When you order a tuna fish sandwich, do you say "tuna" or "tuna fish"?

Sean@lemmy.world to Ask Lemmy@lemmy.world – 81 points –

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As far as I know Tuna-fish is only a nth American thing and sounds very weird to my ears.

So this vote will likely be Nth America vs the rest.

Honestly, why only tuna fish?

Salmon-fish?

Chicken-bird?

You can tune a piano but you can't tune a fish

Is it really that hard to write the word "north"? Is that even what nth is supposed to mean? I keep reading it as the mathematical "1st, 2nd, 3rd, 4th, 5th..., nth" and it makes my head hurt

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"tunafish" sounds weird but "nth American" (not first or second or thirteenth but nth) sounds fine?

β€˜We have really everything in common with America nowadays except, of course, language’ - Oscar Wilde

Swordfish? Plenty other languages keep the fish-part in the Tuna name, also

Not the same as there is no one calling a swordfish just sword.

Plenty other languages keep the fish-part in the Tuna name

Do they? Which ones?

Hungarian here. Probably it would sound weird without the 'fish' bit, since we call it 'tonhal' ('hal' meaning fish). I just can't imagine someone offering some tuna to me, asking 'Ton?'.

EDIT: However, in English, I call it tuna, not tuna fish.

Danish/swedish/norwegian, tunfisk/tonfisk

We do have a tuna cactus here that people eat. Nopales are from the Tuna. Prickly pear fruit also. That cactus is called Tuna here.

I mean the fish when I say Tuna though, and would say Prickly Pear cactus.

But do hear Tuna often used to mean the plant.

There's a few other redundant versions, like how they say "horse-back riding". Why not bikeseat riding or plane cockpit flying?

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