How did our prefixes and Suffixes well come into existence? Or maybe why certain words die of or change? I've seen the word "unsex" in Macbeth(The play not the character). Why don't I here unsex being used today? Or maybe certain words that are changing meaning right now? Like a lot of people I see use the word "gender" when they mean the word "sex".
It's a rare occasion when I get to share ancient Finnish jokes about long-ago deceased politicians, but it's sort of relevant. The politician in case was the then Foreign Secretary and an old crony of then-President Kekkonen, and he was infamous for his bad grasp of English and heavy alcoholism. (People found that kind of thing funny back then.) The story goes that the Foreign Secretary had been drinking heavily in a hotel bar abroad, getting soused enough that he couldn't remember the words for "8th floor" in English. He solved the problem by instructing the elevator operator: "Seven-Up, one more."
I think 7up hasn't been sold in Brazil ever since the 1980s. When my family traveled to Argentina back in 2006, my then 8yo brother once asked the waiter for a "tup". He had no idea the 7 was a number and that it was supposed to be read in English.
2:50 while yes it can help if you feel like throwing up since contains a chemical which prevents from throwing up this is actually included since it so much sugar that it would make you throw up otherwise, often better to have it flat if you want to drink it for this purpose
The german Fanta is of a slightly other color than the Fanta of the US. In Germany it is very yellow, while in the US it is orange. There is a mix of Fanta and Coke. Coka Cola named it Mezzo-Mix. But the broader name in Germany is Spezi, with regional differences. You forgot about Sprite.
I've actually bought Mezzo Mix - and IRN-BRU - here in Niagara Falls, NY but it's not easy to come by (there's only one store that sells them and they're in the specialty section).
Thank you for mentioning my country! Kinnie is hard to find outside of Malta, but if you're lucky you might find it in certain places, like the U.K or Australia.
A&W Root Beer comes from its founders, Roy Allen and Frank Wright. As for the name "root beer" itself, it comes from the sassafras root used to make it, and beer comes from the fact that it's brewed similarly to most alcohols, even though it has no alcohol in it.
When made originally, it did in fact have alcohol in it. You can still buy it that way, if yr inclined. Way to sweet for my tastes but the flavor is superior as a schnapp.
I don't believe I've heard of drinking flat soda if one is feeling unwell. I have heard of drinking soda if one is unwell, but it was neither Coca-Cola nor Pepsi. The soda of choice is Sprite or something akin to the clear lemon lime drink, and it was never flat. Clear liquids are a recommendation for illness, which Coke and Pepsi are most definitely not.
i have a second german one: Spezi, for a very orange flavored cola. Spezi meaning (special)friend/buddy/mate in Bavarian-German. A fun factoid about that soda is that the original brewery, yes brewery that invented it could not keep up with demand and had to license the brand and recipe to various other breweries. Thing is, the biggest of them Paulaner recently sued them because they want the brand for themselves. Because the name is became a "proper noun" (Technically Gattungsbegriff, but that does not translate) in the 50 years it has been on the Market the court ruled they can sell it without license unter "Paulaner Spezi" - but only within Germany where it actually is just a type of soda now.
Awesome regional drink from North Carolina is Cheerwine. It's a cherry flavored drink kind of similar to Dr. Pepper, but more cherry tasting. Best way to drink it is in a glass bottle. So good!! ❤️
And caffeinated! They actually sell it here in Niagara Falls, NY - but only at one particular store. And you can only get it in the 4-pak glass bottles.
@@fnjesusfreak Cool! 😄 Didn't know it was sold anywhere up north. Glass bottles make any drink taste better. They also tend to have real sugar rather than corn syrup, so that may also be part of it.
