361
7mon
34

Whatever you decide to name 'em

zero_gravitas - 7mon

Can be disambiguated with 'hot chips' if you ever need to - no worries!

31
Fleur_ - 7mon

Been enjoying saying"French chips" when needing to clarify

7
CEOofmyhouse56 - 7mon

If you have to clarify, it's hot chips or packet chips.

27
DUMBASS - 7mon

It's dinner chips/snack chips for me.

5
itsathursday @lemmy.world - 7mon

But when do you eat chips?

Hot chips are definitely an anytime food.

4
DUMBASS - 7mon

Cooked chips? Generally with my dinner, this is mainly for my shopping lists so my dumb ass doesn't get confused.

2
eureka - 7mon

Does the name "french fries" get used?

4
CEOofmyhouse56 - 7mon

I don't think I've ever used that other than at macca's.Shoe string I have.

4
als @lemmy.blahaj.zone - 7mon

Sometimes, mainly just fries I think. I'd certainly know what you meant if you said mcdonalds chips but I'd personally call them fries

1
TotallynotJessica @lemmy.blahaj.zone - 7mon

bloke is claiming to be right about English language, so he's automatically wrong, not least because English is totally undeserving of any respect in the first place

1
Brave Little Hitachi Wand - 7mon

My kid has no actual memories of America, but speaks in an American accent and uses British and American English interchangeably. Almost at random.

I don't even mind anymore either way. I just wish he'd stop calling me bruh. Do they have that in Australia?

16
Aussiemandeus - 7mon

Nah brah

6
Brave Little Hitachi Wand - 7mon

That checks out

1
Zozano - 7mon

As an Australian, I refuse to order 'fries' when I go to McDonalds. They're fucking chips, cunt.

13
BigBananaDealer @lemm.ee - 7mon

austrailian

calls it mcdonalds instead of maccas

26
Zozano - 7mon

I'm trying to accommodate for our mates overseas.

But yeah, you're right, now, I'll be off, I need to go buy a pack of Winnie Blues from the Servo, then head down to the bottle-o to grab a carton of Coopers.

13
kingofras @lemmy.world - 7mon

I finally realised why the fuck they -o everything: it is so they can squeeze that unrequested quick summary of their next 3 stops on their journey at the end of saying goodbye.

I swear I’ve had conversations where they ramble of the exit-itenerary “Dave? Yeah just saw him, he’s droppin’ the kids of at the pool and the he’s goin fishin for the rest of the day I reckon”

Followed by “Nah mate sorry can’t help ya” <<<- the actual answer to my question.

Followed by their own “Anyways, I better be goin, go to walk the dog and then take m to the vet. Poor thing got lice again. Would’ve loved to have a nap but you can’t let a dog suffer like that.”

We are so good at wasting fckin time.

8
spiffmeister - 7mon

Somehow there's never been any confusion.

5
nevetsg - 7mon

If someone asks me if I want some chips my answer will be Yes either way...

13
badcommandorfilename @lemmy.world - 7mon

Turns out, anywhere that sells chips never sells chips

7
spiffmeister - 7mon

100%, saying fish and chips is easy mode for chip context.

4
HollowNaught @lemmy.world - 6mon

Also, if somebody told me they were getting chips and came back with some pringles, I'd be throwing hands

2
Enkrod - 7mon

Pommes and Chips! 🇩🇪

The super thick pommes variant might get called Fritjes in the Northwest thanks to our favourite neighbors (Netherlands)

4
huppakee @lemm.ee - 7mon

Ja frietjesss

3
Whats_your_reasoning @lemmy.world - 7mon

“Pommes” like the French, “pomme de terre”?

3
wieson @feddit.org - 7mon

Yes, but we pronounce the "es".

A word more true to the french pronunciation of "pommes frites" is "Pommfritz", but that's used by older people.

5
astrsk - 7mon

They’re all chippies

3
Itdidnttrickledown @lemmy.world - 7mon

Jerry is stoned. His mom is a chip.

2
Putzak @lemm.ee - 7mon

I'd like to add the age old war between the north and south of the Netherlands of calling fries/chips friet or patat.

2
captainlezbian @lemmy.world - 7mon

Bullshit. In the UK those crisps are walkers not lays

1