Canadian Thanksgiving Monday

Hahaha.....
Actually we don' t use those words like that or eh! ..only in a joking manner.
It's how Americans have interpreted it.
I have lived here in Canada for 65 years and yet to hear them spoken in normal conversation.

Interesting take on it here.
https://www.woot.com/blog/post/the-debunker-do-canadians-say-oot-and-aboot
Mizmo. Canadian cops do use the phrase " out and about " to mean they are starting their shift, and leaving the station and driving to their patrol area . Source ? Metro Toronto Police Service Auxiliary Constable, 1977 to 1986.

Example...2297 10 8, out and about in Rexdale ". 2297 how many on board today ? Badge 1298, and Auxiliary badge 50016. 2297 copy a call for a disturbance at the bowling alley at the Rexdale Mall. 2297 10-4 on route. JimB.
 

Does anyone know why Canada celebrates Thanksgiving 40-50 days earlier than the U.S.? Is it that winter and going indoors comes earlier way up there in the north?
Yes. Being a northern nation, our harvest comes earlier in the fall. Remember we are the second largest country in the world ( only Russia is bigger than Canada ) and we grow crops that are hardy and cold resistant. In the western Provinces the grain operations are huge, with some wheat farms that are 5 or 6 thousand acres in size. The first Thanksgiving celebration in our history was when the first French explorers were "over wintering " at Hochelaga in what is now the Province of Quebec in the year 1625. JimB.
 
Mizmo. Canadian cops do use the phrase " out and about " to mean they are starting their shift, and leaving the station and driving to their patrol area . Source ? Metro Toronto Police Service Auxiliary Constable, 1977 to 1986.

Example...2297 10 8, out and about in Rexdale ". 2297 how many on board today ? Badge 1298, and Auxiliary badge 50016. 2297 copy a call for a disturbance at the bowling alley at the Rexdale Mall. 2297 10-4 on route. JimB.

Of course we say out an about !
My post is referring to the use of oot and aboot.
Surely the cops don't say are 'oot and aboot in Rexdale Mall'
 
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Do Canadians also do this on Thanksgiving?

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Does anyone know why Canada celebrates Thanksgiving 40-50 days earlier than the U.S.? Is it that winter and going indoors comes earlier way up there in the north?


"Thanksgiving or Thanksgiving Day, is an annual Canadian holiday and harvest festival, held on the second Monday in October, which celebrates the harvest and other blessings of the past year."

American
"The holiday feast dates back to November 1621, when the newly arrived Pilgrims and the Wampanoag Indians gathered at Plymouth for an autumn harvest celebration, an event regarded as America's “first Thanksgiving.”

Many of the trappings of Canadian Thanksgiving are similar to those of its U.S. counterpart, but the Canadian tradition belongs to the 16th century, more than four decades before the historic 1621 gathering in Plymouth, Massachusetts that set American Thanksgiving into motion
 
I had a teacher in grammar school who moved here from Nova Scotia. From what I understand there are many Scots there...or were there.

It was noticed immediately that when he said out or about it sounded like oot and aboot, sort of.

My ex's family are French Canadian who came down to Maine, and then CT. They had a cute accent and way of speaking too. Guys from there were carpenters and said things like:

I'll hold the sheet rock me; you bang the nails, you. Or-

Throw me down the stairs, my hat and coat you.
 
Re: "oot and aboot" .. some transplanted Scots that live on our east coast may speak that way.
I love to listen to my eldest sister's gentleman friend, who is a Scot. Though he has lived here for decades,
his accent is still very strong.
 
Do Canadians eat turkey on their Thanksgiving Day?

We had an Egyptian Colonel onboard our ship on a Thanksgiving. He never ate turkey. When he tasted it, he didn’t like it because he said it had no taste. The spices he asked for were not available, so he peppered the crap out of it. After he put the pepper on it and tasted it, he said, “Better.” I was like, “Pepper on turkey?”
 
I sure missed having turkey this weekend. The friends that I invited had just started a special diet so I accommodated them. They would eat a bit of chicken so I added a boxed stuffing mix to it the next day. Not the same, but cut the edge.

Easter, Thanksgiving and Christmas were always traditional turkey days. I don’t like those rolled things.

p.s. I was talking to my DD today and she said the best thing she served was my Sausage Meat Stuffing. Everyone loved it.
 
Curious......is turkey the traditional Thanksgiving meal in Canada like it is here in the U.S. ?
We went out to a place right in the middle of no where, just old fashioned home cooking. DH had turkey, I had ham, and son had both. It was very nice.....we really enjoyed it out there.
 


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