When I was in college, my mom introduced me to a soda from her childhood , Bubble Up, which is similar to 7Up. 7Up , Canada Dry Ginger Ale or Sprite were go tos whenever I had an upset stomach. There are so many regional sodas🥤 in the US, some are sold nationally like Verner's which is well known throughout the Midwest, Big Red which is a "homegrown " soft drink in Texas (I know someone born and raised in TX that grew up drinking Big Red) There's a store in Highland Park, Ca just outside of Los Angeles called Gelco's and it stocks soft drinks that aren't either produced on a large scale like Tab or Nehi or that are produced in specific regions of the country. They also stock soft drinks from oither countries. I've seen Irn Bru in the international sisle of my local grocery store.
Supposedly there are vomit suppressants in fizzy drinks because the amount of sugar would make people want to hurl. Something like that and I don't know how true it is, but that's the reasoning given for why people recommend it when you feel sick.
I've always loved Vernor's. I'm 72 now, and I remember it from when I was a boy. Back in those days, each can had this on the label: "Aged 4 years in wood." This changed later to "Aged for years in wood." At some point it was "Barrel aged - three years in wood." It's the absolute best ginger ale -- and I've never lived where it was easy to get.
When I asked my doctor once, if drinking cola is any good for digestive distress, he said "It is neither good nor bad, just let the carbonation out since that could upset your stomach. Why we usually say to drink it when you are sick, is - especially in case of children - because the sugar and the flavour usually improves your mood" Did anyone else get this answer from a doctor?
Pepsin is name of an enzyme required for digestion it is a typo of endopetidase , as it breaks down peptide bonds, which is from greek pepton meaning to digest, or soften, it is also the source for Pepto Bismol.
Shasta Cola, notorious (at least in the US) for being that soda which copies all the other major ones, gets its name from Mount Shasta in California. That's where it was originally located, and started as the Shasta Mineral Springs Company, selling water, before later flavored water and then soda. While it's no longer located at Mount Shasta (it's in Hayward now), it still retains the mountain's name.
About Coca-Cola being linked with Christmas: here in Norway we also have "julebrus" (meaning "Christmas soda"), a type of soda sold around Christmas time, there are many different kinds made by many different brands, usually they're red or brown (I always preferred the red type myself) As for the "drinking cola when sick", as kids me and my brother were often given a glass of Coke when sick and throwing up (didn't have to be flat though). Wondering if part of it might have been to help get the puke taste out of your mouth?
When You asked for the "rel Dr. Pepper" in the audience - I immediately thought about: "Could the real Slim Shady please stand up?" Which gave me the idea to ask about the peculiarities of rapper names, like all the Lil's for example.
I actually didn't find out about the connection between Coke and Christmas until I was an adult. And it still feels strange. This is a regional thing. In Sweden we have a soft drink called "must", that is a sweet malt drink. It is consumed almost exclusively around Christmas and Easter, and is called "Julmust" or "Påskmust" (Christmas Malt or Easter Malt) depending on the occasion. It has a very full, bready taste. Think the Guinness of soft drinks. Goes well with the kind of fatty foods you consume around those holidays. Adults often mix it fifty-fifty with a dark beer. This is referred to as "mumma" a word that can describe many mixes of soft and alcoholic drinks.
Not sure about digestion, but I’ve always found the caffeine content of your average cola can provide some aid to headaches. Also Vernors and chicken soup is the unofficial cold remedy of Michigan.
I have read that Dr. Pepper was originally a prune soda, sold as a laxative. They added soda water and cherry flavor to make it more palatable. The clock face highlighting 10, 2, and 4 indicated the times one should take Dr. Pepper. Later the prune juice was removed because more people were drinking it for refreshment.
When it comes to sodas which are only avaible within specific areas, I have to say that my favorite is the apple/orange soda Trocadero. It seems to be mostly only avaible in Norrland, which is the northern part of Sweden. And when it comes to Coca-Cola and Christmas, we've got a thing called "julmust" and "påskmust" here in Sweden. It is only sold around Christmas and Easter respectively, but it tastes almost but not quite like Coca Cola or Pepsi.
