Do any Canadians actually use the word "Hoser"
I'm Canadian and I've lived in Canada my entire life. I had never, ever heard that word until I watched "How I Met Your Mother."
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4FE9SLJ2Xoc
I'm Canadian and I've lived in Canada my entire life. I had never, ever heard that word until I watched "How I Met Your Mother."
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4FE9SLJ2Xoc
Me neither! Never before, never since. Except once on a crossword puzzle. Oh. And here.
shareMaybe it's a very specific regional thing that Americans have somehow latched on to and made into a stereotype, like that stereotypical Canadian accent that you won't find in most of Canada.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4FE9SLJ2Xoc
Maybe it's a very specific regional thing that Americans have somehow latched on to and made into a stereotype, like that stereotypical Canadian accent that you won't find in most of Canada.
I live in the Greater Toronto Area. I never heard "hoser" until I saw the Canadian movie Strange Brew
shareI've lived in Toronto Canada my entire life (35 years) and never, not even once, heard anyone saying "hoser"... you only hear it on American tv shows for some reason...
I have no clue where they got that from
It's from SCTV dude. Using the word Hoser is the equivalent to any time you quote something from SNL or Simpsons.
shareEvidently, it was a term popularized by Rick Moranis on SCTV.
So a Canadian is to blame. I'm not sure where he got it from though.
Yes. I was born in Canada and have lived here most of my life, and I've heard "hoser" at least a couple times most years.
It's not very common, but I recognized its use in this movie title immediately.
Not where I live (Calgary, Alberta).
Seems like a thing only a Canadian caricature of a character would say.
EHHHHHHHH????
I'm 47 and I've used hoser since I was a teenager. Maybe it's a generational thing? I've lived all across Canada so I'm not sure it's a geographical thing.
See you on the dark side of the moon.
I'm also 47 and grew up in Ontario. I haven't really heard people "seriously" use it since the 80s. When I was a teenager it seemed a somewhat "normal" thing to say, but I guess it's fallen out of favour long ago.
I'm not sure if people used it before Bob & Doug MacKenzie, though (see SCTV & "Strange Brew"). I certainly don't remember hearing it around before they popularized it (but I don't remember a lot from 30+ years ago!) Did it originate with them?
Just Bob and Doug. Koo-loo-koo-koo-koo-koo-koo-koo!
shareNever heard anybody say "aboot", either, unless it's in a film taking shots at Canada.
shareWe can take shots at Canada, but Canada always makes the save
shareI don't think I've met a Canadian who minds shots being taken at Canada. Canada can take a joke (excellent sense of humour - giving and receiving - in the Great White North).
shareI have no problem with shots taken at Canada, I just wish these American writers would stop relying on tired old stereotypes, many of which are barely true.
It's just lazy.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4FE9SLJ2Xoc
Well you've just met one, me. When every single mention of your country is an insult, dismissal, or a shot against it, you get pretty damn fed up.
It's an exaggeration of the actual pronounciation, which DOES have an 'oo' aboot it.
You can deny it all you want, but canadians do say aboot, just not that severe.
It really doesn't. At least not in my pronunciation or that of any Canadians I've met. I know some east-coasters who say something closer to "aboat" but never anything with an "oo" sound. I would describe the Canadian vowel sounds in the middle of the word as almost a short "e" sound followed by a long "o". Even that isn't quite right. But it's closer to reality that "aboot."
Here's an interesting article on the subject: http://www.atlasobscura.com/articles/whats-going-on-with-the-way-canadians-say-about?utm_source=facebook.com&utm_medium=atlas-page
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4FE9SLJ2Xoc
I agree that Canadian's don't say "aboot", but neither do we say "abOWt" like Americans, which can be highly exaggerated, so to just say "about", to them, sounds clipped and odd to them.
shareI think I've heard some Canadian NHL players, but mostly specifically Sidney Crosby say "abo-oot" a lot... like he is sounding it out phonetically.
I have some extended-family in Toronto, but they speak with a slight accent, not as pronounced as HIMYM etc make it out though.
Nobody I know does. They also don't say "aboot" nor do they say "eh" at the end of every other sentence.
share