iced tea

Bonnie Osborn Briggs BBriggs at LATTE.MEMPHIS.EDU
Mon Aug 2 20:40:12 UTC 1999


In the Mid-South you will generally hear "ice tea".  You even see it on
menus.  Then if you ask for ice tea, you have to say whether you want
sweet tea or not.  Sweet tea already has sugar or artificial sweeteners
added.

BB

Barn hart wrote:
>
> My curiosity has been stirred up.  In one of Popik's recent quotations
> there is a reference to ice tea being more common in Texas.
>
> >     "So much tea is consumed here year-round that you might even call
> iced
> >tea 'the national beverage of Texas.'  Historically, it is called
> 'ice' tea
> >in Texas.  Iced tea was created by an Indian tea merchant who couldn't
> sell
> >his hot tea at the St. Louis World's Fair in 1904."
> >--"Tea Pleasures," HOUSTON CHRONICLE, 26 July 1995.
>
> I have not found any reference yet in dialect dictionaries as to the
> dialect variation of ice vs. iced tea.
>
> DAE has only iced tea.
> DA has only iced tea.
> WU3 has iced tea as the main entry and ice tea with a cross reference.
> OED has no reference to either.
> OEDs has no reference to either.
> Cent. Dict. has only iced tea.
> DARE has no reference to either.
> AmDiDic has no reference to either.
>
> Nexis shows 24,500 articles for iced tea
> Nexis shows   4,200 articles for ice tea.
>
> Has anyone a feeling for possible geographical or social distribution
> for these two terms?
>
> Regards,
> David K. Barnhart
> barnhart at highlands.com



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