ain't your buddy, pal!
ain't your buddy, pal!
ain't your buddy, pal!
Alaskans and Hawaiians are incapable of forming bonds of friendship.
Interesting. Can we have have at least a tiny bit of info how this data came to be?
Not just this one, but all the infographs, maps etc. Always leave entirely open if someone just guessed the data for the lulz.
This makes me a litte sad sometimes
People in Washington don't refer to each others.
Exclusively as comrade (not pictured)
I thought America was mostly NTSC
nice maps, homes!
no bro’s in california?
whoever made this hasn’t been to anything out west
Bruh
Touche
The most glaring thing I saw too. I lived a large chunk of my life in So Cal and everyone was bro.
thanks bro… dude is definitely popular, but bro has been pretty dominant….
i will say it’s gone down ever since “bro” became derogatory… like tech-bro and other bullshit….
Doesn't seem to count genz online slang
what happened to man... as in hey man.
Can't afford the ticket. . . . BACK TO SUFFRAGETTE CITY
Hey man (nice shot) - they are back, with their last album August 2023.
I don't know, my man.
that is cool, maaan. you tha man ! oh maaaan did you see those protests in US ?
Seattle Freeze is REAL
As a Washingtonian, as usual, I’m glad to barely be represented on a heat map of something.
I dunno my guy.
Northeast US left off because they just say "Yo asshole"
It's how real america emotes
Anybody use the word fucker as a term of endearment? "What's up, fucker?"
Ah, you must be from the North East.
Or south Florida
I'm an anomaly. I've lived almost everywhere.
We prefer "What's up fuckface?"
I love that New England doesn't show a preference for any of the choices. My theory: Boston throws off the curve with "asshole" and "fucker" and the data scientists didn't want to cover cursing.
Masshole.
New England always on top, in our own way; confusing to those who aren't from around here.
Eastern Pennsylvania apparently has no word for Bros.
It's just a nod and a quickly whispered "Go Birds."
Youse guys
He speaks the shibboleth!
"Jawn"
I was upset that Kentucky didn't have much coverage, but then I realized that "Hosscat" wasn't one of the choices.
So there's PAL, where's NTSC, and SÉCAM?
angry analogue arrow up depress
I don't know why but "fella" sounds old fashioned to me.
Cause ya ain't from the south
I'm not from the US either, lol
I'm not your pal, guy!
I'm not your guy buddeh!
Hypothesis: you can go to the Great lakes region and just make random noises and people will be like "hey, what's up?”.
I'm apparently in the "Pal" region and it's not a word I use often to refer to people, nor have I heard it used often by others either.
We use "Dude" pretty often, but looking at the map you'd think this is a dude desert.
Further down the article this screen’s taken from, they show the raw data they got for “dude”, and its usage is pretty much everywhere.
Don't forget "guy" and "chief".
they forgor 💀
The large amounts of no-bro-zones scares me.
People in Georgia and Washington State apparently don't have friends.
Liv3 WA, can confirm.
Or Florida.
But actually it checks out for WA
Florida has a few bros.
I was thinking the north west was looking pretty bare too. Some in Montana, but that’s all.
Been ‘dude’ for me as long as I’ve been alive.
West coast here. There’s also “man” and “guys.” I use those way more than “dude” lol
ok broseph
Speaking of brotymology, what's a gender neutral version of bro/man?
they are kinda a gender neutral.
Bro is fairly commonly used as gender neutral word.
Man (as in my man) does not have an equivalent (my person does not havve the ring) - but originally, man was the gender neutral term for persons, and we user mer (as in mermaid) / were (as in werewolf) for males. that is how man was used. But that very well could also be due to bias in writing and archiving of stuff, I don not know much about this.
I use "fam".
man is short for human
Hu-man from Earth
I'm old, but my even older inlaws refer to each other affectionately as "person."
People say "dude" is neutral, but you don't often see it used when all the dudes are women, and the existence of "dudette" also implies it's not.
"Friend" maybe but could sound sarcastic.
Come to think of it, all these terms are ripe for sarcastic use. In fact, I'd like to see the map of antibrotymology. Which of the above is used the way Wolverine uses "Bub"?
Cuz is acceptable
Sib (as in sibling) is my preferred one.
Suggests that in Georgia, Americans don't refer to their friends
Having male friends in Georgia is too homoerotic for their sensibilities.
Where is sexy-(square)pants? Man-in-tights? Curly-cock? Dick-broom?
You have some strange buddies.
I never call them buddies, idk, that just sounds wrong.
You can call me Al.
Anything goes in Michigan.
The last two aren't really used here.
Guess I'm not your pal, fella.
Damn, no representation for "babe", "bbgrl", etc? I use those a lot.
People really say "fella"? It seems centered around Louisiana?
What up, fucko?
Georgians have no friends.
Mid Atlantic region just doesn’t like anyone.
We do not. So that is accurate!
There's quite a few terms missing, bitch, homie & n - - - a are the ones that come to mind right away. I'd like to see the demographic distribution of the participants.
The only thing this proves is that us here in the PNW truly do have less friends than the rest of our country men.
but it's made up for with the greater PNW polycule
I'm surprised it hasn't shifted to dude with the Californians moving in.
Speaking as a Californian, I'm pretty sure the people leaving for Washington are the folks who ended up in the land of eight uninterrupted months of extroverts and cloudless blue skies by mistake and are self-sorting for a grimmer location. Can't blame them, I'd go too if I could; summers here just about make me lose my mind.
The top three are used in California.
I mainly stick with Dude and Buddy (Buddy being my go to for strangers "Thanks Buddy")
In my office a few years back I started ironically calling people "Homie" and that overtime morphed into a gender neutral term of endearment we all used for each other.
I really wonder where "Homie" fits into this
Michigan is all about it.
Dude is the single best word in the english language
Chief…
My area has some color in every one of these, lol.
And mine has none for any of them... Sir
That sucks, my acquaintance.
Fella 4 life
Massachusetts has much more dude than this.
Good post, mate.
In Florida I mainly hear the top 3.
Bottom 2 would probably get an odd look.
That's really interesting I never thought that something as simple as "bro" would be different in different states
bruh
So, we're no longer using 'stud?'
Only for bros with benefits.
Breh.
I'm not your fella, pal
I'm super curious about that hole in Texas for "dude."