Frazz by Jef Mallett for November 20, 2012
Transcript:
The red maple leave became Canada's official flag in d) 1965 c) 1918 b) 1812 a) 1776 Canada is directly: b) east of Newark d) west of Eureka c) north of Barrow a) south of Detroit A Canadian dollar is called a: c) boonie b) loonie d) goonie a) prunie Boy: How come everything ends with...? Mr. Burke: If you can guess, your grade goes up a point.
Dana Kuhar Premium Member about 12 years ago
My answers (partly guessed, partly known): d, a, b.
herdleader53 about 12 years ago
Jojo I believe the only thing east of Newark NJ is the Atlantic Ocean and Europe.
Randy B Premium Member about 12 years ago
All the lists end with “eh”.And there’s a little bit of Canada that’s south-east of Detroit.
Varnes about 12 years ago
I was just north of Lake Superior and pulled up to a stop sign. Somebody had spray painted eh? Next to the word STOP. Yes, There is a bit of Canada south of Detroit. There is also a point in Panama where the Pacific is to the east, and the Atlantic is to the west….
Varnes about 12 years ago
Eh?
Never_More about 12 years ago
It’s called a one dollar coin. It has a picture of a loon on it so it gained the nickname loonie. It was made “official” in 2006, 19 years after it was first released. A toonie (the correct spelling) is a two dollar coin that came out in 1996. Calling it a toonie is joke. And I mean that as in an actual joke, ha ha type of thing. A two dollar coin is worth two loonies, so it’s a toonie. We’re probably one of the few countries who named their money on a joke.
bagbalm about 12 years ago
Their real money is however a Maple.
vwdualnomand about 12 years ago
the canadians beat the soviets in hockey in the 1972 summit series. paul henderson’s shot on goal. plus, remember when gretzky passed to mario lemieux to score. and, there are a lot of celebs from canada, michael j fox, ryan reynolds, wayne gretzky, william shatner, etc…
TheWildSow about 12 years ago
How do you spell Canada?C, ehN, eh…
Teresa Stafford Premium Member about 12 years ago
Since the answers aren’t in alphabetical order, all the lists end with a – which sounds a bit like “eh” (which a lot of folks think Canadians say a lot at the end of sentences!)
gocomics12345123 about 12 years ago
It’s called a loonie because the $1 coin has a loon on it, and (less obviously) because it’s introduction was met with some resistance and people wanted to make fun of it. So they called it a loonie. Plus it’s way easier to say than one-dollar-coin.
A toonie is a $2 coin, and it’s called that because it sounds like “loonie” (it has a polar bear on it).
As for why they end with “ie” instead of “y”, it’s because we speak the Queen’s English instead of the bastardised American tongue Do yourself a favour and just think of it as a horse of a different colour ;)
puddleglum1066 about 12 years ago
Seen in a bar in Banff: “Eh? Eh? Meeting Nightly at 9 pm.”
By the way, when the maple-leaf flag came out, some joked that the image isn’t a maple leaf at all, but in fact the profiles of Liberal and Conservative politicians jammed together forehead-to-forehead and yelling at the top of their lungs. Look closely, you can still see that… kinda like the “is it a vase, or is it a pair of faces?” illusion.
GoBlue about 12 years ago
I love taking visitors to Detroit, showing them Windsor Canada on the other side of the river, and asking them what direction they’re looking. They always say “north”. :)
It’s another reason why most of us wonder what the heck Journey meant in their song “Don’t Stop Believin’” when they sing that the guy was from South Detroit.. Huh. Guess they mean that he’s from Canada, eh?
sonorhC about 12 years ago
I actually think that Canada’s flag is one of the best-designed flags in the world. It’s simple enough that a child can draw it, while still being instantly recognizable, and distinctive to the nation itself.And I think that if Canada ever adopts a five-dollar coin, they should put an albatross on it, so it can be the Goonie.
twj0729 about 12 years ago
I read everyone’s comments and I still don’t understand the strip.
Dave459 about 12 years ago
Canada? It’s spelt with a “C” eh and an “N” eh and a “D” eh?
It’s ok, I’m a Canadian . . .
Paul Read Premium Member about 12 years ago
I’ve heard that some Canadian wags call the two dollar coin a moonie because it has “the queen on the front with a bear behind.”
admwrlk Premium Member about 12 years ago
Pengawins is practicacally chickens
shemamoy about 12 years ago
Having grown up with a grandmother who emigrated from Canada the kids in our family were used to hearing the “ay” very often and even teased Nanny about. I’m sending this on to my sibs who don’t get this comic where they live. Love it!
edgeways about 12 years ago
So… when they where trying to come up with a name for the country, before it was called Canada, a bunch of folks got together, but some scrabble tiles in a bag and had this one fella pull them out and read them: “Ok, first one is a ‘C’ eh, next a ‘N’ eh and last is a ‘D’ eh.”
cj7ole about 12 years ago
Answer: all of the choices to the answer end in a) pronounced ’eh. Now you get it, eh?
catzilla23 about 12 years ago
A few years back an enterprising Canadian produced a coin bank in the shape of the Canadian House of Parliament, called it a Loonie Bin.
migmanus about 12 years ago
All of the lists and with “a” like the way they named the country. They picked letters out of a hat. “C” ay, “N” ay, “D” ay.
prrdh about 12 years ago
Or up a mark, eh?
pschearer Premium Member about 12 years ago
But if their national symbol is a maple leaf, why is the first word of their national anthem “Oak”? ;-)
glblanchard Premium Member about 12 years ago
Huh?
fritzoid Premium Member about 12 years ago
“C’est un scandale! L’examen n’est pas en français, et je refuse de le prendre!”
