Grew up in the Midwest and am familiar with it.
This pretty much matches my experience, and for me it was in the late 80’s. I learned it from my kids. Before that it was dibs.
And whatever they called it, if they got to squalling about it, they got put on rotation. Mothers do have veto.
Only slightly more often than people who find themselves behind the wheel of a large automobile.
Am I right, or am I wrong?
If one is too late to call shotgun, there is still time to call “not bitch!”
Yes, all my life.
Know what it means, no idea where from ('nother UKer here). The only time I can remember hearing it anywhere in living memory is on Psych (last time it was Shawn and Gus bickering about calling shotgun on a hot air balloon). Never heard anyone say it in real life.
I’ve known about “shotgun” since I started driving in 1966, but had never heard “Riding Bitch” until someone said it in “No Country For Old Men.” Took a second or two to realize what it obviously meant.
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Back before my brother and I “got hip” to the expression, which was more a matter of our ages then the availability of the term, we would holler out, “I got the front seat, going and coming.” Later the shorthand of “Shotgun” won out over that long sentence. This would have been early 50’s at the latest, maybe late 40’s.
Is one allowed to “shotgun” things other than the passenger seat? (e.g. “Shotgun the remote”)
As long as I can remember, in fact I’m sure my brother and I used to do it and that was in the mid 70’s. My kids still do it whenever I have both of them free to see me at the same time and hubby isn’t around.
Not in my experience - “shotgun” specifically means the passenger seat, with reference to riding shotgun on a stagecoach or wagon. It doesn’t mean “I get _____”.
That would be “dibs”, I believe. Calling shotgun on the remote would, at best, mean you were going to sit next to the guy who called dibs on the remote, but really, it would just be silly. Shotgun is specific to seating in a vehicle.
We lived near the beach when I grew up and when we got back in the car at the end of the day we were sweaty, sandy and salty. We always yelled, “Shotguns in the shower!” and whoever said that phrase got to shower first at home.
That’s the only way I’ve ever used it.
I was a teen in the 70s, grew up in Alaska, and we used it in the way described in the OP.
Sure, but I haven’t used it in years. I’m 60.