Apologies for the first depiction of the fed, I didn’t make this image :/

  • rbos@lemmy.ca
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    23 hours ago

    Gen X here. Well,borderline. I choose which as convenience dictates. Psych is correct.

    • Pat_Riot@lemmy.today
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      18 hours ago

      Now you have me wondering if it was regional, because it was definitely sike in Florida all the way through the '80s.

        • The Quuuuuill@slrpnk.net
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          15 hours ago

          little secret: Florida isn’t as different from the rest os the US as people think. it just has a different law about journalistic reporting on police reports than the rest of the country which makes their police blotter easy fodder for hack comedians who don’t know robbing a gas station with an alligator in florida is the same energy as robbing a wawa with a badger in Pittsburgh, but the latter isn’t reported by default

    • The Quuuuuill@slrpnk.net
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      18 hours ago

      i learned it as sike comes from the swamp reclamation ditches in florida that skateboarders would hang out near. you’d shove someone in the ditch (sike) and say “sike” when you did a real dumb low stakes prank

      • rbos@lemmy.ca
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        13 hours ago

        That is an interesting thought. And y’know, it’s not like English hasn’t had competing spellings for words before.

        As long as there’s a valid etymology, I’d treat either as correct. But granted, they can become correct through use even if it does come from a bone-apple-tea situation.

        • The Quuuuuill@slrpnk.net
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          12 hours ago

          absolutely. there wasn’t any prescribed spelling for anything until i think it was the mid 1800s. and dictionaries are meant to be descriptive of the language as it is, not prescriptive of what it should be