I’m sorry, but in my world, I sit on a couch, and a couch it will remain.
The words like sofa and soda hurt my ears. There’s an extra, unneeded syllable and just makes it sound goofy. I’ll stop there - You don’t want to listen to me complain, do you?
All right, what do you call it then, couch or sofa? (or perhaps, something else?)
Also, if possible, provide location (unless it comes up in the left column).
However, growing up in the midwest we called the regular everyday seating apparatus the couch and the one reserved for company only the sofa. It was kept in the Room That No One Was Allowed To Go Into Except On Thanksgiving Or Funerals.
Moderator’s Note: On the one hand, “sofa potato” just doesn’t have the same ring to it. On the other hand, if one of our well-known SDMB posters had to change his username to “Couch King”, he’d sound like a furniture salesman (probably one with really irritating locally-produced TV ads), and not like someone making a sly double entendre.
This thread, however, clearly belongs in IMHO, so off it goes.
Actually, chaise lounge is some kind of bastardization of chaise longue, but it sounds a lot better. My mother always spells it “longue” but pronounces it “lounge.”
I usually say “couch” but it’s interchangable with “sofa,” much like I usually say “car” but it’s interchangable with “stupid piece of mother****ing **- **** that always breaks down *********.”
I use both. My Dad always called it a couch, my Mom a sofa. So I will use either one that suits me at the time. I have not been able to identify any kind of reason I would use one over the other.
I usually call it a lounge (and it’s in a room, and I’m a lizard), or sometimes a couch, and i also call it a sof… Well hey! I call it all three things!!
On the other hand, a car is a car, never an automobile (see, I don’t think I can even spell the word).
It was often a devan growing up in Oklahoma, but when I moved to Texas nobody called it that. It’s usually a couch, or a loveseat if there’s only room for two on it.
Couch or sofa, interchangably. Bed, when it’s unfolded. Never lounge, divan, chesterfield (isn’t that a cigarette?) or other cearly improper (and probably communist) terms. This is from California, btw.
I was brought up saying “settee”. Now I say “sofa”, occasionally reverting to “settee”. To us Brits, a divan is the kind of bed that’s covered with fabric and sometimes has drawers in the bottom; as opposed to a metal or wooden bedstead. I hate divan beds because they require the use of valances, which I find ugly.