View Full Version : Different words from different parts of the country
graciegirl
06-23-2013, 06:34 AM
When we moved here I began to hear words foreign to me, but everyday words in other parts of this country. Because we are a mix here in The Villages, we have different words for some things.
I had to look it up when someone called someone "fresh" and I found that "wicked good" was as very, very, very good as you could get if you are from Massachusetts.
I am from Ohio where we call kinda not important accessories and a lot of them "knick knacks". My neighbor calls them "Tchochkes". We gather people together in Ohio a lot with a potluck which means that you just bring what you want to a dinner or are divided by the alphabet into desserts, salads and main dishes. Here I have seen Potlucks where you are directed exactly what to bring....takes the "luck" out of it for me....or some people have never been to a potluck and that leaves me speechless. I frequently bring a dish called Johnny Marzetti that people from Ohio recognize at once.
People pause when I say "please" which in Ohio means "huh" or "what?" and there are even certain ways of proununciation different from mine. Pittsburgh people say "dontahn" for down town and we all know that Boston folks Pahk their cahs.
What words, customs, attitudes or ways that are different or new to you have you encountered here in this mini melting pot?
Taltarzac725
06-23-2013, 06:41 AM
When we moved here I began to hear words foreign to me, but everyday words in other parts of this country. Because we are a mix here in The Villages, we have different words for some things.
I had to look it up when someone called someone "fresh" and I found that "wicked good" was as very, very, very good as you could get if you are from Massachusetts.
I am from Ohio where we call kinda not important accessories and a lot of them knick knacks. My neighbor calls them Tchochkes. We gather people together in Ohio a lot with a potluck which means that you just bring what you want to a dinner or are divided by the alphabet into desserts, salads and main dishes. Here I have seen Potlucks run by newbies who tell you exactly what to bring....takes the "luck" out of it for me....or some people have never been to a potluck and that leaves me speechless.
People pause when I say "please" which in Ohio means "huh" or "what?" and there are even certain ways of proununciation different from mine. Pittsburgh people say "dontahn" for down town and we all know that Boston folks Pahk their cahs.
What words, customs, attitudes or ways are different that are new to you, have you encountered here in this mini melting pot?
I remember reading a book I got as a gift about How to talk Minnesotan when I was about to move to Minneapolis-St. Paul to attend law school at the University of Minnesota. This book by Howard Mohr was as seen on Garrison Keillor's show Prairie Home Companion. http://www.amazon.com/How-Talk-Minnesotan-Visitors-Guide/dp/0140092846
Only encountered this kind of speech though once in a while. Seldom around the University of Minnesota did I hear someone talking like this but the farther I got away from the urban areas....
There are a lot of people from the Gopher State here in the Villages.
rubicon
06-23-2013, 06:45 AM
I was born and raised in central New York. Folks from that part of the country have flat A's For instance aunt is pronounced ant. They also have there own version of a sandwich. Its called a sangwich. They all like to add drama when they speak as in All I know which is really suppose to be All's I know. Locally in my hometown is the word jabeep. What is a jabeep think Joey Buttafuoco.
elizabeth52
06-23-2013, 06:56 AM
I am not in TV yet, but noticed differences in parts of NY, such as, stoop vs porch; pop vs soda; basement vs cellar. I was surprised the first time I heard some say they stood "on line" vs "in line". I think that is a downstate NY term. Also, I worked with some from Michigan who was shocked that noone knew what Ham Buns were. Other than her, I have never heard of Ham Buns!
Bonny
06-23-2013, 07:11 AM
I'm from Michigan. Have no clue what a ham bun is.
jmarkohio
06-23-2013, 07:17 AM
Ever have a "Jiggs Dinner"? Popular on St Patricks Day in NW Ohio...cornbeef and cabbage.
graciegirl
06-23-2013, 07:22 AM
Ever have a "Jiggs Dinner"? Popular on St Patricks Day in NW Ohio...cornbeef and cabbage.
Jiggs and Maggie? The old comic strip character? Never heard of a Jiggs dinner and never had corned beef and cabbage. Ever. Until arriving here.
elizabeth52
06-23-2013, 07:24 AM
Bonny,
She explained that it was simply a ham sandwich on a hamburger bun. She told me that it was always served as part of a picnic, potluck, after church activity, etc. Anyway,never heard of it before or after.
