Regional Terms
Posted: Wed Jan 01, 2014 1:34 pm
http://theboard.byu.edu/questions/75727/
The second time I took this (I can't remember two of the cities I got the first time. Spokane and two in roughly the Bay Area) I got Spokane, Seattle, and Santa Rosa.
I was born in the Bay Area, where my mom grew up and my dad lived for several years. It makes sense that, although Santa Rosa is a bit further north than my family is, I would have linguistic tendencies from there. I grew up in Washington, but not near either Seattle or Spokane. I don't understand how I keep getting Spokane. It's on the east side of the state, which is quite different from the west, where I live. I'm also not sure how I don't get a city point in Utah. Granted, it is very dark red. But considering that I lived there for four years, my dad was raised there, I have visited every year since I was a baby, and I would think some of the common terms there would be shared more widely amongst Mormons, it surprises me.
Overall, I think the color coding makes a lot of sense, but the selection of specific cities doesn't. Using a multiple-choice test skews the answers a bit, and there are only so many words they tested.
The second time I took this (I can't remember two of the cities I got the first time. Spokane and two in roughly the Bay Area) I got Spokane, Seattle, and Santa Rosa.
I was born in the Bay Area, where my mom grew up and my dad lived for several years. It makes sense that, although Santa Rosa is a bit further north than my family is, I would have linguistic tendencies from there. I grew up in Washington, but not near either Seattle or Spokane. I don't understand how I keep getting Spokane. It's on the east side of the state, which is quite different from the west, where I live. I'm also not sure how I don't get a city point in Utah. Granted, it is very dark red. But considering that I lived there for four years, my dad was raised there, I have visited every year since I was a baby, and I would think some of the common terms there would be shared more widely amongst Mormons, it surprises me.
Overall, I think the color coding makes a lot of sense, but the selection of specific cities doesn't. Using a multiple-choice test skews the answers a bit, and there are only so many words they tested.