Editing 2126: Google Trends Maps

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* '''"<span style="color:#4988f1">Bigfoot</span>" vs "<span style="color:#d55c52">Mike Pence</span>":''' Apparently, everywhere except for Indiana, people in the US are more interested in a mythical hairy creature than in the current (at the time of this comic's release) Vice President of the United States. Since {{w|Mike Pence}} was once the governor of Indiana, this makes more sense if the time period covered precedes his nomination as Trump's running mate.
 
* '''"<span style="color:#4988f1">Bigfoot</span>" vs "<span style="color:#d55c52">Mike Pence</span>":''' Apparently, everywhere except for Indiana, people in the US are more interested in a mythical hairy creature than in the current (at the time of this comic's release) Vice President of the United States. Since {{w|Mike Pence}} was once the governor of Indiana, this makes more sense if the time period covered precedes his nomination as Trump's running mate.
  
* '''"<span style="color:#4988f1">Etiquette</span>" vs "<span style="color:#d55c52">sexting</span>":''' Similar to the church/strip club example, this map contrasts search interest in polite behavior (etiquette) against risqué behavior ({{w|sexting}}).
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* '''"<span style="color:#4988f1">Etiquette</span>" vs "<span style="color:#d55c52">sexting</span>":''' Similar to the church/strip club example, this map contrasts search interest in polite behavior (etiquette) against risqué behavior ({{w|sexting}}.
  
 
* '''"<span style="color:#4988f1">Little dog</span>" vs "<span style="color:#d55c52">big cat</span>":''' The Trend map contrasts two searches for either oddly-sized pets (in particular, "little dog" probably refers to small domestic dog breeds such as the {{w|Chihuahua}}; "big cat" could refer to large domestic cat breeds such as the Maine Coone, but is somewhat more likely to refer to large wildcat species) or unidentified and briefly glimpsed wildlife that often snatch household pets left outside. The smallest canid in the wilds of America is the kit fox, ''Vulpes macrotis'', which is  smaller than the American wild dog, ''Canis lupus familiaris''. By contrast, "big cat" is a term for the largest members of the cat family (''Felidae''). Except for the jaguar, which is a roaring cat of the ''Panthera'' genus that inhabits Mexico and sometimes Arizona, the largest wild cat in North America is the mountain lion, ''Puma concolor''.  It is also known as cougar, puma, catamount, ghost cat, over seventy other regional names, and the misnomer panther.  (The cougar is ironically of the Felinae subfamily, all of which purr, and not Pantherinae, which roar.  Black panthers in Africa are black-coated leopards, while black panthers in the Americas are black-coated jaguars, and both are Pantherinae. No black-coated pumas have been verified, leading zoologists to believe such sightings are misidentified.)  "Little Dog" is also a Canadian television series, set in Newfoundland and Labrador, which explains the larger number of searches for Little Dog in Maine, the state closest to Newfoundland and Labrador. Interestingly, there mainly seems to be an inverse relationship between the range of coyotes and cougars and the respective searches.
 
* '''"<span style="color:#4988f1">Little dog</span>" vs "<span style="color:#d55c52">big cat</span>":''' The Trend map contrasts two searches for either oddly-sized pets (in particular, "little dog" probably refers to small domestic dog breeds such as the {{w|Chihuahua}}; "big cat" could refer to large domestic cat breeds such as the Maine Coone, but is somewhat more likely to refer to large wildcat species) or unidentified and briefly glimpsed wildlife that often snatch household pets left outside. The smallest canid in the wilds of America is the kit fox, ''Vulpes macrotis'', which is  smaller than the American wild dog, ''Canis lupus familiaris''. By contrast, "big cat" is a term for the largest members of the cat family (''Felidae''). Except for the jaguar, which is a roaring cat of the ''Panthera'' genus that inhabits Mexico and sometimes Arizona, the largest wild cat in North America is the mountain lion, ''Puma concolor''.  It is also known as cougar, puma, catamount, ghost cat, over seventy other regional names, and the misnomer panther.  (The cougar is ironically of the Felinae subfamily, all of which purr, and not Pantherinae, which roar.  Black panthers in Africa are black-coated leopards, while black panthers in the Americas are black-coated jaguars, and both are Pantherinae. No black-coated pumas have been verified, leading zoologists to believe such sightings are misidentified.)  "Little Dog" is also a Canadian television series, set in Newfoundland and Labrador, which explains the larger number of searches for Little Dog in Maine, the state closest to Newfoundland and Labrador. Interestingly, there mainly seems to be an inverse relationship between the range of coyotes and cougars and the respective searches.

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