I did a quick search of the SDMB database and came up with nothing so here goes:
A person from California = Californian
Ditto New York = New Yorker
Ditto Cambridge = Cantabridgean (a little different than the source place, but obviously derived from it; if anyone can help me understand why the UK’s residents names vary so much from the place name itself (e.g., Manchester = Mancunian; Liverpool = Liverpudlian; Oxford = Oxonian, etc…) it would be worth extra bonus points to my main question…)
anyway, what about:
A person from Connecticut = ?
A person from Massachusetts = ?
The locals I have asked don’t know (someone offered “Connecticucian” but was far from sure; everyone wants to refer to CT’ers as “Nutmeggers” and MA’ers as “Bay Staters” or “Massholes”, which, while I found I had unearthed some latent New England tension, didn’t meet the criteria of using the place name to refer to resident.
“Connecticuter” appears in the 1993 Webster’s International Dictionary. I have never heard anyone use it. People I know from Connecticut say “Nutmegger”.
But, here’s what the U.S. Government Printing Office gives as its official list for residents of the various states
Alabamian
Alaskan
Arizonan
Arkansan
Californian
Coloradan
Connecticuter
Delawarean
Floridian
Georgian
Hawaiian
Idahoan
Illinoisan
Indianian
Iowan
Kansan
Kentuckian
Louisianian
Mainer
Marylander
Massachusettsan
Michiganian
Minnesotan
Mississippian
Missourian
Montanan
Nebraskan
Nevadan
New Hampshirite
New Jerseyan
New Mexican
New Yorker
North Carolinian
North Dakotan
Ohioan
Oklahoman
Oregonian
Pennsylvanian
Rhode Islander
South Carolinian
South Dakotan
Tennessean
Texan
Utahn
Vermonter
Virginian
Washingtonian
West Virginian
Wisconsinite
Wyomingite
I don’t know, “Connecticutian” and “Connecticuter” just don’t roll off the tongue. I guess I usually say I’m a Nutmegger, but even that doesn’t do it for me. Our northern neighbors are usually Bay Staters, although Masshole will do if I’m driving on 495.
And New Hampshirite? When I lived there, we were known as Granite Staters. I guess I should have said that I was a native Mancunian and New Hampshirite. Sheesh.
I’m from Connecticut, and I have never used Connecticutian or Connecticuter. Come to think of it, I’ve never used any thing other than “people/person from Connecticut”. I seem to recall this debate with friends back in middle school, and we just gave up.
I’ve called people from Massachusetts Massholes before, but that was only freinds.
One could go the Mark Twain route and refer to residents of Connecticut as “Yankees”. I’ve heard “Bay Stater” for Massachusetts and “Mainiac” for Maine.
People from Michigan refer to themselves as Michiganders more often than Michiganians.
As for some of the other entries:
“Mainer”, “Mainite” and other such terms have, as far as I can tell, never been used by an actual resident of the 23rd state. They all call themselves Down Easters. As to where the heck the term “Down Easter” came from, I have no idea.
“Illinoisan”? They’re Illini, man.
“Indianian”? Hasn’t the U.S. Government Printing Office ever heard of the term Hoosier?
I’ve heard both Ohioan and Buckeye a lot.
I understand that people who live in Hawaii usually refer to themselves as Islanders. The term Hawaiian is supposed to be reserved for people who are ethnically Hawaiian.
No, we don’t. When we’re being serious we call ourselves Mainers. When we’re being jocular, we call ourselves Maineiacs.
People from away have an unfortunate tendency to call the whole state “Down East”, but for me the term refers only to coastal sections of the state east of Penobscot Bay, i.e., Hancock County and Washington County. Some Mainers consider Waldo County, just west of the Bay, to be part of Down East, but I don’t.
Up here in New Hampshaa, we go by “Granite Staters” - coz we’re thickheaded and stubborn. Those poor, misguided folks down in Mass are either “Bay Staters”, “Massholes”, or “G-damn Kennedy Voters”.
Well it may not roll off the tongue but if you’re listening to the news what you’ll here most of the time is “massachusetts residents.” (though lucwarm is right you do hear “bay state residents” often and “bay staters” occasionally).
Casually - the cumbersome but functional “people from massachusetts.” I’ve never heard bay state residents or bay staters used casually.
Charming as it is, I’ve never heard Massholes used. Obviously I don’t hang out with the right crowd.