So I'm 54% Met?
Feb. 19th, 2004 09:31 pmThe Yankee or Dixie linguistic quiz has me at 46% Yankee. Which is fair — “Yankee” is a moving target.
Outside of the US, a Yankee is an American.
In the southern US, a Yankee is a northerner.
In the rest of the north, a Yankee is someone from New England. As a New Yorker, I’m therefore not a Yankee.
In the rest of New England, a Yankee is someone from Vermont.
In Vermont, a Yankee is someone who eats apple pie with cheddar cheese on it.
On the other hand, Wikipedia’s entry on the word suggests that it might have originated in a nickname the Dutch had for English settlers in New York’s early days: Jan Kees, or “John Cheese”.
I got the quiz from
immlass, whose definition of “Yankee” will soon be shifting a slot down that list.
Outside of the US, a Yankee is an American.
In the southern US, a Yankee is a northerner.
In the rest of the north, a Yankee is someone from New England. As a New Yorker, I’m therefore not a Yankee.
In the rest of New England, a Yankee is someone from Vermont.
In Vermont, a Yankee is someone who eats apple pie with cheddar cheese on it.
On the other hand, Wikipedia’s entry on the word suggests that it might have originated in a nickname the Dutch had for English settlers in New York’s early days: Jan Kees, or “John Cheese”.
I got the quiz from
(no subject)
Date: 2004-02-20 03:18 am (UTC)I'm 45% Yankee, which I don't buy. "Hero" is not just a Maine-ism, it's the original designation for that kind of sandwich in New York AFAIK. And who in our neck of the woods doesn't usually pronounce "route" like "root" instead of "rout"? Or "pa-jah-mas"?
Now that I see the rationale for the scoring system, though, I feel a little differently. 0% is pure Yankee, 100% pure Dixie. So that means both you and I actually come out mildly favoring Yankee over Dixie, which is probably fair.
Remember, the Mets are more lovable than the Yankees. I'd rather snuggle you than U.S. Steel any day.