Submitted by Kryptonthenoblegas t3_yol3mk in RhodeIsland

So I'm Australian and grew up using the word bubbler but when I went to school abroad I copped a lot of (friendly) teasing and confusion since apparently the rest of the world actually call it a water fountain all the time and don't know what bubblers are. I've heard that you guys in Rhode Island call water fountains the same thing though so I was wondering whether that was actually true??

222

Comments

You must log in or register to comment.

blahinator180 t1_ivemb6d wrote

Yes we do, bubbler is a brand name (like Kleenex or tempo for tissues). Here and southern Wisconsin we call them bubblers.

Edit: EvidentlyI am wrong and just perpetuating a myth. Apparently no one’s knows, though it might have something to do with the bubble valve in the faucet head. Apparently some companies describe the head of a drinking fountain as a bubbler.

As to why we, Wisconsinites, and Australians use the term for a drinking fountain; no one knows. Not that that is going to stop me from using the term, and passing it on to my kids.

https://www.sheboyganpress.com/story/news/local/2014/10/31/sheboygan-history-bubblers/18254395/

67

ghostpepperlover t1_iven8i0 wrote

Absolutely true. When I moved to Florida in 8th grade I asked where the “bubbla” (spelling to emphasize accent) and everyone looked at me like a confused dog. But fun fact, the Double Bubbler was invented by Halsey W Taylor after he noticed workers getting dysentery from water fountains in the factory.

53

DullPunk t1_ivend6b wrote

Yes. A discord server with other Americans in there got confused when I said that

8

jma7400 t1_ivepa5m wrote

Yes we say bubbler.

3

overthehillhat t1_ivepaj9 wrote

Welcome to RI

We have grindahs and cabinets too

27

geffe71 t1_ivepjt8 wrote

Water fountains are in parks and mall/hotel lobbies

8

theebomba t1_iver3y5 wrote

We also say “Wicked”! Burrr, it’s wicked freezing out 🥶

5

degggendorf t1_ivet7t9 wrote

Maybe I am not a real Rhode Islander, but to me:

Water bubbler = the water dispenser with the 5 gallon jugs you invert on top then dispense into a cup from the spout below, which bubbles as you remove water from the tank and it gets replaced with air.

Water fountain = the device you drink straight out of, which is connected to the water main and shoots the water up in an arc, like a fountain.

−9

Much-Raisin5122 t1_ivevnvl wrote

I remember the first time I realized water fountains weren't known as bubblers was back in the 80s on a field trip to slater mill I believe it was. I had asked an older couple where the bubbler was? And they responded in a British accent asking what I was asking for? I remember saying you know the thing you press the button to get a drink of water? The husband's response was the oh my, you mean the water fountain! Then laughed at me while pointing to the bubbler with a mocking tone saying g the bubbler is over there.

5

Blacksheep01 t1_ivex3al wrote

I actually didn't realize Australians called them bubblers also, that's awesome! But yeah, Rhode Island and Wisconsin call them bubblers still, the rest of of the US has no idea what we are talking about lol.

3

Megs0226 t1_ivexo6s wrote

Yes. I went to college in Maryland and asked someone where the bubbler was in the dorm and they looked at me like I had 3 heads. That’s how I learned that it’s unusual to call it a bubbler.

1

egv78 t1_ivexss9 wrote

Some parts of Massachusetts call it that, too.

2

Pedromac t1_ivez9mm wrote

Yeah the company that made the Bubbler brand of water fountains was in Wisconsin. So they call them bubblers too. And of course Massachusetts and RI bought them, so we can them bubblers.

16

left_based_diet t1_ivf3lis wrote

Don’t you insult RI’s Everyman! His parents must’ve worked really hard to pay for his 50K/year schooling here, how else would he have become a hard-working blue collar ordinary man of the people???

10

Smooth-Goose998 t1_ivf4r7q wrote

Yes! We 100% call it a bubbler in RI. Growing up in RI a water fountain is something with a statue in it that has water spewing out and you drink out of a bubbler. I'm also so excited to find out people in Australia call them bubblers too!!

3

OldTimeyFapGhost420 t1_ivf5axh wrote

It's just one tiny pocket in Minnesota if I'm not mistaken. For the record, they absolutely are. We here in Southern coastal New England are unabashed pricks. They're a bunch of smarmy, spineless, passive aggressive cunts. When you hear about how Americans are fat and uneducated, that's one of the epicenters that skews the statistics.

