1. Mickey - I think most Americans would think of "Mickey Mouse" or a particular date rape drug, but you're wrong! In Canada, a mickey is a 375-mL bottle of liquor. It's quite common to say, "Let's pick up a mickey on our way to the party." Other liquor-related "isms are "two four" (a case of 24 beer), "twenty-sixer" (a 750 mL bottle of liquor), and "forty-pounder" (a 1.14 litre bottle of liquor).
2. Toque - Canadians wear toques for half the year (well, not in my little corner of Lotusland). They're knitted caps. By the way, it's pronounced "tooook."
3. Freezies - These are popsicles that come in a plastic sleeve. Kids everywhere in Canada beg for freezies all summer long. Moms buy them in cases and store them in their garage freezers.
4. Pablum - This is a food product made of a mixture of bone meal, corn meal, vitamins and grains that you mix with warm water to feed babies. (Of course, one could also use "Pablum" to refer to Justin Trudeau's speeches as he tries to garner support for the federal Liberal party but that's another story.)5. Parkade - In the United States, these are called parking garages or parking decks. They are multi-storied areas in downtown - where you park your car so you can shop at the adjoining mall.
6. Pencil Crayons - Americans call these "coloured pencils" and the British call the "colouring pencils." It's possible the term came from the French "crayon de couleur."

7. Robertson screwdriver - This screwdriver was invented by P.L. Robertson (from Ontario) and is superior to its Phillips-head cousins. Only 16% of Commonwealth people and 5% of Americans recognized the name.
8. Hooped - 54% of Canadians use this term to mean "broken" or "useless" as in if your car's engine is seized, the car's hooped. This is purely a western Canadian expression.
With that, you start out the New Year with a bit more trivia to add to your repertoire. Hope everyone has a wonderful 2014.
Thanks to Denise, Roger and the entire team at ABC Wednesday for their hard work and support.










































