News

The terms soda, pop, and coke for sweetened carbonated beverages reflect regional linguistic patterns in the US, shaped by historical, economic, and cultural factors.
Is it soda? Is it pop? Is it Coke? Alabamians weigh in on the great debate and their favorite term won by a landslide ...
According to multiple reports, Quinton M. Allen of Detroit is accused of entering the Mercantile Saginaw Virtual Branch and ...
Dr Pepper Museum President and CEO Chris Dyer (right) speaks with the Texas Standard's David Brown (left) and Shelly Brisbin ...
BTS launched an unexpected Weverse livestream, reassembling as a complete band for the first time after finishing their ...
The "KPop Demon Hunters" fever has now reached SB19! On TikTok, the P-pop Kings shared a 13-second clip of themselves dancing ...
Saylor’s Dirty Sodas Dirty combines soda with other add-ins. Thanks to owner Julie Shryne, can now be found at events in Olympia!
With burgers sizzling and classic rock thumping, many Americans revel in summer cookouts – at least until that wayward cousin ...
Linguists don’t fully know why “pop” became so popular in the Midwest. But one theory links it to a Michigan bottling company, Feigenson Brothers Bottling Works – today known as Faygo ...
As for the Midwestern preference for “pop” – well, the earliest American use of the term to refer to a sparkling beverage appeared in the 1840s in the name of a flavored version called ...