sarah is funnnnny
Jan. 29th, 2008 11:27 amJust two Sarah-things that cracked me up and I wanted to record them for posterity. (And so that Matt and Emily and Ida could be amused.)
So, Sunday night. Sarah and her beyond-glorious mom came over for dinner. The topic came round again to how some people in the Midwest refer to green bell peppers as mangoes. (Incomprehensibly, they refer to the fruit as fruit-mangoes.)
This drives Sarah as completely insane as it does me.
Sarah: *plucking at shirt* I am going to call this pants.
Me: And they call the fruit... fruit-mangoes.
Sarah. Ah. *plucks at pants* These are my leg-pants.
Half the hilarity is her delivery and her facial expressions. Her mom and I about died.
And today, on Days of Our MSN
Me: do you want to try to do a quilting thing
Me: i mean, sep projects
Me: but we both harmoniously quilt together like we're in an episode of Little Women or something?
Me: i could buy us bonnets and shit
Sarah: i absolutely do, but only if i get an apron to wear as well. preferably with ruffles around the edges.
Me: I think a pale green gingham would be fetching with your eyes
Sarah: wicked. so i'll get on the apron purchasing, and then we can have quilting circle. except not a circle, more like a straight line, as we only have two people.
Sarah, you're brilliant and I love you.
So, Sunday night. Sarah and her beyond-glorious mom came over for dinner. The topic came round again to how some people in the Midwest refer to green bell peppers as mangoes. (Incomprehensibly, they refer to the fruit as fruit-mangoes.)
This drives Sarah as completely insane as it does me.
Sarah: *plucking at shirt* I am going to call this pants.
Me: And they call the fruit... fruit-mangoes.
Sarah. Ah. *plucks at pants* These are my leg-pants.
Half the hilarity is her delivery and her facial expressions. Her mom and I about died.
And today, on Days of Our MSN
Me: do you want to try to do a quilting thing
Me: i mean, sep projects
Me: but we both harmoniously quilt together like we're in an episode of Little Women or something?
Me: i could buy us bonnets and shit
Sarah: i absolutely do, but only if i get an apron to wear as well. preferably with ruffles around the edges.
Me: I think a pale green gingham would be fetching with your eyes
Sarah: wicked. so i'll get on the apron purchasing, and then we can have quilting circle. except not a circle, more like a straight line, as we only have two people.
Sarah, you're brilliant and I love you.
no subject
Date: 2008-01-29 07:46 pm (UTC)Hee! :)
no subject
Date: 2008-01-29 07:48 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2008-01-29 07:52 pm (UTC)I have lived in the Midwest for almost 20 years altogether, and I have never heard this. I'm not saying that there's not some people somewhere that do this (possibly even in the Midwest), but it is not a Midwesternism.
no subject
Date: 2008-01-29 08:01 pm (UTC)I first heard of this from Jeff, who is from Indiana. And I don't think I quite believed him until his dad said it in front of me. Jeff nearly died laughing at the look on my face.
When I first heard of it, I did a desperate Web search and found nothing. But I checked again and found: http://www.foodreference.com/html/fmango.html
no subject
Date: 2008-01-29 08:18 pm (UTC)The article you link suggests it's an old-fashioned term used by grandmas and such, so that would explain why nobody's heard it.
Can you imagine making a recipe calling for mangoes and using the fruit, only to discover later that it meant "green peppers"????
no subject
Date: 2008-01-29 08:19 pm (UTC)But Jeff's dad, who just isn't THAT old still uses it. So maybe his region of Indiana is just that clingy to terms that are, you know, insane.
no subject
Date: 2008-01-30 01:01 am (UTC)I, too, have never heard of this particular reference before.
My theory, since I am from IL, is that Indiana people are all insane. :-D
no subject
Date: 2008-01-30 02:18 am (UTC)I ought to check LJ more often than twice a month
Date: 2008-02-01 08:42 pm (UTC)