Also, as a native of Michigan, ever heard of the word "main't"? Was she, perhaps, pulling my leg?
kittygilchrist
06-23-2013, 07:28 AM
Those Brits! I can't understand 'em a wee bit.
queasy27
06-23-2013, 07:35 AM
I remember reading a book I got as a gift about How to talk Minnesotan when I was about to move to Minneapolis-St. Paul to attend law school at the University of Minnesota.
I was raised in Northern California and was introduced to the concept of hotdish (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hotdish) when I moved to North Dakota, then northern Minnesota. (I also had to regularly call my sister back home to chortle about how funny everyone talked!) Nothing in that book is wrong, you betcha. The movie Fargo cracked me up as well. It's funny because it's true.
skyguy79
06-23-2013, 08:09 AM
I am not in TV yet, but noticed differences in parts of NY, such as, stoop vs porch; pop vs soda; basement vs cellar. I was surprised the first time I heard some say they stood "on line" vs "in line". I think that is a downstate NY term. Also, I worked with some from Michigan who was shocked that noone knew what Ham Buns were. Other than her, I have never heard of Ham Buns!Let's see....
stoop vs porch: Have used both terms but prefer porch. Get less backaches porching!
pop vs soda: Doesn't matter much to me the descriptive word that comes out of a persons mouth. It's the taste coming out of the drinks container that counts.
on line vs in line: Did this speech differential stay relevant once modems came on the scene?
I'm from Michigan. Have no clue what a ham bun is.I'm not from Michigan nor do I know what a ham bun is, but I did stay at a Holiday Inn Express once!
BTW, Don't anybody worry about me! Doc says I'll probably be back to normal soon... probably. :loco:
elizabeth52
06-23-2013, 08:32 AM
LOL!!!! Here's hoping for a speedy recovery!
lovsthosebigdogs
06-23-2013, 08:32 AM
When I moved to PA I heard people who didn't know the difference between "let" and "leave". They would leave the dog out before going to work and I thought the dog was out all day, but it only meant that the dog was let out and then back in. They also say 'all' for finished, as in "Get some cake before it's all." They also say "gip" the line which means to get into the middle of it instead of going to the end. We would say "cut" in line for the same idea where I'm from.
The pronunciation thing is different for sure here. In this area they all pronunce the fish "haddock" or "hammock" and "Lennox" etc. with the accent on the second syllable as in "had DOCK" and "ham MOCK" and "Len NOX" and I have always heard it said "had ick", "ham ick" and "Len nix".
ilovetv
06-23-2013, 08:53 AM
I heard a sweet southern lady say recently, "Oh, when ah fell out and hit mah hay-ed, ah needed a lot of stitches."
"Fell out".....I heard this for the first time years ago in Indiana and it took awhile to learn that meant "passed out" or "fainted"!
And how about how friends in Pittsburgh and area say "torenament"...."have to take the kids to a soccer torenament".
.....And then we'll have THANKSgiving dinner (not Thanksgiving)....
It's all fun! We live in a great country!
graciegirl
06-23-2013, 09:12 AM
When I moved to PA I heard people who didn't know the difference between "let" and "leave". They would leave the dog out before going to work and I thought the dog was out all day, but it only meant that the dog was let out and then back in. They also say 'all' for finished, as in "Get some cake before it's all." They also say "gip" the line which means to get into the middle of it instead of going to the end. We would say "cut" in line for the same idea where I'm from.
The pronunciation thing is different for sure here. In this area they all pronunce the fish "haddock" or "hammock" and "Lennox" etc. with the accent on the second syllable as in "had DOCK" and "ham MOCK" and "Len NOX" and I have always heard it said "had ick", "ham ick" and "Len nix".
Isn't that how you say it? That is how I SAY it.
When I was a kid we didn't like "dishing" in line. At Disney, dishing in line is a terrible pain in the neck and seen a LOT.
Also as a kid we were asked to "rid up the table" which means to take everything off of it and put it away and take dirty dishes to the sink.
We had a lot of left over German words, schmear kase was cottage cheese and bumbershoot was umbrella and fer cuts? was something past it's prime or broken.
Bosoxfan
06-23-2013, 09:20 AM
One that stumps people is a word to describe a drinking fountain.In massachusetts we call it a bubbler.We also call sub sandwiches...grinders.
