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      62 months ago

      It refers to the US (American) servicemen stationed in Italy during WWII.

      • @lugal@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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        12 months ago

        According to the link in my parent comment, I quoted in my first comment, it doesn’t but what do I know

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          72 months ago

          There is a popular belief that the name has its origins in World War II when American G.I.s in Italy diluted espresso with hot water to approximate the coffee to which they were accustomed.[9] However, the Oxford English Dictionary cites the term as a borrowing from Central American Spanish café americano, a derisive term for mild coffee dating to the middle of the 1950s.

          Yeah but 1950s > WWII so

          Bonus points: what was the lemon peel for?

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              12 months ago

              I suppose if Google is the authority and “taking off” means . . what, 1980? Then yeah.

              I don’t agree, but that’s okay too.

              • @lugal@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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                12 months ago

                I mean, Google Ngrams is written language so slower than the spoken one. The point is more that Spanish < Italian.

                But if your mom or who ever telling you this is a greater authority than a company analyzing data with no agenda in this case, than that’s ok too. But maybe I’m misreading the graphs. The Italian one has kind of a peak in 1921 but a bigger one in 1814. It only goes above those random peaks around 2000 in Italian and Spanish looks less random to me before that.

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                  22 months ago

                  Damn you do love the googlez don’t ya.

                  Hey - follow your bliss, as they say.