but didn't realize they were specific to California. I thought they called them that everywhere. But even after living in or near the Bay Area for 30 years, I had never heard "dadadamean." And, like several people elsewhere in these comments, I thought a cougar was an "older" woman who likes to date much younger men, like 40 versus 20 or so. We already knew it was an animal!

    • @susanhopemason
      @susanhopemason 2 года назад +8

      I think they do call them that everywhere. I grew up in West Virginia, and had always heard of bear claws and knew that they are a type of pastry.

    • @pXnTilde
      @pXnTilde 2 года назад +3

      yadadamean is probably just black slang or lazy english (i.e., slurred words)

    • @spudmuffin8175
      @spudmuffin8175 2 года назад +2

      Yadadamean definitely Bay Area rap culture slang and is kinda old at this point. It’s in the song “Tell Me When to Go” by E-40.

    • @AtarahDerek
      @AtarahDerek 2 года назад +1

      We have bear claws in Montana.

    • @cathleenrichards3841
      @cathleenrichards3841 2 года назад +3

      I’m in New England and we have Bear Claws here too.

  • @jenniferweaver9030
    @jenniferweaver9030 2 года назад

    Enjoying this series! I could definitely give some interesting regionalisms that are specific to Idaho, Wyoming area! Heard of a jockey box??

  • @Ianzweb
    @Ianzweb 2 года назад

    Really nice to learn this. Thank you so many vids about Americans learning about the uk slang but not many about American words 👍👍 wicked

  • @alanchristensen2139
    @alanchristensen2139 2 года назад +7

    My nephew teaches high school. One Monday he asked his class how their weekend was. One boy said his Scout troop had been out hiking and saw a cougar. Some girl thought he meant they saw "an old lady."

  • @noblefir9106
    @noblefir9106 2 года назад +15

    Cougar is a (mostly) Pacific Northwest term for Mountain Lion (a term which is also used here). The term meaning an older women "hunting" for younger men came from the first meaning.

    • @margefoyle6796
      @margefoyle6796 2 года назад +1

      In California we use cougar and mountain Lion interchangeably, though I think mountain lion is more common in the North and cougar more common in the LA area.

    • @ZippityDont
      @ZippityDont 2 года назад +1

      Those terms are used all over California.

    • @itzamia
      @itzamia 2 года назад

      My friends dad owned a sick ass Mercury Cougar in Florida.

  • @derekwalker4622
    @derekwalker4622 Год назад +1

    Gnarly. Is a word that originated in the California "Valley" of L.A., is no longer used, but was surfer/skater lingo from the 1980's.

  • @tsparky9196
    @tsparky9196 2 года назад +1

    June Gloom, is a SoCal word. During June the air is warming up into the 90s but the ocean water is still very cold, causing fog. The fog lasts all day early in June but 'burns off' as the month progresses earlier and earlier in the day.

  • @violetgibson9
    @violetgibson9 2 года назад +3

    Dank is already a word, which means an area which is dark and moist, like an old, unfurnished basement, or parts of an old home which doesn’t get aired out.

  • @drscopeify
    @drscopeify 2 года назад +18

    Good list! There is nothing like a bear claw on a cold foggy morning in the woods with a hot cup of coffee. It's overall a Danish style pastry but sweeter, larger, sometimes with almond shavings on top and shaped like a bear paw so easy to tear apart and share... or eat eat it all before others ask you for a piece :) My favorite bear claw is at the awesome Schat's Bakery in Bishop CA, that town is just fun. I always stop there on a long 3 day drive from WA to southern CA.

    • @simonewoodwell7354
      @simonewoodwell7354 2 года назад

      Lot's of Bear claws in Philadelphia, PA

    • @tiki_trash
      @tiki_trash 2 года назад +1

      They have sweet almond paste as a filling.

    • @PuppyMonsters
      @PuppyMonsters 2 года назад +1

      Schat's Bakery always had the best breads. Bishop had great shops like that, and Meadow Farms, a smokehouse which had dozens of different types of jerky.
      My question is, if 'bear claw' is a West Coast thing, what the heck do they call a bear claw anywhere else?

