Spyke
lemmy.ml

Adulthood is when no one rewards you for eating chips ๐Ÿ˜”

133
lemm.ee

Girl scouts (and girl guides) often have patches to commemorate a fun event. The ones they earn for work go on the front of their vest and have specific criteria for earning them, but are usually more generic in appearance or don't have details about it on the patch.

This type of patch is likely for the youngest age group (4-5) and is meant to be more of a fun patch. I would also guess that the troop is in more of an urban area so there's not much in the way of a very local, small kid friendly hike.

70
Dozzi92reply
lemmy.world

I just learned this the other day when I was joking with my wife that my daughter and their troop got badges for things like breathing and being near things. She told me the back is for whatever, and that when they become Brownies next year, that comes to an end.

I support it all though. Gets the girls together, they do occasionally do things that resemble community service, and I eat too many goddamn cookies.

19

I would imagine it's a way to familiarize the kids to the incentive structure of the badges when they are still too young to be focused.

3

The kebab sign used to have a eastern European mystical connotation before the Germans misappropriated it.

::: spoiler :::

/S

4

Honestly, the fact that she made an effort to go somewhere she didn't have to was a win.

9
Nezchan
lemmy.ca

Isn't chippy a not so good slang term for women?

4
I_Fart_Glitterreply
lemmy.world

In American, yes, it means promiscuous young woman or prostitute. In Canadian it means irritable or in ice hockey, overly aggressive playing. In British it means fried potato slice selling establishment (stand or shop).

13
kakler bitmapreply
lemmy.world

Not that I've traveled all over the US, but I've never heard the term "chippy" used that way here. Where is it used?

13

Iโ€™ve only heard it from Silent Generation folks, or people being sarcastically old timey as they playfully criticize younger women. Iโ€™m in California.

6
TexasDrunkreply
lemmy.world

Where in America? I don't doubt it, I'm just not familiar with it. Is it possibly something that has fallen out as a slang term or incredibly regional?

6

Itโ€™s a silent generation thing. Itโ€™s only used now if youโ€™re being sarcastically old timey.

3
lemmy.ca

Where do you people live that it would be a monumental achievement to reach the nearest chip stand? Are you in a remote village in the Andean mountains?

1
bleistift2reply
sopuli.xyz

My thought was an American city where you need to cross 8 lanes of traffic without a stoplight.

18
Mouselemmingreply
sh.itjust.works

It's a good joke, except we'd call them fries.

Chips come in a bag and are either crispy salty potato rounds, or corny spicy triangles, or chocolate droplets.

9
IninewCrowreply
lemmy.ca

I thought Americans used pistols instead of knives and forks to eat their food

2
IninewCrowreply
lemmy.ca

... and Tomatoes originated from Central America .... which means that chips and ketchup wouldn't be possible without Native American cultures cultivating these fruits and vegetables

10
Fondotsreply
lemmy.world

Ketchup has kind of an interesting history

The term ketchup/catsup (or various other spellings) first appeared in about the 1600s, but tomato ketchup didn't really catch on until about 200-300 years later. Before then it was used to refer to a variety of different sauces/condiments. Mushroom ketchup was a fairly popular one, some were based on fish sauces (you could maybe make an argument that Worcestershire sauce is a type of ketchup) etc.

The general consensus is that it was sort of the result Europeans attempting to recreate various Asian sauces without really knowing what was in them or having access to the right ingredients (for example trying to make something like soy sauce without soy beans)

4

My favourite story about all that was the one about Worcestershire Sauce .... a bunch of English guys who had never been to India wanted to make their own fish sauce but it didn't work out, so they stored their barrel of stuff in the basement and forgot about it ... they found it a year later, tasted it and noticed that it didn't kill them or make them sick, so they sold it as Lea & Perrins Worcestershire sauce

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Worcestershire_sauce

2
Sergioreply

Fam this would make an awesome kid's book... once upon a time some native in what is now Colombia is having a family reunion; their cousin from the north brings tomatoes, and their cousin from the south brings potatoes. They catch some fish and eat it with sliced potato, and they debate whether it's better with tomato paste or without. I bet libraries would stock that book!

3