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"other" reponses:
48 | soda pop |
11 | Drink |
8 | soft drink |
6 | Pepsi |
4 | tonic |
3 | soda water |
3 | carbonated beverage |
2 | A Drink |
2 | tarzan slam |
2 | Fizzy Drink |
2 | bubbley |
1 | fix |
1 | liqiud refreshment |
1 | by it's name or "Drink" |
1 | carbonated sugar water |
1 | This is the proper truth- POP is used when referring to the past/present tense, as in "I drank too much Pop/I am drinking Pop." SODA is used when referring to the future tense as in "Would you like a Soda/I will have a Soda/Grab me a Soda." and COKE is used when referring to any Cola based drink regardless of brand (ie. Pepsi, RC, Like, Shasta, etc.) |
1 | It is pop unless the drink is grape or orange flavored, then those to are soda |
1 | My mother always called it 'beer' even though she never drank beer being Mormon and all. I never asked why. |
1 | carbonated beveridge |
1 | canned bliss |
1 | sodapoppop |
1 | Sexquid |
1 | Fresca |
1 | "Spicy Juice" but hey, I'm only 3 years old. My mom grew up in Mass and she used to say "tonic", now her and daddy both say "soda" |
1 | All of them |
1 | refresco |
1 | Magic Water |
1 | Beverage of choice |
1 | 7up |
1 | "A drink" (or specific name Coke, Nehi, root beer [we made our own], Orange, etc. |
1 | beveragio |
1 | drank |
1 | good stuff |
1 | rmyULhjYZSU |
1 | rRBkzlscjecj |
1 | lfrsDCZJrrrnQZeXAu |
1 | beverage |
1 | Sprite |
1 | Does this thing still update? |
1 | PDR |
1 | WDguBoNuwv |
1 | bubble |
1 | sugar sweetness |
1 | angel piss |
1 | Soda Pop Or I callit by the name of the Soda |
1 | soft drink or soda pop |
1 | Cola |
1 | fizzy drinks |
1 | Fizzers |
1 | Who, even among scholars in the field, could keep up with the flood of attacks on Pius XII that began in the late 1990s? John Cornwell gave us Hitler’s Pope , and Michael Phayer followed with The Catholic Church and the Holocaust . David Kertzer brought charges against Pius XII in The Popes Against the Jews , and Susan Zuccotti reversed her previous scholarship to pen Under His Very Windows The Vatican and the Holocaust in Italy . Garry Wills used Pius as the centerpiece for his reformist Papal Sin , as did James Carroll in Constantine’s Sword . So, for that matter, did Daniel Goldhagen when he wrote what proved to be the most extended and straightforward assault on Catholicism in decades A Moral Reckoning The Role of the Catholic Church in the Holocaust and Its Unfulfilled Duty of Repair . Meanwhile, the essays and occasional pieces were collected in such volumes as Holocaust Scholars Write to the Vatican , and The Holocaust and the Christian World , and The Vatican and the Holocaust , and Pope Pius XII and the Holocaust , and Christian Responses to the Holocaust ”and on, and on, until we seemed to be facing what the exasperated reviewer John Pawlikowski called “a virtual book-of-the-month club on institutional Catholicism, anti-Semitism, and the Holocaust.” The champions of Pius had their share of book-length innings as well”although, one might note, never from the same level of popular publisher as the attackers managed to find. In 1999 Pierre Blet produced Pius XII and the Second World War According to the Archives of the Vatican and got Paulist Press, a respectable but small Catholic house, to publish it in America. Ronald Rychlak finished his first-rate Hitler, the War, and the Pope , and the hardback was brought out by a press in Columbia, Missouri, known mostly for printing romance novels. For the paperback edition, Rychlak’s work was picked up by the book-publishing arm of the Catholic newspaper Our Sunday Visitor . Those are both fine presses in their way, and Rychlak has done well for them. But one can reasonably point out that Our Sunday Visitor is not quite at the level of distribution, advertising, and influence enjoyed by Doubleday, Houghton Mifflin, Knopf, and Viking”the large houses that issued the books against Pius. The commentator Philip Jenkins recently suggested that this disparity in publishers sends a message that the mainstream view is the guilt of Pius XII, while praise for the Pope belongs only to the cranks, nuts, and sectarians. |
1 | from a can or bottle = pop, in a cup from a fountain = soda |
1 | can=popcup(fountain)=soda |
1 | "Soda Water" from Italian emigrant Grandfather. Then just "soda pop" when we were older in school. then just "soda" |
Statistics last generated: Sun Aug 30 00:07:42 2015 Pacific Time