"Sconnie" Voted Local Word of the Year
MADISON, WI – Januray 12th, 2010 - City Dictionary (CityDictionary.com) users have spoken and "sconnie" has been chosen from five worthy finalists as Local Word of the Year. While some City Dictionary users have expressed dissatisfaction with the word, claiming that Wisconsinites don't use it to refer to themselves, a solid 70% of Wisconsin voters chose "sconnie" for Local Word of the Year.
Rounding out the rest of the field, "polio water" received the second-most votes, followed in order by "meat raffle", "slugging", and "neutral ground". Included below is a description of each of the local terms with its percent of the total national vote received:
- sconnie: 43%
The word "sconnie"
can mean anything relating to Wisconsin, or—when capitalized—"Sconnie" can refer
to a person from Wisconsin. While the concept seems rather straightforward, very
few people are in agreement as to where the word comes from and who actually uses
it. On City Dictionary, people have documented use within Wisconsin and in neighboring
states like Michigan and Minnesota, as well as far away places like Colorado and
Hawaii. With that said, many naysayers within Wisconsin consider it a term that
ought to be relegated to other-state obscurity. City Dictionary user madnick calls
sconnie a "bogus term made up to sell t-shirts." He must be referring to Sconnie
Nation, the Wisconsin lifestyle business started in a dorm room by two University
of Wisconsin-Madison students. Sconnie Nation sells apparel with the Sconnie® brand
(which the company has trademarked). The signature Sconnie t-shirt has become so
popular at Wisconsin Badger sporting events that the national media has taken notice.
During a SportsCenter broadcast in 2009, an ESPN anchor referred to the entire state
of Wisconsin as Sconnie. Also, an
article on ESPN’s website refers to the "beer-soaked Sconnie faithful" at
a Badger game in 2008. This last reference plays right into Sconnie Nation’s message
of Sconnie as representative of Wisconsin’s beer-centered culture. While some
Wisconsinites resist, the word sconnie has secured its place in the local vernacular.
What remains unclear, however, is exactly how widespread the word’s use really is.
- polio water: 21%
As City Dictionary user QQgreenIZ puts it,
polio water is Boston speak for a puddle of water. Another user calls it
"stinky water from the gutters that mixes with garbage." Corroborating these definitions,
in the book All Souls: A Family Story from Southie, author Michael Patrick
MacDonald writes, "the water in the gutter was called polio water, because it stank
so bad from mixing with mud and garbage, and if you ever stepped into it you were
branded for a whole day as the one with polio on your sneaker." He follows that
definition with a story about someone "spilling more water into the gutter, making
floods of polio water at the bottom of the street." The term must have originated from
the harsh reality of the first half of the 20th Century when polio had not yet been
eradicated. The poliovirus,
which was spread through fecal-to-oral contact, was commonly found in sewage water,
which suggests that polio water may have originated as a term with a truly literal
meaning.
- meat raffle: 15%
Cultural staple of Minnesota, a
meat raffle often takes place in a bar and supports a local charity. Tickets
are typically sold for $1 apiece, and the winners get—you guessed it—meat. The meat
consists of any number of different cuts from the local butcher. Needless to say,
if you are not from Minnesota—or from another Upper Midwestern state—meat raffles
are probably far off your radar screen.
- slugging: 12%
Slugging
is a form of hitchhiking that has developed in the Washington, DC area that benefits
both the hitchhiker and the driver. The concept is ingenious: 1) Form a line of
passengers near the freeway, 2) hitch a ride from a car passing by to make a total
of three or more passengers, and 3) take a ride on the freeway in the High Occupancy
Vehicle (HOV) lane and get to work quicker. Slugging in the DC area has become such
an institution that there is even a website dedicated to local information on slugging,
as well as the history of the term and the ins and outs of slugging etiquette. According
to Slug-Lines.com, the word "slug" originated
from toll booth attendants who were warned of fake coins from commuters called "slugs".
Then, in the 1970s, when people started to form lines to hitchhike and take advantage
of the new HOV lanes, buses often stopped to pick these people up. Annoyed by the
false bus riders, bus drivers became better at distinguishing between real bus patrons
and the fake ones, whom were then deemed "slugs".
- neutral ground: 9%
Neutral
ground has three potential meanings in New Orleans. Most commonly referred
to as a street's median in other parts of the country, neutral ground arose in New
Orleans when Canal Street formed the barrier between the old French and Spanish parts of town and the newer American part. The median of Canal Street was considered the neutral part of town where people could trade, and was thus dubbed neutral ground. By extension, all street medians in New Orleans have become neutral ground in the everyday language of the locals.
The term neutral ground was also used shortly after the Louisiana
Purchase when the United States and then-Spanish Texas laid claim to land in Western
Louisiana. To arrive at a temporary settlement, the two parties agreed to deem the
land "neutral", giving rise to the term "neutral ground". The third meaning is decidedly
less linguistic in nature, but stays true to the historical theme of this term.
A City Dictionary user informed us that Neutral Ground is the name of New Orleans’
first coffeehouse.
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