Sweeper is one that got me to. Both sets of my Grandparents were dirt farmers and even they called it a vacuum cleaner.
I wasn't in the Navy or anything, but I sail sailboats.Wasn't a sailor either, but "head" is the first thing that popped into my southern mind. 34-35.
I've usually heard Russian racehorse. I always wondered why the Russian horses had a greater urge than other horses.Or "pee like a racehorse".
A little surprised at how pervasive Germanic ancestry is (of which I am) in the middle and northern tiers. Offhand it looks to be THE largest representation, if I'm reading it correctly.A saw this map recently and I guess it fits here.
View attachment 4091
It shows the map of U.S. counties by ethnicity.
Purple in this map means "African-American," and the yellowish area is "American" (not sure what that means). You will noticed the southern states are mostly yellowish and purple, while the northern states are "German," or "Irish," etc.
This map lends credence to Granny of the Beverly Hillbillies who described the Civil War as the "war between the Yankees and the Americans."
I'm just curious what it means to be "American." I refuse to believe the authors think most people in Wisconsin were born in Germany. I'm sure they mean "Of German descent." So the counties in which the plurality were "American," where did their ancestors come from? The county I now live in is one of the yellow ones. My ancestors come from England, Ireland and Scotland. I am, as a German would say, "eine Mischung," so maybe that is what is considered an American.A little surprised at how pervasive Germanic ancestry is (of which I am) in the middle and northern tiers. Offhand it looks to be THE largest representation, if I'm reading it correctly.