I don't think I've posted my dialect quiz thing, so I retook it and here it is:
It highlighted Des Moines, Detroit, and Buffalo, but I haven't been to any of those cities. I wonder if Youngstown or Cleveland was an option, those would have been a bit closer to home.
I've picked up on a few New Englander expressions, like sunshowers and referring to rotaries, as, well, rotaries. This is the only place I've seen them, so I use the local word for them. I also use a handful of Southern ones like access roads (hilariously, this is only used in Texas or Atlanta) but not y'all, I still say you all or you guys. Most of my picks, though, are Midwestern. Referring to Halloween Eve as the devils' night is apparently really popular in Michigan and Pittsburg--but Youngstown was a bit yellow there too, and I think I remember hearing that expression as a kid. Apparently, saying freeway is really Western, but calling them interstates wasn't an option.
It highlighted Des Moines, Detroit, and Buffalo, but I haven't been to any of those cities. I wonder if Youngstown or Cleveland was an option, those would have been a bit closer to home.
I've picked up on a few New Englander expressions, like sunshowers and referring to rotaries, as, well, rotaries. This is the only place I've seen them, so I use the local word for them. I also use a handful of Southern ones like access roads (hilariously, this is only used in Texas or Atlanta) but not y'all, I still say you all or you guys. Most of my picks, though, are Midwestern. Referring to Halloween Eve as the devils' night is apparently really popular in Michigan and Pittsburg--but Youngstown was a bit yellow there too, and I think I remember hearing that expression as a kid. Apparently, saying freeway is really Western, but calling them interstates wasn't an option.