A couple more regional US sodas are Moxie (from an old slang word for spunk or chutzpah) and Royal Crown, or R-C for short. Moxie comes from the Northeast, Pennsylvania I think, and I have never tasted it, but I have heard it has a very bitter taste (Worf would call it it a “warrior’s drink,” like prune juice), like Dr. Pepper unsweetened. R-C is popular in the South, particularly among people who don’t want to spend enough to buy Coca-Cola. A popular poor kid’s lunch in the old days was “R-C and Moon Pie” (a round marshmallow sandwich with the cookies and filling all dipped in chocolate, vanilla, or banana flavored crème which hardens around it all).
RC is actually my preferred cola (well, that's when it's on sale, otherwise I'm more likely to buy Adirondack, which was the big non-brand brand where I grew up).
A&W Rootbeer is a good one for next soda names videos. That and that rootbeer is NOT a beer but a tea. It was named "beer" to get men to drink it in the USA.😉
A&W rootbeer is wild in that there are actually 4 different root beers using that name, the one served in the US restaurants, the one served in the separate Canadian restaurants, the one bottled in the US, and the one bottled in Canada, all of which have a different formulation.
I live in California. The neighboring city to where I live hosts Scottish Higland Games at the end of June every year. They sell Irn-Bru. It's the only time I see it in the United States.
I will say, as an Australian, Irn Bru is my favourite soft drink, and possibly my second preferred beverage after water. As a matter of fact, of my top 10 snacks (I realise I’m taking a liberty by considering drinks as snacks), it’s the only drink on the podium, narrowly edged out by choc chip cookies, and fries.
In my experience, caffeine has some laxative effect. I'm confident enough to say that many people in the Nordic countries can attest to that the best way to get a hurry to the toilet is snus and cup of black coffee. So yeah, I can see where Pepsi got it's name.
Fun fact: Coca-Cola is the only company that's legally allowe to import coca leaves, so the only way to legally get them would be to get them would be through that company.
There are also the different brands of root beer that you didn't have time for in this video. A&W, Barq's, Mug, Dad's, etc. I know A&W is taken from the last initials of the 2 founders, who opened a restaurant at the same time.
People act like Fanta's origin is some hidden sin It was just people trying to make a drink in a bad situation, unless Goering himself was in charge I think they can claim moral innocence here
Suggest a topic for next Monday's video!
Mountain dew
How did our prefixes and Suffixes well come into existence? Or maybe why certain words die of or change? I've seen the word "unsex" in Macbeth(The play not the character). Why don't I here unsex being used today? Or maybe certain words that are changing meaning right now? Like a lot of people I see use the word "gender" when they mean the word "sex".
@@Minorskillissue that's related to soda lol
@@NickIggler1969 What? How?
@@Minorskillissue is that idea soda related? I think no
actually, it turns out, dr. pepper was a FIZZician
Amazing pun 😂
so was his "pop."
Booooooo
🎉😂
I’m from Waco, TX, the birthplace of Dr. Pepper (known for nothing else) and we even have a Dr. Pepper museum where you can do research on soda names.
It's also known as the site of the David Koresh cult, and their compound being burned down by the FBI. But y'all don't talk about that.
Waco, TX, is known for something else, it's just not a good thing
@@eljanrimsa5843 nope. You’re probably thinking of West or Killeen.
No sieges?
@@LemonbreadSC nope. I really think you’re thinking of some other city in Central Texas.
It's a rare occasion when I get to share ancient Finnish jokes about long-ago deceased politicians, but it's sort of relevant. The politician in case was the then Foreign Secretary and an old crony of then-President Kekkonen, and he was infamous for his bad grasp of English and heavy alcoholism. (People found that kind of thing funny back then.) The story goes that the Foreign Secretary had been drinking heavily in a hotel bar abroad, getting soused enough that he couldn't remember the words for "8th floor" in English. He solved the problem by instructing the elevator operator: "Seven-Up, one more."