Patty55
06-23-2013, 09:33 AM
One that stumps people is a word to describe a drinking fountain.In massachusetts we call it a bubbler.We also call sub sandwiches...grinders.
Long Islanders call a sub a hero. I thought that in MA a sub was a cold hero and a grinder was a hot hero.
Patty55
06-23-2013, 09:38 AM
What is dish the line?
Downstate NY drinks soda, but when we lived in the Bronx we'd order a "2 cent plain" (seltzer), on LI they didn't know what that was, they also didn't drink seltzer.
When I lived in NC and they were leaving to go somewhere they would "get gone".
I have never been to a potluck.
Bill-n-Brillo
06-23-2013, 09:51 AM
What is dish the line?...........
That's when you cut/jump in line in front of others who are already there.
Another thing heard around various parts of the country: "creek" pronounced like "crick".
Bill :)
Ceafolks
06-23-2013, 09:58 AM
This could be a long, long, long thread.
Patty55
06-23-2013, 09:58 AM
Here in TV they call living on a retention pond "waterfront". On LI we call retention ponds SUMPS, nobody wants to live on the SUMP, so they put a big high fence and shrubs to hide it-LOL
BarryRX
06-23-2013, 10:10 AM
When we moved here I began to hear words foreign to me, but everyday words in other parts of this country. Because we are a mix here in The Villages, we have different words for some things.
I had to look it up when someone called someone "fresh" and I found that "wicked good" was as very, very, very good as you could get if you are from Massachusetts.
I am from Ohio where we call kinda not important accessories and a lot of them "knick knacks". My neighbor calls them "Tchochkes". We gather people together in Ohio a lot with a potluck which means that you just bring what you want to a dinner or are divided by the alphabet into desserts, salads and main dishes. Here I have seen Potlucks where you are directed exactly what to bring....takes the "luck" out of it for me....or some people have never been to a potluck and that leaves me speechless. I frequently bring a dish called Johnny Marzetti that people from Ohio recognize at once.
People pause when I say "please" which in Ohio means "huh" or "what?" and there are even certain ways of proununciation different from mine. Pittsburgh people say "dontahn" for down town and we all know that Boston folks Pahk their cahs.
What words, customs, attitudes or ways that are different or new to you have you encountered here in this mini melting pot?
Hi Gracie, I believe the word tchotchkes is of Yiddish origin and is usually meant to donate something of poor quality like a cheap souvenir. In Yiddish, it is also sometimes used to refer to a girl who acts cheap.
salpal
06-23-2013, 12:18 PM
From Philly area and unfortunately, I do sometimes talk like dis (this): (from website called Philly Slang:
Aaeg - Egg
Addi-tood - Attitude
Aeneeding - Anything
A-ite - Alright
A-ready - Already
Arnch - Orange (Pattie) Also "Aren't you" as in Arnch you glad to see me?
Ac-a-me - Acme Market
Alrighty - Stop it already with alrighty! The word doesn’t exist.
Arn or Eye-urn or Eyern - Clothes Iron.
Aster-ick - Asterisk
Ath-a-lete - Athlete
Ats All, Dat’s All - That’s all
Bat-tree - Battery
Baff-room - Bathroom
Beggles - (Submitted by Sarah, 10/02))
Bee-yood-ee-ful - Beautiful
Big Ma-hoff - An ostentatious person; a big shot
Birff-day - Birthday
Bref-fist - Breakfast
Casina - Casino
Chimley - Chimney (Pattie) rare usage.
Caus - Because
Colbert - Sewer (Tom Burke, changed from Colbin, Aug 06 see feedback, Feedback Jun 07 says proper word is Culvert)
Coont - Couldn't
Cooughee - Coffee
Con-fra-bill - Comfortable
Con-ter-versy - Contraversy
Crown - Crayon
Cump-nee - Company
Dahnashure - At the beach as in Lannick Ciddy, OhCee, Whilewould and the
like. The alternative is upamount'ns to the poke-noes
Def-lee - Definitely
Dis, Dat, Dey, Dees, Doze, Dem, Dough - This, That, They, These,
Those, Them, Though
Dint - Didn't
Do-in - Doing, as in "Hal ya doin?"
