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Quote from: Danika on September 07, 2012, 05:20:41 PMI grew up in the Rocky Mountain region of the US and had never heard this till I moved to the Northeast. When someone makes a mistake, they say "my bad." And I had a friend from Michigan who said that where she lived, they didn't say "my bad" but they said "my bag" instead, when they were correcting themselves.Having grown up in the northeast and then moving to the Rocky Mountain region, I never noticed that one...but now I'm going to see if people don't say it here (because I'm oh so far from you ). I grew up saying it so I never paid attention for people not saying it...challenge accepted!
I grew up in the Rocky Mountain region of the US and had never heard this till I moved to the Northeast. When someone makes a mistake, they say "my bad." And I had a friend from Michigan who said that where she lived, they didn't say "my bad" but they said "my bag" instead, when they were correcting themselves.
Quote from: Dark Magdalena on September 07, 2012, 05:38:11 PMQuote from: Danika on September 07, 2012, 05:20:41 PMI grew up in the Rocky Mountain region of the US and had never heard this till I moved to the Northeast. When someone makes a mistake, they say "my bad." And I had a friend from Michigan who said that where she lived, they didn't say "my bad" but they said "my bag" instead, when they were correcting themselves.Having grown up in the northeast and then moving to the Rocky Mountain region, I never noticed that one...but now I'm going to see if people don't say it here (because I'm oh so far from you ). I grew up saying it so I never paid attention for people not saying it...challenge accepted!I will be interested to hear the results. I am in the Northeast and had no idea "my bad" was regional. I have heard (seen?) people on here complaining that it is rude; but i have always thought it to be a handy little phrase. I also kind of thought it originated or was at least popularized by the TV show "Martin" so shows what i know
I tend to think "my bad" is more urban than regional.
Quote from: Jones on September 07, 2012, 05:42:39 PMI was chatting with a gal from Oklahoma and was about to say something about the weather in her "neck of the woods." Then I realized she didn't live where there were or ever had been a forest, and didn't know if it would confuse her. Do people use that phrase in non-woodsy areas?Oh yes, 'neck of the woods' is generic American. Whether or not trees are present, you know it means the place where you live. We never have quite figured out how woods have a neck but, who really cares? it's fun to say.
I was chatting with a gal from Oklahoma and was about to say something about the weather in her "neck of the woods." Then I realized she didn't live where there were or ever had been a forest, and didn't know if it would confuse her. Do people use that phrase in non-woodsy areas?
I do wonder if the "my bad" is a mangulation (ha!) of the English translation for "mea culpa". ("My fault" or "my mistake".) Possible?
Does anyone else refer to an umbrella as a bumbershoot? My mother called them that and I've never heard it anywhere else. Of course, my mother had a myriad of unusual expressions.
I'd never encountered the expression "my bad", before discovering the Internet. Had thus imagined that it was pure "Net-speak", and quite recently come into being. Various recent posts inform me otherwise. To the best of my knowledge, it was unused and unknown here in the UK, before the Net era.
Another one to throw into the mix: when I have to put up with something unpleasant because it simply can't be helped, I have to thole it. Anybody else do that?
Quote from: Free Range Hippy Chick on September 12, 2012, 05:24:59 AMAnother one to throw into the mix: when I have to put up with something unpleasant because it simply can't be helped, I have to thole it. Anybody else do that?I've never heard that. How does one pronounce that? Just th like in "throw" and ole rhyming with hole? Most of the folks I know use the slang "suck it up." I'm not sure of the derivation of "suck it up" and I'm not sure I want to know.