Is Mr. Pibb named after a real mister?
A man, yes
@@NickIggler1969a mister
@@Dontdoit_ a man has a penis
Guy I knew in college had a t-shirt made: MR PIBB GOT HIS PHD NOW HE'S DR PEPPER. Not funny, you ask me...
@@Dontdoit_ a man
I think 7up hasn't been sold in Brazil ever since the 1980s.
When my family traveled to Argentina back in 2006, my then 8yo brother once asked the waiter for a "tup". He had no idea the 7 was a number and that it was supposed to be read in English.
Our go-to drink when we had upset stomachs was ginger ale. Generally Canada Dry.
Oh: "Canada" because it was invented by a Canadian living in the States, and "Dry" because it wasn't sweet.
An alcoholic stand-up comic blamed his addiction on seeing a billboard reading “Drink Canada Dry.” And he really tried!
2:50 while yes it can help if you feel like throwing up since contains a chemical which prevents from throwing up this is actually included since it so much sugar that it would make you throw up otherwise, often better to have it flat if you want to drink it for this purpose
If that's true, and I'm inclined to believe you, that's disgusting. But so is most processed.....anything.
If my last name was “Pepper,” I’d get a PhD, just so I can say that I am the real “Dr. Pepper” 😂
I am working on doing just that! Can't let a good last name go to waste!
Join the military and become Sgt. Pepper!
The german Fanta is of a slightly other color than the Fanta of the US. In Germany it is very yellow, while in the US it is orange.
There is a mix of Fanta and Coke. Coka Cola named it Mezzo-Mix. But the broader name in Germany is Spezi, with regional differences.
You forgot about Sprite.
Naturally. Sprite IS rather forgettable.
I've actually bought Mezzo Mix - and IRN-BRU - here in Niagara Falls, NY but it's not easy to come by (there's only one store that sells them and they're in the specialty section).
If the original Dr. Pepper is still alive, then he needs to contact a university to do research why he still alive.
I know two Dr. Peppers. In Texas no less.
7-Up has the coolest name, imo.
Thank you for mentioning my country! Kinnie is hard to find outside of Malta, but if you're lucky you might find it in certain places, like the U.K or Australia.
A&W Root Beer comes from its founders, Roy Allen and Frank Wright. As for the name "root beer" itself, it comes from the sassafras root used to make it, and beer comes from the fact that it's brewed similarly to most alcohols, even though it has no alcohol in it.
When made originally, it did in fact have alcohol in it. You can still buy it that way, if yr inclined.
Way to sweet for my tastes but the flavor is superior as a schnapp.
4:00 Mr. Hilter was too busy trying to win the North Minehead by-election
I assume he sent Mr. Hess to campaign for him.
In Australia we Call Them Soft Drinks 1:11
George Costanza: “I think that ginger ale they served me was just Coke and Sprite mixed together. How can I prove it? Ah, I can’t! Dammit!”
I don't believe I've heard of drinking flat soda if one is feeling unwell. I have heard of drinking soda if one is unwell, but it was neither Coca-Cola nor Pepsi. The soda of choice is Sprite or something akin to the clear lemon lime drink, and it was never flat. Clear liquids are a recommendation for illness, which Coke and Pepsi are most definitely not.
Ginger ale is the one I've usually heard of being used that way.
i have a second german one: Spezi, for a very orange flavored cola. Spezi meaning (special)friend/buddy/mate in Bavarian-German. A fun factoid about that soda is that the original brewery, yes brewery that invented it could not keep up with demand and had to license the brand and recipe to various other breweries. Thing is, the biggest of them Paulaner recently sued them because they want the brand for themselves. Because the name is became a "proper noun" (Technically Gattungsbegriff, but that does not translate) in the 50 years it has been on the Market the court ruled they can sell it without license unter "Paulaner Spezi" - but only within Germany where it actually is just a type of soda now.
