It’s a pretty common US term, too, and I’d imagine that most Americans would know exactly what’s meant by it. But, yes, “bodega” is used a lot in NYC, AIUI.
I used to take a drink or two out of my dad’s bottle of vermouth when I was in high school. His liquor cabinet only had the one thing. It was nasty but teenagers can’t be choosers.
The thing is, there’s that problems with using a phrase like “generally known and understood” when referring to you-know-who. Hell, even “North America.” Are we sure he knows what that is?
Great show! I think we discussed it here a while back.
I hadn’t heard the term bodega until relatively recently myself. I would actually use it, though, assuming there were any bodegas that I needed to talk about. To me, a bodega never sells gas, and the majority of small convenience stores in the suburbs sell gas.
“Corner store” is the preferred and most common term in the Chicago area. In fact, I would guess a lot of people in this area have no clue what a “bodega” is.
“No clue”? The term is used on a lot of TV shows set in New York. Especially Law and Order where it’s is used constantly. Hold-ups, don’tcha know.
In South Texas we sometimes say “Ice House” or “Ice Station” for a convenience store that sells gas, snacks, beer, sodas, and a few groceries. And, of course, ice.
Right. I had no idea what one was when I first started hearing the term probably less than five years ago. But it has become common since then. (Usually about bidega cats.)
IME, as recently as a decade ago, a fair number of New Yorkers called bodegas “delis.” (Not to be confused with old-school Jewish delis like Katz’s or Carnegie.)
That’s not humor. It’s just glee, pure pleasure derived from his cruelty.
Wouldn’t it be better if it involved the EMALS he hates so much?
Isn’t it an article of faith for War Criminal H. to do what he can to bring about the return of the Big Guy?
See above. It’s not joking; it’s pleasure derived from cruelty.
We (the generic we, the community here) have had discussions over the years on this board about a person who insists on asserting something incorrect which they do not know to be false even though the correct information is well-known and not a niche item. The big question is: are they actually lying?
The felon is incredibly bad at damn near everything. One of the things he’s absolutely terrible at is reporting facts. Everything he asserts is false. He is, as should be obvious to even the most disinterested observer, too lazy to find out facts. So he opens his mouth and says what he wants to be the truth. He is such a simpleton, and such a lazy one at that, that he simply doesn’t know he’s spewing counterfactual assertions. The key thing here is the things he wants to be true are all based on his desire to satisfy, to unleash his cruelty. And that’s not humor; it’s just cruelty.
When I say he’s satisfying his need for cruelty, I mean he’s using cruelty to dominate, to control, to have power over others.
Bodega is Spanish and means wine cellar, often with a door to the street when it is open to the public, mostly cheap places for winos, but it can also be private and only accessible from within the house.
Of course, he doesn’t jest, he often says the quiet (keep it to himself) out loud, and if a row is made of it, he’ll say he was just kidding or meant something else.
From New York, and I can’t think of any stores “on the corner” in any of the boroughs. Tom’s Diner, used extensively in “Seinfeld” for location cues, was referred to as “On the corner” in Suzanne Vega’s song “Tom’s Diner,” yet unless you lived on that block, you’d not say “Let’s go to the corner diner”. As for Seinfeld, that seemed to be the only diner they ever went to, and they’d probably just say, “Let’s go to the diner”. As for little convenience stores, “bodega” would have the widest use, though trump could have offered that up rather than say he couldn’t figure out what a “corner store” was and ranting about it.
Bush Sr’s bafflement at the supermarket scanner was a mistake of his handlers. It would have been somewhat impressive if someone had quickly explained the tech of checkouts back then. I don’t thnk it hurt him as much as Dukakis riding in a tank did, yet it’s the job of the forward crew to explain stuff like how ridiculed you’ll be if you don’t know this or do that.
I had never heard the term “bottled,” yet I’m not running for MP in the UK. I like Liverpool, though I guess I’d have to change that if I did run for MP outside Liverpool (never been). Anyways, I know Vance endorsed Arsenal (dunno if he visited them while in London) and they have a 6 point lead with 6 games to go and if one of the Manchester teams catch up, he’ll have one more FAIL to his name way before the midterms.
IME almost all NYCitizens use “bodega” where people in other US cities use “corner store” (which differs from “convenience store” in that the latter is usually a national chain, and can be located anywhere, not just in urban areas. Every convenience store everywhere sells essentially the same items, where bodegas/corner stores reflect the ethnicity and socioeconomic status of their particular neighborhood). (Actually, in recent years NYC has embraced the term “convenience store” as a euphemism for “gray-market weed shop”)
But it beggars imagination that anyone in NYC would never have heard of the term “corner store”.
I don’t drink it straight but have a bottle of sweet Italian vermouth on hand for a Manhattan-like cocktail I make. I don’t judge others on what they might drink.* The Whisk(e)y Tribe’s motto is, The best whiskey is the whiskey you like drunk the way you like it.
Like that MRI guy who wore a chain and padlock?
“Here, sir, is the latest Noble prize. Yes, it is made of iron. Gold is for wimps and you’re an iron man. Now, stand right over this groove in the deck for a photo-op. Yes, she’s eighteen – that’s as young as you can be in the navy”
*Well, Mad Dog 20/20, perhaps, but other than that…
Until relatively recently, in Massachusetts they’d call it a “spa”. But nowadays a “spa” is plsce you go for mani-pedis and skin treatments, and the “convenience stores” that are still called “spas” are few and far between.