Having lived in many parts of the UK over the years both as a child at school and also as an adult these differences do seem to resonate. Above we have the classic Tea/Dinner/Supper distinction, instinctively if someone was coming round our house for "Tea" we'd be thinking about Earl-Grey and Victoria-sponge, maybe some hot-cross buns if you're lucky, however, when I used to live in Manchester it would mean beans on toast or perhaps pie and chips!
Then we have the age old sc-on or sc-own. In our family we've always asserted that "scone" rhymes with "gone", although bizarrely my kids seem to like toying with the other way, I guess that reflects teenage contrarianism rather than anything else.
Less controversial but still quite confusing for the uninitiated we have the bread-roll dilemma, is it a roll and bun or a bap? In honesty my family wouldn't entirely conform to convention on this, we would say bun for burgers but roll for the bread you have with a meal. I think of all the variants this one might be the most diverse, especially since most people in the South-East that shop in places like Waitrose seem to buy French bread these days (what the hell would they call that in Stoke?)
Definitely "Tag", "Tiggy" sounds a bit kinky to my "South-Eastern" ears...
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