    • @PuppyMonsters
      @PuppyMonsters 2 года назад +2

      @@tiki_trash Bear Claws in Cali always had almond paste, but in Washington, they almost always have an apple filling.

    • @RoxieMarquez_marroxeli
      @RoxieMarquez_marroxeli 2 года назад

      Went to the Schat's Bakery in Mammoth, so freakin tasty!!!

  • @ladydisa
    @ladydisa 2 года назад +2

    Love the series! Yadadamean has me laughing though. I have lived in the Bay Area for 25 years and I've never heard this ever.

  • @Jasonwolf1495
    @Jasonwolf1495 2 года назад +1

    Post up is definitely one I've heard beyond west coast. I've more often heard it as near military language. you post up for the night when you're camping in enemy territory. It's from taking guard positions.

  • @brianb7686
    @brianb7686 2 года назад +6

    June Gloom is particularly used in San Diego.

    • @fogcat5
      @fogcat5 2 года назад +2

      related to May Gray and No Sky July here

    • @candygram4435
      @candygram4435 2 года назад +2

      No sun until afternoon in north orange county

  • @allisonrust6685
    @allisonrust6685 2 года назад +23

    That was not a potato bug. That was a pill bug or rollie pollie

    • @jeremygilbert7989
      @jeremygilbert7989 2 года назад +2

      In Oregon growing up they were synonymous save for pill bug, never heard anyone call one that.

    • @orlock20
      @orlock20 2 года назад +1

      I call the pictured bug a sal bug and I was born and raised in California.

    • @leeann4743
      @leeann4743 2 года назад +2

      I grew up in Oregon and we called them potato bugs or pill bugs. I never heard rollie pollie until I lived in the midwest :)

    • @Author.Noelle.Alexandria
      @Author.Noelle.Alexandria 2 года назад +2

      @@leeann4743 I've never heard potato bug here. Always roly polies or pill bugs. I asked my daughter, and she said it's a poly poly. All she's ever known is Vancouver/Portland.

    • @exrobowidow1617
      @exrobowidow1617 2 года назад

      @@orlock20 As a kid, we called them pill bugs. Only when I was older did I hear the term sow bug.

  • @silver-fd3cv
    @silver-fd3cv 8 месяцев назад +1

    When I was a little child, over half a century ago, my mom used to yell at me, "Get off your duff !! It's a sunny day today ! Either go outside to play or get busy washing the car !"
    She meant get off my rear end (I was usually watching TV on a Saturday morning. I loved "Mighty Mouse" and "Top Cat" Cartoons.) and get busy outside.
    Lol !
    I have never heard "duff " used to mean forest floor litter such as leaves and pine needles that had fallen off the trees.
    We just said, "forest floor litter."
    Forest floor litter was considered dangerous to the forest as it could be highly flammable.

  • @mortviolette284
    @mortviolette284 2 года назад +4

    “Post up” can mean more generally to settle in for a temporary period. I hear a lot of people use it when explaining where they might work for a period of time, perhaps in a cafe for a few hours. Imagine someone setting out their laptop, notepad, paperwork, books, etc. and getting comfortable. This is from a Bay Area perspective.

    • @gben7084
      @gben7084 2 года назад +1

      also in Basketball to stand still to block

    • @spectre8522
      @spectre8522 Год назад

      @@gben7084 Yes that was what I was thinking

    • @flabbylips
      @flabbylips Год назад

      Think of it like a fence post. So if you "post up" you are holding your position.

  • @angelajohnson5728
    @angelajohnson5728 2 года назад +13

    This was one that had me guessing along with Laurence. I, a California native raised in the PNW, never heard "sunbreak" or "duff" and certainly not "yadadamean"

    • @anthonygreen7763
      @anthonygreen7763 2 года назад +1

      yadadamean is definitely bay area only

    • @Silverstar98121
      @Silverstar98121 2 года назад +5

      You must have moved out of the PNW long time ago. Weather forecasters have been using the word "sunbreaks" since I moved here 32 years ago.

