Because we need a thread where we cop to it when we get sucked into cute.
Check out the end of this one. It's hilariously like kindergarten.
https://www.Twitter or X not allowed/i/web/status/1310206305399787520/
No, @lizkat: In this forum, given the number of exiles (voluntary and involuntary from MR), an instruction that reads "file under, they got me," initially had me fearing that you may have had an encounter with the ban hammer in that place.
What IS the word for icelolly anyway? Popsicle? (that feels like saying Xerox for photocopy).
That’s it! And you’re probably right. It’s a brand name that took over. Xerox, Kleenex....
That’s it! And you’re probably right. It’s a brand name that took over. Xerox, Kleenex....
Hoover...
Wow, until the age of the info highway, I had always thought of that last one as a British / Irish appropriation of brand for the generic device or activity, but when I looked it up in Wikipedia it mentioned the USA as well.
I've heard ice-pops too for popsicles... but not sure where. New Jersey maybe? Or Jersey guys in my offices in NYC talking about going down to the shore for this that and the other thing on the weekends... but there I think ice pops were incidental at best, i.e. not their main focus.
Check out the end of this one. It's hilariously like kindergarten.
The wooden taste of the spoon is also an important part of that memory for me.It does remind me of my days in kindergarten, when the teachers would put us all in the big playpen, and throw us cups of vanilla ice cream to eat.
...which reminds me of how much I miss those ice cream cups with the little wooden spoons. Wonder if they still make those.
The wooden taste of the spoon is also an important part of that memory for me.
...which reminds me of how much I miss those ice cream cups with the little wooden spoons. Wonder if they still make those.
I always think of ice-pops as the frozen juice in a plastic sleeve, rather than the square on a stick.
I don’t say Hoover for the same reason I say photocopy and tissue. At some point I became very brand-aware.
Well this is not a video just a tweet in a thread, but I got sucked into the cute of it anyway
https://www.Twitter or X not allowed/i/web/status/1311309896944701440/
Most don’t - but you can bet they know what it means.I've never heard anyone from the US say "hoover".
Most don’t - but you can bet they know what it means.
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