Draff - Draft
Draw - Drawer
E - He
Earl - Oil
Figger - Figure
Fighdollas - Five Dollars (Patti)
Fluffia - Philadelphia
Fridge, Ice Box - Refrigerator
Fuss-trated - Frustrated
Ga head, GeHead, Gaw head - Go Ahead
Goff-forbid - God forbid
Gun-all - Canoli (the delectable Italian pastry)
Haff - Have
Hal? - How?
Hunnert - Hundred
Husbint - Husband (Pattie)
I-dear - Idea
Iggles - Eagles
Ice-ning - Icing
Ir-regardless - Regardless
Jeet? - Did you eat? No, Jew?- No, did you?
Kel-ler - Color
Lannick Ciddy or Lantic Ciddy - Atlantic City
Laasch, Las - Last
Leck-tric - Electric
Leven - Eleven
Lie-berry - Library
Lot-tree - Lottery
MAC - Local version of an ATM (automated teller machine)(Thanks Tommy)
Meer-oe - Mirror
My-en - Mine
MayazWell - May as well
Newsey - Nosey
Nuthin, Nuttin - Nothing
Offen - Often
Ollars - Dollars
Olney - A neighborhood in the Northeast, pronounced AH - LEN - EE or AH - LEH - NEE
Paa-ler - Parlor or living room
Pay-mint - Pavement
Pea-nits - Peanuts
Petique - Petite
Pix-ture, Pitcher - Picture
Pock-a-book - Purse
Plug - Fire Hydrant, specifically when used for first or third base in streetball or a boundryline. Limited neighborhood use, possibly south philly.
Prob-lee - Probably
Rawn - Ruin
Re-dic-liss - Ridiculous
Reg-a-ler - Regular
San-wich, Sang-wich - Sandwich
Sim-u-lar - Similar
Soar, Sol - Saw
Sow-Philly - South Philly, leave off the TH (Thanks Jessica)
Sparra-grass - Asparagus
Taawk - Talk
Tal - Towel
Took-en - Taken
Tree - Three
U-mid - Humid
U-min - Human
Ward-er or Whadder or Wooder - Water, H20 (Thanks Brooke for Wooder)
WaWa - A local conveniance store similar to but better than 7-11(Thanks Tommy)
Whaddya? - What do you?
Which-a-ma-callit - The name of a person, place or thing that Alzheimer’s has removed from your memory bank
Whoodaya? - Who do you?
Winda, Win-dill - Window
Wit - With
Wit-out - Without
Woont - Wouldn't
Yesta-day - Yesterday
Yea - Yes (Thanks Jessica)
Youse, Yziz - You (plural)
Zink - Sink (Patti)
manaboutown
06-23-2013, 12:27 PM
Pocketbook (MD) and purse in the west, also wallet and billfold, toMAYto and toMAHto, eXcetera (CA) and etcetera, re-lah-ter for realtor, "he goes" (CA) rather than "he says", going "down the ocean" (Baltimore, MD) and "going to the beach" (CA), "red or green" meaning which color of chili do you want on your dinner in NM (green is more popular and usually hotter), freeways - usually identified as "the 5" or "the 405", never I-5 or I-405, and "surface streets" (CA) and expressways and roads or streets on the east coast
queasy27
06-23-2013, 12:34 PM
Here in TV they call living on a retention pond "waterfront". On LI we call retention ponds SUMPS, nobody wants to live on the SUMP, so they put a big high fence and shrubs to hide it-LOL
Haha! It's all in the spin, Patty!
quirky3
06-23-2013, 01:29 PM
Here in TV they call living on a retention pond "waterfront". On LI we call retention ponds SUMPS, nobody wants to live on the SUMP, so they put a big high fence and shrubs to hide it-LOL
So true! Growing up in upstate NY and New England, I was looking at properties in Florida, and I was excited to see so many "lake front" properties listed. But when I looked at the details and maps, I realized it was what we might call "swamp" or "lagoon" at best, with no extra charge for the alligators! Still, they have beautiful wildlife once you adjust your expectations.
justjim
06-23-2013, 01:50 PM
Had not heard the term boy howdy since I left southern Illinois until a sweet lady from Ohio used the same term. Boy Howdy it was good to hear it again!
perrjojo
06-23-2013, 02:03 PM
Texans are "fixin to go" rather than getting ready to go. All sodas or pop are referred to as Coke. Want a Coke? Yes. What kind? Dr Pepper.
bluedog103
06-23-2013, 02:36 PM
In Brooklyn they check the erl in the car and flush the terlet.
jpharmat
06-23-2013, 02:54 PM
In Massachusetts:
grinder = sub sandwich
bubbler = water fountain
elastic = rubber band
soda = pop
cellar = basement
wicked good = awesome!
