up here in Saskatchewan, I’ve grown up with “pop” - “soda” means club soda to me, and Coke is a brand name, not a generic. That seems to match the pattern in Montana, North Dakota, and Minnesota.
except for that one lime-green “other” county, in Minnesota, that picks up the North-west angle. what’s up with that?
Glad to see New Jersey having all counties at 80+% soda. If they did a more recent poll, I bet Virginia and North Carolina would be even more “soda” do to all of the people who have moved there from the northeast in the past few years.
Hmmm. The whole state is varying degrees of pop except for this county, which is soda. As is California. And we have a hell of a lot of Californians up here.
I’m not a native but always called it soda. Dunno where my parents picked it up, my dad was from Ohio and my mom grew up all over the place.
I’ve lived in Portland for four years now, and worked in the restaurant business most of that time. I do not recall ever hearing anyone here refer to soda as “pop”.
Eh, New Mexico never knows what the hell they’re doing on any issue. Though I’m in Santa Fe county and apparently everyone here calls it ‘coke’, but I almost never hear that, so I’m not sure how much I’m trusting this map.
Where I live, (around Buffalo), most people call it “pop”. I call it “pop” because it’s less syllables. On top of that I work at Wegmans, where their brand of soda is W-Pop. Actually now I think it’s “W-Cola” or “Dr. W” these days.
I’m from Chicago, and the correct term is “pop”. I don’t even know what’s going on with this “coke” thing. That’s just completely and utterly wrong. “Coke” is a subcategory of a subcategory of pop. There’s “colas”, a specific flavor of pop, and then there’s “Coke”, a specific brand of cola. This misnaming must be the root of all problems in the South.
I like the correspondence between the pop vs. soda map and maps of the Confederacy and Civil War battlefields . It appears that the linguistic forces of the Union are again making significant inroads into Virginia and Nawth C’alina.
I usually go with “soft drink”. Probably because I lived in Albuquerque as a kid, which happens to be one of a handful of “80% - 100% other” counties.
Then I moved to Detroit, where I’ve spent most of my life, and went to college in Ohio. For some reason, I never use pop, but now I do say soda occasionally. Don’t have a clue why.