    • @ArtamStudio
      @ArtamStudio 2 года назад +3

      Bay Area native, read and heard lots of ("hella") run-together words, many are in Carl Nolte's oft-misquoted 2/26/1984 _S.F. Chronicle_ column "How to Talk Like a San Franciscan;" but *never* heard "yadadamean."

    • @luelladiaz109
      @luelladiaz109 2 года назад

      Duff is the only one of the 3 I heard but it was used to mean your rear. Get off your duff and rake the leaves. That type of use.

    • @pyrovania
      @pyrovania 2 года назад

      I've heard "sucker hole" to describe a break in the PNW cloud cover, but not "sunbreak".
      Called a sucker hole because there is a sucker who thinks it's going to clear up when they see that hole.

  • @michelleb7399
    @michelleb7399 2 года назад +25

    I grew up in Oregon & Washington… potato bug was the first word I learned for it. I heard “roly poly” from others but always said “potato bug” myself.

    • @sierraroseprzybyla3333
      @sierraroseprzybyla3333 2 года назад +2

      That’s not a potato bug… you learned the wrong term for the wrong bug.

    • @tb45g
      @tb45g 2 года назад

      Same here, PNW and it's always been a potato bug. I was horrified when I first saw pictures of what people elsewhere called a potato bug. I think over time it's changed to pillbug or rolly-poly due to a lot of transplants in the area who would get confused if you called it a potato bug.
      I guess it's one of those things like possum and opossum where they have the same name in other places but are completely different.

    • @ahtemmathehun3506
      @ahtemmathehun3506 2 года назад

      It's an Isreal Beetle in the rest of the world. Very ugly bug that ravages crops in Cali. They're gross looking too, pink and slimy looking and they bite too!

  • @pauljones2510
    @pauljones2510 Год назад +1

    June Gloom. Always clouds up and rains mid-June when it should be warm and sunny. Although I experienced it for over thirty years. I never knew there was a word for it.
    There's also Summer in January. The middle two weeks of January (at least in the San Francisco Bay Area) get really warm and everyone is out in t-shirt and shorts.

    • @pyrovania
      @pyrovania Год назад +1

      It does that in Southern California too, but not this year.

  • @curtisbrack3398
    @curtisbrack3398 2 года назад +2

    In reference to San Francisco and the "June Gloom", there is supposedly a famous quote from Mark Twain where he said : "The coldest winter I ever spent was a summer in San Francisco!"

    • @treetopjones737
      @treetopjones737 2 года назад

      Don't get your hair done in SF during the Summer. Fog that runs right around your head.

  • @mastiffmom2592
    @mastiffmom2592 2 года назад +7

    Today, I realized how many British RUclipsrs admire Laurence! I watch a few British RUclipsrs, I love them. I’m not as familiar with them as I am with Lost in the Pond. Kabir Considers is the only name I know, off hand, he’s great. There’s a young couple that have recently tried American snacks, who are cute. This guy, maybe H and Friends, or something like that. He says wow a lot and points LOL They all reference Laurence in their videos. Laurence is great! I love his sense of humor, his love for both Great Britain and America and the best part, I learn so much from him.
    Lost in the Pond is a great channel and it has even more meaning, coming from other Brits! Well done, Laurence, well done. 💯

  • @melliehelen8650
    @melliehelen8650 2 года назад +12

    Lifelong Californian here - while gnarly does mean something particularly intense (good or bad), that term pretty much reached its height in the 80s. Almost never hear it used anymore. Surprised that bear claw isn’t known across the US! And, I remember when the town of North Hollywood (actually part of the City of Los Angeles) began its campaign to revitalize itself in the late 80s by rebranding itself with the NoHo moniker, which was directly influenced by SoHo! Thanks for this fun ep, Lawrence!

    • @EricaGamet
      @EricaGamet 2 года назад +2

      Okay, but I giggle when my friend mentions that he lives in WeHo.

    • @JonReevesLA
      @JonReevesLA 2 года назад +1

      Yeah,. and the NoHo Arts District really started to take off around 2000 or so. I don't think it's used much to refer to the residential areas of North Hollywood. (Useless trivia: I watched them film the car crash from the beginning of Erin Brockovitch at the corner of Lankershim and Magnolia, which is pretty much the epicenter of the NoHo Arts District now.)