And of course we do not pronounce our r's... lol
Parker
06-23-2013, 03:05 PM
When I first moved to the south, after having grown up in the west, everyone asked me "You alright?", or "You okay?" I thought that they all thought I had been sick. In California, the same question would have been worded "How are you?"
This thread is hilarious!
bluedog103
06-23-2013, 03:39 PM
In Massachusetts:
And of course we do not pronounce our r's... lol
Except the ones that aren't there. I recall as a kid listening to JFK talk about the Cuban missile crisis and wondering where the heck Cubar was.
Mikeod
06-23-2013, 03:55 PM
When I wa growing up, I learned the hard way that a milk shake didn't have any ice cream, just milk and flavoring. But a frappe did. Then I met someone from Rhode Island who ordered a cabinet at the ice cream shop. Huh?
Not so much nomenclature, but attitude, was that when we were going into Boston (about 65 miles!), we took the car in for a check-up. Then I got to CA where it was no big deal to go from San Francisco to LA for a weekend. That's also where I learned travel is measured in time, not miles, and for good reason.
jblum315
06-23-2013, 03:58 PM
My mother used to say "Lawsy Mercy" My son thought it was so funny that he still repeats it.
asianthree
06-23-2013, 05:31 PM
Texans are "fixin to go" rather than getting ready to go. All sodas or pop are referred to as Coke. Want a Coke? Yes. What kind? Dr Pepper.
in Ky fixin to go instead of ready to go is because ya can't get them to stop talking so they are always.... fixin to go...but the best one for me was if i did something very wrong like take my horse out when a storm was coming.. my aunt would say when i get ahold of you "i am going to slap you into next tuesday.."
perrjojo
06-23-2013, 05:37 PM
Except the ones that aren't there. I recall as a kid listening to JFK talk about the Cuban missile crisis and wondering where the heck Cubar was.
And who is really named Lindar?
redwitch
06-23-2013, 05:39 PM
Mine is actually more British -- they don't got to the hospital, they go to hospital. If on the freeways (yup, I'm from California), you don't travel in a direction it seems (that is, you don't go north or south), the freeway signs say The North, The South (guess hospitals don't need articles but directions do?).
The Villages truly confused me -- I was always under the impression that an avenue was a minimum of 10 blocks. Not here, I've seen 2-block avenues.
I always loved that folks from Jersey don't live in a town, they live off an exit. More than once I've heard take "Exit 135 [fill in appropriate number] and that's where we are."
First time I heard a soda called a pop, I literally looked around for my classmate's father.
Now, can someone please explain to me why island is pronounced "aye land" and not "is land" and Arkansas is "ar can saw" and not "ar can sass"? Didn't understand that when I first heard those words (and understood to what they were referring) and still don't understand the logic behind those pronunciations.
perrjojo
06-23-2013, 05:43 PM
When I moved from Texas to Georgia I found the women carried pocket books....I carried a Purse. If my car wouldn't start, they thought it wouldn't crank. Since my car wouldn't start/crank they would offer to carry me to work. That sounded a little weird to me but then I found out that meant take me to work.
Patty55
06-23-2013, 05:54 PM
Mine is actually more British -- they don't got to the hospital, they go to hospital. If on the freeways (yup, I'm from California), you don't travel in a direction it seems (that is, you don't go north or south), the freeway signs say The North, The South (guess hospitals don't need articles but directions do?).
The Villages truly confused me -- I was always under the impression that an avenue was a minimum of 10 blocks. Not here, I've seen 2-block avenues.
I always loved that folks from Jersey don't live in a town, they live off an exit. More than once I've heard take "Exit 135 [fill in appropriate number] and that's where we are."
First time I heard a soda called a pop, I literally looked around for my classmate's father.
