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View Full Version : Five Canadian words and where they came from



Teh One Who Knocks
06-22-2017, 11:22 AM
By Leslie Young, National Online Journalist, Investigative - Global News


http://i.imgur.com/07r0qj9.jpg

Canada is a unique land with a lot of unique words – which we mostly borrowed from other people.

Here’s a look at some Canadian terms and their interesting origins.

Toque

The classic Canadian winter accessory, the name for this woolly cap is taken, of course, from the French “tuque” – with that spelling still sometimes being used in English too.

The word appeared in publications in the mid-1800s, usually associated with French-Canadians and voyageurs. Before that, it referred to a type of cap worn in 16th century France, according to the ITP Nelson Canadian Dictionary of the English language. The word’s origins go back further, to the Spanish word “toca” – again an old style of hat or headdress – and before that, possibly an Arabic or Persian word.

Poutine

Another French-loan word – poutine has become a truly Canadian snack. But according to the Dictionary of Canadianisms on Historical Principles (DCHP), the word is actually derived from the English word “pudding.”

Poutine as we know it today is a relatively new invention, dating from the late 1950s or early 1960s in Quebec. According to the DCHP, a 1982 article in the Toronto Star still described it as a “new fast-food snack” gaining popularity in Quebec snack bars.

There is another, older dish called “poutine râpée” that was part of traditional Acadian cuisine. It’s a sort of boiled dumpling, with a potato exterior wrapped around a meat filling. Linguists aren’t too sure whether the two dishes are related though or whether the word “poutine” that’s commonly used today was borrowed from the Acadian food.

Canuck

“Canuck” is a term that predates Confederation and there are some interesting theories as to its origin.

One theory, endorsed in the latest edition of the DCHP, is that the word is originally Hawaiian. Polynesian sailors working on whaling ships called themselves “kanaka,” meaning “men” and the term was adopted by North American sailors to refer to Polynesians.

From there, the term was used more generally by American sailors to apply to many foreigners, including Germans, Dutch and French-Canadians – possibly as an insult.

But it slowly lost its derogatory connotations and came into common use in the last third of the 19th century, used to refer to Canadians and Canadian things, including hockey teams.

“I think it was used just as a descriptive term in the West,” said Margery Fee, a UBC English professor and associate editor of the DCHP. “It just became adapted to a new setting.”

Bunny hug

The “bunny hug” is a particularly Saskatchewan term for what people elsewhere in Canada might call a “hoodie” – a hooded sweatshirt with a big pocket on the front.

One of the first mentions of a “bunny hug” sweater is from 1978. The DCHP theorizes that teenagers in the 1980s, as the hooded sweatshirt became popular, invented and popularized the term. It later became a marker of Saskatchewan identity.

Fee suggests that it’s unlikely the term existed before the hooded sweatshirt. “I can’t imagine people in Saskatchewan were wearing something that looked like that in the 1930s.”

She understands why the term has stuck around though: “It explains the garment so nicely.”

Eh

The stereotypical Canadian “eh” is a holdover from British English, according to the DCHP. And it doesn’t just persist in Canada – it’s also common in New Zealand.

It’s even used in the same way in both countries: generally as a way of getting confirmation or acknowledgement of what you’ve just said. “It’s cold out, eh?” for example.

“Really, it’s not as Canadian as people would like to think,” said Fee. However, they elected to include it in the dictionary because Canadians believe it’s a Canadian word and a national symbol, and so, it became one.

It’s hard to say exactly when “eh” became associated with Canada though. The DCHP suggests it happened sometime after the Second World War, perhaps in the late 1950s. Canadian linguists were considering the word’s Canadian identity by the 1970s.

“Now you can get t-shirts that use it as a joke,” said Fee.

But two people probably did more than anyone else to popularize “eh” as a stereotypically Canadian phrase: Bob and Doug McKenzie. The SCTV characters, played by Rick Moranis and Dave Thomas, frequently used the word “eh” along with such other memorable phrases as “Take off!” and “hoser” – a term Fee says they might have invented.

The skit’s popularity in the early 1980s and beyond ensured that “eh” would forever be associated with the Great White North.

Noilly Pratt
06-22-2017, 02:55 PM
In my experience "eh" is used more in the East coast than the west.

Also, Poutine is pronounced in Quebec and Ontario as the proper French "pu-tahn" but elsewhere in Canada (and it's less popular the more West you go) it's pronounced "pooh-teen". My daughter loves it, I hate it.