    • @melliehelen8650
      @melliehelen8650 2 года назад

      @@JonReevesLA I lived literally around the corner from there and also worked right near there back then.

    • @samanthamyers4267
      @samanthamyers4267 2 года назад +1

      We use bear claw in Virginia as well.

    • @jillianlutes152
      @jillianlutes152 2 года назад +2

      Ok, that explains it. NoHo would have gone out of fashion as a word by the time I was paying more attention to my surroundings. I'm like, "Wha? Who calls it that?"

  • @doublequilI
    @doublequilI 2 года назад

    These types of videos always make me shout at the screen, so kudos for making my kids look at me as if I'm strange.

  • @melbaker9495
    @melbaker9495 2 года назад +7

    Duff is used a lot when we talk about forest fire danger. "There was a lot of duff on the forest floor providing fuel for the fire."

    • @donaldcarey114
      @donaldcarey114 2 года назад

      In Australia duff referred to flour baed foods like bread.

  • @quilabright4263
    @quilabright4263 2 года назад +3

    I grew up and live in eastern Washington. The thing we called a potato bug was a beetle that was red in it's larvae form and stripped brown and white in it's adult form. They live on and eat the potato greens. My mother made us pick them of the leaves in the garden as a child.
    The bug shown we call a pill bug or a rolly-polly.

    • @Bacopa68
      @Bacopa68 2 года назад +2

      Yeah, I'm from Texas and a potato bug is a striped beetle that lays eggs on tomatoes and eggplants. Their larvae are resistant to the toxins in all members of the nightshade family. They'd basically have a late spring orgy sometimes and you have to go out and pull the beetles off the plants and drop them a coffee can with a little gasoline in the bottom. We don't grow potatoes here, but these beetles specialize in attacking all plants that defend themselves with atropine and solanine.

    • @rachelnelson8694
      @rachelnelson8694 2 года назад +1

      Thank you! I grew up in the PNW, my grandparents had a potato farm in Idaho. That's exactly what a potato bug is. I know I spent days picking them off potato plants and drowning them in pails of water. I wish I had known my grandparents had neems oil they sprayed on them when us grandkids weren't there.

    • @Bacopa68
      @Bacopa68 2 года назад +1

      @@rachelnelson8694Yeah, once you grow a lot of atropine and solanine plants resistant to most insects, potato beetles will show up. We drown them in hydrocarbons to make sure they are dead when plucked off our eggplants and tomatoes. I never heard that neem oil or other phenols kill potato beetles but it makes sense that it would.

    • @rachelnelson8694
      @rachelnelson8694 2 года назад

      @@Bacopa68 yep, I now own an organic farm in Arizona. The wetter it is the more potato bugs you will have. So during monsoon season here, I spray the Neem oil on in the evening and by morning they are all dead. It dries out their bodies.

  • @kerryemberlyhamby6213
    @kerryemberlyhamby6213 Год назад +1

    Pacific Northwest native here.
    I've noticed that when I was little, everybody in my local area called that wild big cat a cougar, then for a few short years we called it a puma, but now everybody calls it a mountain lion for the past dozen or so years.
    I first heard of a potato bug when I was in my 30s. When I finally saw a picture, I knew exactly what it was. I've known it all my life as a rollypoley, and I still call it that. Related bonus trivia: What everybody here now calls a "june bug", I grew up calling a "skeeter-eater" even after learning that they don't actually consume mosquitos.
    In my mind without looking it up, "dank" means "saturated with moisture", but it also somehow gets more commonly used in my home town to describe an old mansion in a formerly very rich neighborhood that has gone bad and lost most of its value, so the owners remodeled their mansion's interior and converted it into an apartment building with several cheap apartments in it.

