Pronunciation:
/póteɪtoÊ tÉËmÉ tÉÊ/
Definitions:
1. (idiomatic) Used to suggest that two apparently similar things are actually different from each other.
2. (idiomatic) Used to admit that there is a distinction between two close things when the speaker previously maintained there was no distinction.
Etymology:
Uses American English and British English pronunciations of the words potato and tomato. Adaptation of the interchangeable sayings, âpotato potahtoâ and âtomayto tomahto.â Parodied allusion to George Gershwin's song "Let's Call the Whole Thing Off": "You like tomatoes (/tÉËmeɪtoÊz/) and I like tomatoes (/tÉËmÉ toÊz/)".
Synonyms:
tomayto potahto
Antonyms:
potayto potahto, tomayto tomahto, same difference
1. âWhat was in that burrito?â
âAluminum foilâ
âWait... I asked what was âinâ it, not what was âonâ it.â
âPotayto tomahtoâ