Genericized trademark?
@@fnjesusfreak i was going by what sounded right when i looked it up in a dictionary. Maybe Genericized trademark is the better word.
One of the best ad campaigns in recent memory is the "Make 7 Up Yours" T-shirts, with "Make 7" on the front and "Up Yours" on the back lol
I remember that. I don’t think it ran for very long though.
"Recent". Honey, I have bad news about how old we are...
@@erraticonteuse I was born when Nixon was in the White House. "Make 7 Up Yours" is recent... 😉
@@spddiesel Heh, I was born during the Reagan administration, so "Make 7 Up Yours" was a formative expression in my life 😆
Would the Real Dr. Pepper please stand up, please stand up, please stand up?
Well, there is a Dr. GARY Pepper od Jupiter, Florida. His specialty, ironically, is Diabetes. 😮
Awesome regional drink from North Carolina is Cheerwine. It's a cherry flavored drink kind of similar to Dr. Pepper, but more cherry tasting. Best way to drink it is in a glass bottle. So good!! ❤️
And caffeinated!
They actually sell it here in Niagara Falls, NY - but only at one particular store. And you can only get it in the 4-pak glass bottles.
@@fnjesusfreak Cool! 😄 Didn't know it was sold anywhere up north. Glass bottles make any drink taste better. They also tend to have real sugar rather than corn syrup, so that may also be part of it.
When I was in college, my mom introduced me to a soda from her childhood , Bubble Up, which is similar to 7Up. 7Up , Canada Dry Ginger Ale or Sprite were go tos whenever I had an upset stomach.
There are so many regional sodas🥤 in the US, some are sold nationally like Verner's which is well known throughout the Midwest, Big Red which is a "homegrown " soft drink in Texas (I know someone born and raised in TX that grew up drinking Big Red)
There's a store in Highland Park, Ca just outside of Los Angeles called Gelco's and it stocks soft drinks that aren't either produced on a large scale like Tab or Nehi or that are produced in specific regions of the country. They also stock soft drinks from oither countries. I've seen Irn Bru in the international sisle of my local grocery store.
Would definitely be cool if you made a sequel video (you could talk about Sprite, Canada Dry, Mountain Dew, and many others) :)
Supposedly there are vomit suppressants in fizzy drinks because the amount of sugar would make people want to hurl. Something like that and I don't know how true it is, but that's the reasoning given for why people recommend it when you feel sick.
Why does The Rock only buy store Brand Soda?
He only goes for the cheap pops.
Dr. Pepper is old enough that it could have become a doctor thru apprenticeship with a snakeoil salesman and barber surgeon
Cheerwine
Hires Rootbeer
I've always loved Vernor's. I'm 72 now, and I remember it from when I was a boy. Back in those days, each can had this on the label: "Aged 4 years in wood." This changed later to "Aged for years in wood." At some point it was "Barrel aged - three years in wood." It's the absolute best ginger ale -- and I've never lived where it was easy to get.
How about kofola, where does that come from?
When I asked my doctor once, if drinking cola is any good for digestive distress, he said "It is neither good nor bad, just let the carbonation out since that could upset your stomach. Why we usually say to drink it when you are sick, is - especially in case of children - because the sugar and the flavour usually improves your mood"
Did anyone else get this answer from a doctor?
Pepsin is name of an enzyme required for digestion it is a typo of endopetidase , as it breaks down peptide bonds, which is from greek pepton meaning to digest, or soften, it is also the source for Pepto Bismol.
Shasta Cola, notorious (at least in the US) for being that soda which copies all the other major ones, gets its name from Mount Shasta in California. That's where it was originally located, and started as the Shasta Mineral Springs Company, selling water, before later flavored water and then soda. While it's no longer located at Mount Shasta (it's in Hayward now), it still retains the mountain's name.