  • @cogspace
    @cogspace 2 года назад +1

    "Post up" is only ever used to mean to wait in a place, usually for a specific purpose, for possibly an extended period. It's always used with the word "at" (or, rarely, "in" or "on"), for example you might "post up at the bar" or "post up at the mall" while waiting for someone else to arrive. It carries the implication of giving oneself something to do while they wait for something that probably isn't related to the waiting place. It doesn't see a lot of use. It's very situational and a bit old-fashioned. I believe it phrase originated in the 19th century, when the "post" in question was a hitching post. It's built in the same way as "park up", "ruck up", "roll up", "hold up", "hole up", etc.

  • @VintageCarHistory
    @VintageCarHistory 2 года назад +47

    The animal you called a, 'Potato Bug', is actually a rolly polly, in cali-speak. A potato bug in the California region is actually a Jerusalem cricket. Very different insect.

    • @ferulebezel
      @ferulebezel 2 года назад +3

      You sound like a Joizy guy. Those are the only people I've ever heard say "Cali".

    • @heatherpayne1995
      @heatherpayne1995 2 года назад +2

      Yeah, those things you call potato bugs in California are monstrous. In the PNW our potato bugs are cute little things.

    • @Perfectly_Cromulent351
      @Perfectly_Cromulent351 2 года назад +6

      No self-respecting Californian says “Cali”.

    • @pXnTilde
      @pXnTilde 2 года назад +3

      Meanwhile, in the rest of the PNW, a potato bug is what was shown.

    • @pXnTilde
      @pXnTilde 2 года назад +2

      @@Perfectly_Cromulent351 Literally never heard anyone other than californians say Cali. Yall are eating your own

  • @John_Fugazzi
    @John_Fugazzi 2 года назад +7

    In San Francisco, "June Gloom" often lasts until September, at least on the West Side. In August it's usually everywhere.

  • @subductionzone
    @subductionzone 2 года назад +1

    On a day with sunbreaks, just seeing that there is distant sunlight somewhere makes one feel better. One does not have to have the sun be visible at one's own location. One feels better knowing that yes the Sun does still exist.

  • @uppity1
    @uppity1 2 года назад +1

    June Gloom is preceded by the May Gray. Generally extends about 5 mi in from the coast, then you hit the brilliant sunshine.

  • @acc91303
    @acc91303 2 года назад +9

    Rocky mountain region slang would make a great addition to this series

    • @stevenwagner983
      @stevenwagner983 2 года назад

      Be test for me went to college in MT and have spent lots of time in CO, whole life in Seattle though

  • @georgiancrossroads
    @georgiancrossroads 2 года назад +12

    Laurence here are some Alaskan terms for you: Skookum, Cheechako, Tuffs, Getting Bermed In, Sucker Hole, Humpies (and related to Humpies, Dogs, Reds & Kings) and finally Going Outside.

    • @aliquida7132
      @aliquida7132 2 года назад +3

      I was thinking skookum for the pacific north west as well. I do like that word.

    • @Entertainzor
      @Entertainzor 2 года назад +1

      You might want to start him off with a more basic one, like "sourdough."

    • @sandrajewitt6050
      @sandrajewitt6050 2 года назад +2

      Skookum is used in BC too

    • @heatherpayne1995
      @heatherpayne1995 2 года назад +2

      Skookum is a Chinook Jargon word.

    • @aliquida7132
      @aliquida7132 2 года назад +1

      @@heatherpayne1995
      I bought my father a Chinook Jargon dictionary for Christmas one year. I find the whole thing fascinating.

  • @dwc1964
    @dwc1964 2 года назад +2

    (jumping in before you read the definition from whatever source you've got)
    As a Bay Area native - until 1993 in the South and East Bay, since then in San Francisco proper - I was thrilled to see "hella" as the #1, as it originated in Oakland IIRC shortly after I moved away from there. And yes, it's exactly as you say, equivalent to a Bostonian's "wicked". It's a contraction of "hell of" as in "a hell of a lot".
    ETA: I've never hears "yadadamean" - must be recent, everyone I've ever heard says "yanowamsayin"

  • @hgrace0
    @hgrace0 Год назад

    You did a fantastic job. You got some correct that I totally didn’t

  • @glory3670
    @glory3670 2 года назад +5

    I have a different definition for Dank and Duff. Dank - dark, gloomy, damp. Duff - butt as in: Get of your duff and go get some work done.