Chips form

The question for English native speakers.
How do you call these types of chips?
1. Flat ones
2. The ones with waves
3. With tiny ribs.

Thanks.

1.Chips
2.Ruffles
3.Ruffles

1 petals
2 hi and byes
3 riddlyroos

1. Flatties
2. Wavies
3. Ridgies

1. Shitty ass "Lays"
2. Quite ok "Taffel San Diego"
3. Master race "Estrella sourcream and onion"

1. chips
2. wavy chips
3. ruffles

1. Potato chippy-crunchies
2. Wavy-pavy-potaty crackers
3. Ruffletons

>These crisps *hold up bag*
>Those crisps *point to bag*
>Those crisps *point to third bag*
Seriously; under what circumstance do you need to refer to a specific type of snackfood where the referent isn't present?

1. Chips
2. Chips
3. Chips

1.) chips
2.) wavy chips
3.) ruffles

Here in Wisconsin it would be:
1. Chips (or Crisps if you're over 40)
2. Ruffles
3. Crinkley Chips

You just call them all crisps

Bismarck, North Dakota
1. Chips or Pomme Crisps
2. Pomridges
3. Waffle chips

1. "(yummy) pressed starch diskums"
2. "low frequency high wavelength compressed carbohydrate saltynes"
3. as you might have guessed, "high frequency low wavelength compressed carb saltynes," or for short, we'd call them "1200nm chips"

its a regional thing though and these might change from street to street, let alone state to state, non-americans need not apply, the dialectal differences are too great to compare american phrases for compressed starches to british.

Texarkana reporting in.
1' chips or frites
2' curly chips
3' never seen them here so I'll pass

1.crisps
2. mcoys goat crinkle cut crisps
3. plain crinkle crips

the tiny rib type is so great yet so rare ;_;

1. Chips
2. Wavy chips
3. Ruffles (because they're more like ridges than waves)

ITT amerifats not giving too much thought about what goes into our mouths

1. Crispywhispies
2. Crispywhispywavies
3. Crispywhispywavettos

Chips, wavy chips, dip chips.

1.crisps
2.artecos
3.meteor

1) crisps
2) ridge cut
3) crinkle cut

Bump.

Thanks everyone.

crisps
ruffles
ruffles

Australia

Thin cut
Crinkle
Tiny ribs? I know we have biscuits that look like this but idk about chip. I've only seen it in Japan.

chips
wavy chips
wavy chips
(because the Lays package calls them "wavy lays")

To be honest we just don't even care enough to give them actual distinct names, like whether they're flat or wavy most of us don't care enough to distinguish them.

1) Chips
2) Wavy Chips
3) Chips

>chips
>chips
>chips