My nana had a thick southie Boston accent. Born in 1916 and pretty much never left the neighborhood her whole life except to visit us in Florida, and I have census records showing many generation lived in the same parish. I wish I could have heard her say this. Much mirth would have ensued.
As it was I could barely understand potato. Came out pa nae nae somehow
Wuss ta sure
Wow so lilafowler is your grandmother!! Small world! 😝
I've not spoken with lila but I'd put money on nana's being thicker. I hear it in my Boston friends but not like that. Even when they're piss drunk when everyone's is strongest no matter where we're from
But hi 104 year old dead ruth (she did live into her 90s) aka lila.
My nana had a thick southie Boston accent. Born in 1916 and pretty much never left the neighborhood her whole life except to visit us in Florida, and I have census records showing many generation lived in the same parish. I wish I could have heard her say this. Much mirth would have ensued.
As it was I could barely understand potato. Came out pa nae nae somehow
Wuss ta sure
Wow so lilafowler is your grandmother!! Small world! 😝
Post by basilosaurus on Aug 2, 2020 17:14:02 GMT -5
Come now, it's sriracha named after a city in Thailand. Don't pronounce the first r if you want to sound cool. Rooster sauce is a mere imitation but admittedly most common in USA.
Come now, it's sriracha named after a city in Thailand. Don't pronounce the first r if you want to sound cool. Rooster sauce is a mere imitation but admittedly most common in USA.
Anyone want me on a trivia team?
This is just stealing a commonly used name lol. Rooster sauce has been used in my family since the 1920s.
Before this comment I had never heard of anyone using rooster to describe Sriracha. Sriracha would never be in my home though because I think it smells awful so I would never decide to taste it.
Come now, it's sriracha named after a city in Thailand. Don't pronounce the first r if you want to sound cool. Rooster sauce is a mere imitation but admittedly most common in USA.
Anyone want me on a trivia team?
This is just stealing a commonly used name lol. Rooster sauce has been used in my family since the 1920s.
Before this comment I had never heard of anyone using rooster to describe Sriracha. Sriracha would never be in my home though because I think it smells awful so I would never decide to taste it.
Oh. The most common sriracha brand in usa has a giant rooster on the front, so a lot of people call it rooster sauce. Even my thai friends who've been in usa for awhile do sometimes.