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This discussion had gone so far from Food of Shame, I thought I'd start a new thread.
I've only lived in the Eastern part of the U.S., and in my experience, could buy jimmies in the baking ingredients section of any grocery store or ask for them to be sprinkled on my ice cream cone just about anyplace, but it looks as if you are correct. This Wikipedia article explains that it is from the Boston area. I first remember being aware of the term when I lived in Upstate New York as a young adult (I had not done much baking as a child or adolescent in Southern Ohio. I know my mother had jimmies on the shelf, but cannot swear that they were called that on the label.) I see in the dictionaries online that in British listings, the only use of "jimmy" is the one meaning the crowbar-like tool a burglar would use to break into a house, spelled "jemmy" over there. Here, the burglar would "jimmy" the door or the window. No reference to candy sprinkles--or to the weird tartan Jimmy hats with bad wig hair that they sell to clueless tourists in Scotland. Wordmatic | ||
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Thanks for starting a new thread for this question, Wordmatic. As I had said in the other thread, I have heard the word jimmies used this way, but where I come from it is much more common to use the word "sprinkles." | |||
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What you call sprinkles or jimmies we call hundreds-and-thousands. "Jimmy" and "jemmy" are used pretty well interchangeably to mean a crowbar. "Jimmy" is also used as an all-purpose term of address in Glasgow, Scotland; "See you, Jimmy" means "Good-day, my friend". Build a man a fire and he's warm for a day. Set a man on fire and he's warm for the rest of his life. | |||
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Jimmy is also Cockney rhyming slang. Richard English | |||
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In the States, jimmy is usually a verb, but in times past it used to be a noun. A burglar jimmies open a door or a window with a crowbar. —Ceci n'est pas un seing. | |||
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