this post was submitted on 24 Oct 2023
518 points (94.5% liked)
Casual UK
2161 readers
8 users here now
Casual UK
A casual place for banter and anything that doesn't fit in anywhere else.
Have chat and a natter. Talk about anything and everything.
Keep it casual.
Rules
- Be friendly.
- Be Kind.
- Follow Feddit.uk site rules.
Other communities:
Here:
Elsewhere:
founded 1 year ago
MODERATORS
you are viewing a single comment's thread
view the rest of the comments
view the rest of the comments
Chai literally means tea. So chai tea is tea tea. It's like pizza pie or ATM machine.
Those two things are not remotely the same
The Americans seem to have a very wide definition of the word Pie and none of them seem to be pies.
It's the same with brits and the word pudding...
Yes and but that's just how the distinction is made. Prime example: Shiba/Akita "Inu". Inu is literally dog. Yet it refers to the purebred dog of Japan, not the american shitmix (no shade, theres just not much consistency with what they're mixed with). Language evolves over time, even the dumb evolutions.
I don't think they're engaging in etymological reductionism.
Their argument is that instead of saying "milk only belongs in chai tea", one could've just said "milk only belongs in chai".