If you get all the answers right and guess the trick format, you’ll be given an “Eh? Plus.”
chemgal about 12 years ago
I’d have thought that the first one would include 1867 as a choice, since that’s when Canda’s “birthday” is.
tlynnch about 12 years ago
d – 1965c – Barrow GAb – loonie
mike_slmi about 12 years ago
Nice one, Jef. Only I did not know the one aboot the flag.
ampeck about 12 years ago
Actually @AshburnStadium right now the US dollar is 1.002 to 1.00 Canadian dollars so the US dollar is just a tad more than the Loonie. I was just in Toronto a little over a week ago.
veranna about 12 years ago
loonie because of the picture of a Loon on the coin.
cindidido about 12 years ago
(a) is the last answer shown to every question because it’s Canada, eh?
Katiekicks about 12 years ago
Do you get it now, ay? That’s how Canadians talk, with an a at the end of their sentence
hippogriff about 12 years ago
ampeck: For the last few months, our Canada Pension cheques gave us more US funds than the original Canadian figure – and that is after the Bank of America (their “translator” of dollars) had removed their exorbitant fee. At the same time, the Dalla Snooze was claiming the US dollar was higher than the Canadian. Who are you going to believe – a propaganda sheet or money in the bank?
pearlsarefuzzy about 12 years ago
Okay, I finally got it after reading some of the comments. I did know two of the answers, i.e. South of Detroit, loonie. I grew near the Detroit area. Now I feel silly for not getting the “eh” part. I have friends from Alpena MI and they talk that way, too. Canada is the best neighbor any country could hope to have – ever!
Konabill about 12 years ago
The questions were easy, it’s the cartoon that I don’t understand.
fritzoid Premium Member about 12 years ago
“American students being tested on questions about Canada. Does this actually happen?”
Social Studies class, yeah. But given how little US residents know about any country other than the US, I can understand your confusion. :-)
Skoally about 12 years ago
how can Canada be south of an American city?All of the questions end with an A much like Canadians end many statements with an eh. ROFL funny as heck
rini1946 about 12 years ago
took a minute did not see all the last ans. were “A” (eh) good one had to think it hurt
tramey about 12 years ago
Thank you Varnes, it took a minute, but I finally got it, :-)
Elderflower about 12 years ago
if you don’t get this, I guess you’ve never talked to a Canadian, eh?
John W Kennedy Premium Member about 12 years ago
It’s not just Canadian. I grew up saying “Eh?” all the time in Central Maine (“Central Maine” being a technical term for the Waterville area, even though it’s not remotely near the state’s center.) And I didn’t pick it up from my parents, who were from Troy and Brooklyn, New York. It means what people in some other regions mean when they say, “Right?” or what other people in still other regions mean by, “Y’know?” Perhaps it’s related to French, ”Hein?”, or to the old habit in England of /beginning/ sentences with “Eh.”
patlaborvi about 12 years ago
Something you need to remember is that the cartoonist lives near Detroit so he knows the little trivia that part of Canada is actually south of Detroit.
pschearer Premium Member about 12 years ago
If you love America, then you should learn to understand it better. We were founded as a free nation that has devolved into a mixed economy, a mixture of constantly shrinking freedom and ever-growing controls. In that mixed system, crooked businessmen will seek government favors and even honest ones will lobby to try to defend their rights. Meantime, the anti-American principles that have infiltrated over the last century and a half have caused most Americans to assume it is the government’s purpose to run everything and that all businessmen are greedy bastards that must be kept in chains. But there is no separation between human rights in general and economic rights, for without economic rights, no other rights are possible. Just look at the Soviet Union.
pbuckland Premium Member about 12 years ago
I am a Canadian, and this joke about Canadians ending their sentences with “eh” is a gross exaggeration. Far worse is the constant use of “you know”, “right” or “like” every few words that knows no nationality.
baihe8 about 12 years ago
…and don’t forget, when the toonie first came out, there was a debate about what to name it. (For those of you who don’t know, it’s got a Polar Bear on it, and like all our other coins, it has the Queen on the back.) Ok, so one idea was the “moonie” because “it has the picture of the Queen with a bear behind!”
ZBicyclist Premium Member about 12 years ago
“Yes, the Canadian flag DOES have bars.” Of course. Anyplace with as much winter as Canada has bars everywhere.
NCTom Premium Member about 12 years ago
Okay, eh…. Oak anada is not the real start of the anthem, you know, and for all those who still don’t believe it, look at a map, a part of Canada loops south of Detroit, you know,and I certainly agree that the exaggeration of the use of “eh” is overdone, and even if it weren’t, it’s better than “like”, “you know”, you know. I like the idea of Je ne parle jamais en anglais!
hippogriff about 12 years ago
The $2 coin is also called a doubloon, but cannot be broken into eight pieces.
Dana Kuhar Premium Member about 12 years ago
This strip now discussed on http://comicsidontunderstand.com
DDS029 about 12 years ago
‘Eh is really more of an “English speaking Scandinavian” thing. There is a popular bumper sticker here in Mich. that says “Say ya, to da U.P., ’eh?”. I’ve had my share of conversations “wit da Yoopers too, ’eh.” And us Detroit area kids got a bit of an education about Canada. The Canadian flag prior to 1965 was similar to Australia’s. Both national anthem’s are played at a lot of sporting events along the SE Mich, and SW Ontario border.