About Coca-Cola being linked with Christmas: here in Norway we also have "julebrus" (meaning "Christmas soda"), a type of soda sold around Christmas time, there are many different kinds made by many different brands, usually they're red or brown (I always preferred the red type myself)
As for the "drinking cola when sick", as kids me and my brother were often given a glass of Coke when sick and throwing up (didn't have to be flat though). Wondering if part of it might have been to help get the puke taste out of your mouth?
I’ve found Irn Bru in Singapore (and spent over £2 on a can cos I was so surprised to see it’s.
When You asked for the "rel Dr. Pepper" in the audience - I immediately thought about: "Could the real Slim Shady please stand up?"
Which gave me the idea to ask about the peculiarities of rapper names, like all the Lil's for example.
What about Dandelion & Burdock? I used to love it when I still lived in England. You can't get it in the Netherlands unfortunately :(
My last name is Pepper! I clicked on this so fast. Some Pepper appreciation!
Maybe Dr Pepper gets it's name from it's flavour, peppercorns ie Black Pepper? Black pepper has a pretty strong flavour
I actually didn't find out about the connection between Coke and Christmas until I was an adult. And it still feels strange.
This is a regional thing. In Sweden we have a soft drink called "must", that is a sweet malt drink. It is consumed almost exclusively around Christmas and Easter, and is called "Julmust" or "Påskmust" (Christmas Malt or Easter Malt) depending on the occasion.
It has a very full, bready taste. Think the Guinness of soft drinks. Goes well with the kind of fatty foods you consume around those holidays. Adults often mix it fifty-fifty with a dark beer. This is referred to as "mumma" a word that can describe many mixes of soft and alcoholic drinks.
Not sure about digestion, but I’ve always found the caffeine content of your average cola can provide some aid to headaches. Also Vernors and chicken soup is the unofficial cold remedy of Michigan.
I have read that Dr. Pepper was originally a prune soda, sold as a laxative. They added soda water and cherry flavor to make it more palatable. The clock face highlighting 10, 2, and 4 indicated the times one should take Dr. Pepper. Later the prune juice was removed because more people were drinking it for refreshment.
When it comes to sodas which are only avaible within specific areas, I have to say that my favorite is the apple/orange soda Trocadero.
It seems to be mostly only avaible in Norrland, which is the northern part of Sweden.
And when it comes to Coca-Cola and Christmas, we've got a thing called "julmust" and "påskmust" here in Sweden.
It is only sold around Christmas and Easter respectively, but it tastes almost but not quite like Coca Cola or Pepsi.
A couple more regional US sodas are Moxie (from an old slang word for spunk or chutzpah) and Royal Crown, or R-C for short. Moxie comes from the Northeast, Pennsylvania I think, and I have never tasted it, but I have heard it has a very bitter taste (Worf would call it it a “warrior’s drink,” like prune juice), like Dr. Pepper unsweetened. R-C is popular in the South, particularly among people who don’t want to spend enough to buy Coca-Cola. A popular poor kid’s lunch in the old days was “R-C and Moon Pie” (a round marshmallow sandwich with the cookies and filling all dipped in chocolate, vanilla, or banana flavored crème which hardens around it all).
RC is actually my preferred cola (well, that's when it's on sale, otherwise I'm more likely to buy Adirondack, which was the big non-brand brand where I grew up).
I'm one of those weirdos who actually likes Moxie, and it's been sad being unable to get it since I left New England.
A&W Rootbeer is a good one for next soda names videos. That and that rootbeer is NOT a beer but a tea. It was named "beer" to get men to drink it in the USA.😉
A&W rootbeer is wild in that there are actually 4 different root beers using that name, the one served in the US restaurants, the one served in the separate Canadian restaurants, the one bottled in the US, and the one bottled in Canada, all of which have a different formulation.
It's like you got some pepper in your nose talkning about Dr. Pepper.