Godfather
06-22-2017, 05:09 PM
Bunny hug is a new one to me :lol:

Teh One Who Knocks
06-22-2017, 05:11 PM
Bunny hug is a new one to me :lol:

Never been to Saskatchewan, eh?

Godfather
06-22-2017, 06:25 PM
Canada has 'flyover' provinces too :lol:

My cousin lives there. -30 in the winter, then +35 in the summer with horseflies eating you alive. Fuuuck that.

Hugh_Janus
06-22-2017, 06:43 PM
I want to taste poutine

Muddy
06-22-2017, 06:49 PM
Me too.. But in a proper form in Canada.. I don't want a rip-off version..

Godfather
06-22-2017, 07:04 PM
I'm not crazy about gravy or squeaky cheese on my fries to be honest. Gimme ketchup and plain old crispy fries any day.

Griffin
06-22-2017, 11:09 PM
I want to taste poutine

I had it at The Whistle Stop pub (http://www.whistlersinn.com/whistle-stop-pub) in Jasper, Alberta. The wife and I both liked it alot.

This sign was between the restrooms.


http://i267.photobucket.com/albums/ii308/johng52/2015%20Canadian%20Rockies%20trip/Canadian%20Rockies%20676_zpskgin0vk9.jpg

Godfather
06-23-2017, 12:44 AM
Didn't know you were in Whis! Right on. Steam Whistle is from back east though :mad: Hopefully you got to try some local breweries!

deebakes
06-23-2017, 12:49 AM
i just got invited to montreal for a meeting next year eh :tup:

Godfather
06-23-2017, 12:56 AM
That's amazing.

Forget the poutine, you HAVE to try smoked meat: http://www.schwartzsdeli.com/

Make sure to try a montreal bagel too, they're a bit different from New York style but equally awesome. I recommend St-Viateur Bagel


EDIT: Watch Anthony Bourdain's Layover ep on Montreal if you haven't already too!

deebakes
06-23-2017, 01:51 AM
thanks buddy :tup:

the guy that invited me has been raving about the smoked meat scene there, i was assuming it wasn't some gay turn on :tup:

Griffin
06-23-2017, 02:09 AM
Didn't know you were in Whis! Right on. Steam Whistle is from back east though :mad: Hopefully you got to try some local breweries!

I tried this one while over looking Lake Louise (http://www.lakelouisegondola.com/dining.php).

http://i267.photobucket.com/albums/ii308/johng52/2015%20Canadian%20Rockies%20trip/Canadian%20Rockies%20424_zps2wdti7xo.jpg

deebakes
06-23-2017, 02:14 AM
i've had that, i thought it was yellow water :lol:

Griffin
06-23-2017, 02:20 AM
Kind of like a Canadian Budweiser

...wait, they are the same company.

Godfather
06-23-2017, 02:47 AM
:lol: Anheuser-Busch owns Kokanee now, but wasn't exactly the pride of Canada even before then.

Then again, any beer will taste fucking amazing with that view.

Godfather
06-23-2017, 02:49 AM
Kind of like a Canadian Budweiser

...wait, they are the same company.

Ya, Bud, Kokanee, Canadian... all shit tier beers to us, but they're still very crush-able on a hot day.

Griffin
06-23-2017, 02:58 AM
:lol: Anheuser-Busch owns Kokanee now, but wasn't exactly the pride of Canada even before then.

Then again, any beer will taste fucking amazing with that view.

The view from the Whitehorn Bistro deck after getting off the Lake Louise gondola is like looking down from heaven.

Godfather
06-23-2017, 03:03 AM
Truly. I remember I was in Banff with these girls from the Praries and they kept saying how they thought it must be a painting. The Rockies are surreal.

Griffin
06-23-2017, 03:15 AM
93A, the old highway south of Jasper that goes to Mt Edith Cavell and joins back onto the Icefield parkway at Athabasca Falls.

http://i267.photobucket.com/albums/ii308/johng52/2015%20Canadian%20Rockies%20trip/Canadian%20Rockies%20825_zpseci1rjsl.jpg (http://s267.photobucket.com/user/johng52/media/2015%20Canadian%20Rockies%20trip/Canadian%20Rockies%20825_zpseci1rjsl.jpg.html)

http://i267.photobucket.com/albums/ii308/johng52/2015%20Canadian%20Rockies%20trip/Canadian%20Rockies%20664_zpsri2woed7.jpg

http://i267.photobucket.com/albums/ii308/johng52/2015%20Canadian%20Rockies%20trip/Canadian%20Rockies%20650_zpszy8zofhh.jpg