4

debbado t1_ivf5n3t wrote

When I moved from Connecticut to RI when I was a kid, between bubblers and cabinets (aka milk shake), i was confused.

1

orm518 t1_ivf98rl wrote

Bubbler is used routinely in Massachusetts, Rhode Island, plus some bleed into other New England states like New Hampshire and Maine, etc., and weirdly, Wisconsin.

1

Tenchiro t1_ivfdi1m wrote

We also called them bubblers when I lived in Portland Oregon, although just the outdoor ones downtown.

1

dc_dobbz t1_ivfl0qe wrote

I relocated in 2nd grade and it wasn’t any better. The other one that threw me was the use of “Lav” for rest room. I spent the first few months of second grade thinking my elementary school had a laboratory.

10

dc_dobbz t1_ivfliwv wrote

I KNEW there was something I liked about Australia (apart from Wallabies and Paul Hogan).

2

pinktwinkie t1_ivfmrci wrote

Sad as fuck. Last time i was at the creamery i odered one, and they did bring a frappe which was fine, but they also used to bring over the big silver blender thing which they didnt.

1

CapDris116 t1_ivfocbh wrote

Water fountain??? Like in a fancy park?????

1

wickedtachy t1_ivfulyi wrote

Sure do, and its not a liquor store (beer wine liquor all have to be brought at retail store besides breweries etc). It's a package store....a Packy as it was.

2

Keiralee10 t1_ivfwd6c wrote

I’m a teacher from Massachusetts, and was teaching in a first grade classroom in Arizona. One of the tiny kids asked me if they could go get a water, but the water vending machine they usually use was out of service, so I told them that, and instructed them to just go to the bubbler.

They came back crying a few minutes later because they didn’t know what a “bubbler” was and couldn’t find it.

That was when I realized they are called something different everywhere else.

2

_CaesarAugustus_ t1_ivfx59x wrote

I’m not sure where you got that from, lazy dictionary, but I did find info regarding a “double bubbler” fountain from WWI and how people came to call water fountains “bubblers” because of it. Maybe it’s a blend of the two? Some people had already called it that, and some came to call it that after the dual-stream water fountain.

1

ImCaffeinated_Chris t1_ivg5q0p wrote

Math class in Midwest I asked about a functions graph. "Does it look like how we draw seagulls?" All heads turned to me.

All people from RI would have understood.

1

Rhody05 t1_ivgkh8b wrote

Yes , I’ve called them bubblers my whole life. The water actually projects vertically through the piece which is called a “bubbler”.

1

Rhody1964 t1_ivgsuc2 wrote

You DO? I thought we were alone in this one! Cheers!

3

NessMcNesserson t1_ivh7oyq wrote

Yes! Haha I discovered this when I went to Australia and my friend refered to a bubbler and I damn near lost my shit! It was funny as!

2

bigdugie69 t1_ivhfhnd wrote

Idk what a water fountain is but yes I do know what a bubbler is!

We call drinking water fountains bubblers but a regular water fountain (like a regular decorative fountain) is a water fountain!

1

saucyB52 t1_ivhn46j wrote

bubblers always had blue corossive stuff growin off the spout

i drank it anyways

1

Wise_Check6255 t1_ivhntll wrote

Yup. It's common in Northeast US to cal them Bubblers.

2

sandsonik t1_ivjk3d5 wrote

I always thought it was strange that it's just us and Wisconsonites who use the term, separated as we are by so many states. Cool to hear it's an Aussie thing too.

Water fountains are those things with statues in public parks. Pretty to look at, but you don't want t to drink from them!

2

leavingthecold t1_ivjz94m wrote

Never heard bubbler ( bubblahh ) until I moved to RI as a kid (khed)

1

cpr4life8 t1_ivkq95k wrote

Water fountain - Found in a park, square, garden, or in front of a building, etc. Used for decoration.

Drinking fountain - For the purpose of drinking water.

Bubbler - Midwestern term (mainly Wisconsin) for drinking fountain.

1

RivalSFx t1_ivlsjz2 wrote

In Rhode Island, USA. Water Fountain has nothing to do with getting a drink.

1

brenden77 t1_ivlxlnn wrote

Yes, yes we do. Welcome!

1