i wish i could be joking but my dad is the music teacher at a church so he owuld be mad. we had sex, all the time how bad i know but we dont want to wait and he said GREAT OH KAY! and I was really feeling the wets? down there- too embarsed to say- but he acted like man.
Re: What does cheesestick mean to you?
We call fried cheese cheesesticks. However, I am also from a place where every carbonated beverage is known as Coke.
String cheese is string cheese
A cheesestick is a fried little piece of heaven dipped in ranch or marinara sauce.
This post makes me sad because I used to LOVE cheese pre bfp and now I eat every now and then, but not anywhere near as often as I used to
Penelope Lynn 5.8.2009
Harrison Peter 4.10.2012
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I'm in NY and would never use the word "cheesestick"
I'd say string cheese or mozzarella sticks
And we say soda
ps- now I want mozzarella sticks!
this except I am in NH and I am thinking mozzerella sticks with dinner tonight!
Court
DH 40 ME 40
GD, Myasthenia Gravis, Factor V Leiden
DS #1 born via emergancy c-section 01/23/06 at 37w
DS#2 born via c-section 10/27/2007 at 36w due to PROM
DS #3 born via repeat c-section 04/13/2012 at 39w
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This blows my mind! I've never heard of anything but actual coke referred to as a coke. Guess you learn something new every day!
I know it is weird. We also have sweet tea in like every single restaurant. When I go to Kansas I get sad cause no one has sweet tea.
This confuses me too. I don't get why people would call ALL soda Coke. Coke is the name of Coca Cola. Here in NY if you ask for Coke, they ask if Pepsi is ok if they don't serve Coca Cola.
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I can't explain it either. That is how it has always been around here. We are weird.
This is so true... I definitely say "on line" when I'm waiting on a line for something and never realized it was strange until I went away to school in Delaware and everyone noticed.
At home, cheesesticks are cold string cheese, but when ordering appetizers, cheesesticks are fried mozzarella for me.
Now I want something fried... calamari would be awesome. It's not on the no-no list is it?
I'm in Georgia and it's the same way here. I may ask someone, "Do you want a coke? Ok, what kind - we have Sprite, Dr. Pepper and Mt Dew."
DH and I are from GA but we moved to DC a few years ago, and could not find sweet tea anywhere. Some places would claim to have it and it would be on tap from some mix like they do with fruit punch. I'm sorry, but that is not the same...
Pre-kids, the fried sticks of cheese....mmmmm.
Post-kids, big ol' stick of cheese that my toddler lived off of for months.
I know that cheesestick is supposed to mean cold cheese but I really want it to mean fried, yum!
The only reason I know it's supposed to mean cold is because my midwife really wants me to eat more so she suggested cheesesticks and I don't think I would be lucky enough for her to recommend the fried kind, lol.
Yes, what you said
Interesting...I am a NYer, always have been, but I've never heard that....is in a NYC thing? We are in the Albany area and I have never heard on line used instead of in line....I would have had the same reaction you had.
I think it depends on context. If i'm at a friend's house and they said "want a cheesestick?" i'm thinking string cheese.
If I'm at a restraurant and they say "wanna get an order of cheese sticks?", I'm thinking the friend stuff.