I’ve never once heard anyone ever refer to them as anything other than “Timbits”, just as I’ve never heard anyone ask me to pass them a “facial tissue”, and I’ve never heard of “hook and loop fastener” shoes. The word got genericized.
You’re arguing that “every place” must mean shops.
I absolutely didn’t read it as that, I assumed they meant “other parts of Canada”. I mean, Canada is a gigantic country with tons of regional accent, dialect, even language differences.
Might be best to chalk it up to a misunderstanding and move on.
I’ve never once heard anyone ever refer to them as anything other than “Timbits”, just as I’ve never heard anyone ask me to pass them a “facial tissue”, and I’ve never heard of “hook and loop fastener” shoes. The word got genericized.
That was because Tim’s was the only place, that’s stopped being changed a decade ago and hasn’t been the case since then.
It’s not a genericized term like Kleenex and escalator, sorry.
It is in Canada. You show any Canadian the picture in this post, and they will tell you it’s a timbit.
In every place I’ve been to in Canada and every to every Canadian I’ve known, yes it is.
Other places absolutely can’t advertise as Timbits, that’s a trademarked name.
Don’t make shit up dude.
I didn’t claim that. I don’t think you understand what people in this thread are saying.
Other companies can’t advertise their products as “Kleenex”, but that doesn’t stop most people from calling all facial tissues Kleenex.
Most Canadians call them Timbits.
Canada is already a place, what other “places” would you be referring to other than place (stores) like Tim Hortons, McDonalds, etc. in your comment?
As a non-canadian who has never heard the word timbits before, this is the funniest argument I have ever read on lemmy
A weird hill to die on too lol
Oh my guy… Places like Calgary, Edmonton, Vancouver, Toronto… Not stores, geographical locations.
Maybe this is an Eng (UK) / Eng (US) issue.
You’re arguing that “every place” must mean shops.
I absolutely didn’t read it as that, I assumed they meant “other parts of Canada”. I mean, Canada is a gigantic country with tons of regional accent, dialect, even language differences.
Might be best to chalk it up to a misunderstanding and move on.