I live in California. The neighboring city to where I live hosts Scottish Higland Games at the end of June every year. They sell Irn-Bru. It's the only time I see it in the United States.
I will say, as an Australian, Irn Bru is my favourite soft drink, and possibly my second preferred beverage after water. As a matter of fact, of my top 10 snacks (I realise I’m taking a liberty by considering drinks as snacks), it’s the only drink on the podium, narrowly edged out by choc chip cookies, and fries.
I love Mountain Dew. It tastes great and it is specifically designed to make moonshine palatable!!
In my experience, caffeine has some laxative effect. I'm confident enough to say that many people in the Nordic countries can attest to that the best way to get a hurry to the toilet is snus and cup of black coffee.
So yeah, I can see where Pepsi got it's name.
You should have tried Fitz’s soda in St. Louis !
MISSED OPPORTUNITY TO SAY:
WIll the real Dr Pepper please stand up?
In my country, Red Fanta is a population choice of offering to gods and spirits
Fun fact: Coca-Cola is the only company that's legally allowe to import coca leaves, so the only way to legally get them would be to get them would be through that company.
The local pop in the area where I live is Sun Drop
Vimto is a popular to drink to have during Ramadan
❤😊❤😊❤😊❤😊❤😊
❤😊❤😊❤😊❤😊❤
@@mingfanzhang4600 Ramadan
7up was named for the lithium that use to be in it. 7 is the atomic mass of lithium.
I cannot find IRN BRU here in Florida. So upset about this!
_Mountain Dew_ , in all its flavors, vs _Mellow Yellow_ / _Surge_
Basically Pepsi-Cola vs Coca-Cola products…
Pepsi wasn't just named after pepsin; it used to contain it.
I'm a Pepper! Wouldn't you want to be a Pepper, too!
Something in Dr. Pepper is addictive. I just can't quit Diet Dr. Pepper ☺️
There are also the different brands of root beer that you didn't have time for in this video. A&W, Barq's, Mug, Dad's, etc. I know A&W is taken from the last initials of the 2 founders, who opened a restaurant at the same time.
People act like Fanta's origin is some hidden sin
It was just people trying to make a drink in a bad situation, unless Goering himself was in charge I think they can claim moral innocence here
If anyone can tell me where I can get irn bru in the states I will be eternally grateful!!!
The German FANTA was something completely different drink from the actual one. The today FANTA was created in ITALY... check that out, please.
ginger ale can help with stomach issues.
Will the real Dr. Pepper please stand up
If you are a practicing physician who invented a brand of soda one hundred and forty years ago, please tell us in the comments.
The situation with fanta is more complicated.
ruclips.net/video/3BR6Z_vmpmI/видео.html
Vimto names origins came from the word vim and the adjective vigour
Pity poor Vimto not being considered a global brand.
‘Poor” and “Vimto” belong together. Horrible muck. The nasty floor sweepings from a pop factory
sie in german is pronounced zi if i remember correctly
Isn't Dr. Pepper supposed to taste the way the inside of a very specific pharmacy smells?
Where I come from there's a drink called Jesus. It's a pink soda, with a very sweet taste.
"Fad danes"? What the heck is that???
Ooh do Fanta ;)
Why does Dr. Pepper come in bottles?
His wife died. (I didn't make it up.)
Alas, Vimto enjoyers get no representation yet again. Society truly is cruel.
What is "soda"? Do you mean fizzy pop?
We call it pop in the Midwest
Soda, fizzy pop, cola all different regional terms for the same thing.
You know exactly what he meant by the content in the video. You could just say; "Oh, where I am from, we call it fizzy Pop!"
Coca-Cola isn't named after its key ingredients (that would be water followed by sugar) but it promotional ingredients. 😉
Yeah, I can see how “sugar water” doesn’t have the same effect. 😜
😊❤😊❤😊❤😊❤😊❤😊
❤😊❤😊❤😊❤
@@mingfanzhang8927 aaa