Now, can someone please explain to me why island is pronounced "aye land" and not "is land" and Arkansas is "ar can saw" and not "ar can sass"? Didn't understand that when I first heard those words (and understood to what they were referring) and still don't understand the logic behind those pronunciations.
On Long Island if you ask where people live they tell you the name of the developement. They'll say "House Beautiful" or "Colonial Oaks". We didn't live in a developement, I always felt left out.
Maybe the worst pronunciation of island is good old Lawn Guyland-lol.
mommieswamie
06-23-2013, 06:43 PM
What fun this is --
I'm from Baton Rouge, La
"soft drinks" not "soda", that is "soft drinks" as opposed to "hard drinks" meaning liquor
"crayfish" like it rhymes with "aw" not "crayfish" like it rhymes with "a".
"mayonnaise" like "my-o-nase" not "ma-o-nase"
and it's always nice to get a little "lagniappe" - something extra, a Baker's dozen
and of course "y'all" is the plural of "you"
we "fix" dinner, we do not "make" dinner. I was with a group of knitting friends once and was asked what I was "making" for Christmas. I immediately started talking about all the things that I was knitting, until I realized that was not at all what I had been asked. The question was about what was I "making" for Christmas dinner for food to eat. I guess if I had been asked what was I "fixing" for Christmas I would have understood that the question was about food and not knitting, but then again that was my fault for not adapting to the language of the place where I was at the time.
Southerners are always apologizing as in "Oh, I'm so sorry. That was my fault." There have been times in other parts of the country where I have been chastised as in "Stop apologizing all the time." I don't know any other way to talk.
and digressing from the language a bit:
Southerners eat sugar on cottage cheese. At boarding school in Washington DC, I once asked for more cottage cheese for lunch. I was told that I could have some only if I ate it the "right" way and that was without putting sugar on it.
Baileysmom
06-23-2013, 07:03 PM
This is an interesting thread and I look forward to reading more. My husband is from Ohio and never heard of Johnny Marzetti but I looked it up and it sounds delicious Gracie, I might have to make it. I agree a pot luck should be as it sounds and not assigned, takes the fun out of it. I am from MA and many of us don't roll the 'r' as much as others but I love hearing someone say 'wicked awesome' brings me right back home.
Bosoxfan
06-23-2013, 07:51 PM
Except the ones that aren't there. I recall as a kid listening to JFK talk about the Cuban missile crisis and wondering where the heck Cubar was.
The Kennedys have their own dialect. Nobody in Massachusetts talks anything like them
zonerboy
06-23-2013, 09:26 PM
According to my wife, if some one is not wearing any clothes, they are nekkid.
ilovetv
06-23-2013, 09:34 PM
According to my wife, if some one is not wearing any clothes, they are nekkid.
Is that like "BUCK nekkid"? (far more naked, I think)
And what about saying "warsh" instead of "wash"? I used to hear that in the midwest.
Today on 640 AM radio here I heard one of the typical Villager on the Street interviews and the woman said she was from "Warshington State" (and would never go back to needing a snow shovel). She was lovin' the lifestyle as we all are.....
zonerboy
06-23-2013, 09:58 PM
Some people call it BUTT nekkid!
LOL
Serenoa
06-24-2013, 05:14 PM
According to my wife, if some one is not wearing any clothes, they are nekkid.
no, no, no....
If you just don't have any clothes on....you are NAKED.
But if you don't have any clothes on & you're up to sometin....then you're
NEKKID!! :22yikes:
Patty55
06-24-2013, 05:29 PM
The Kennedys have their own dialect. Nobody in Massachusetts talks anything like them
Maybe because they're from the Bronx.
stuckinparadise
06-24-2013, 05:50 PM
I am originally from Wisconsin but when I joined the Army, my first duty station was in Alabama. Needless to say, their choices for words were very different from what I was used to, ie. toboggan is used to describe a hat worn by robbers (in Wisconsin, we called them stocking caps or beanies). According to Wikipedia: A toboggan is a simple sled which is a traditional form of transport used by the Innu and Cree of northern Canada. In modern times, it is used on snow to carry one or more people (often children) down a hill or other slope for recreation. They also used the term "mash the button" for pushing the button when using an elevator or any other device where a button needs to be pushed.
Patty55
06-24-2013, 06:03 PM
I once had a mechanic in the south tell me to "Mash my incinerator pedal" instead of my gas pedal.
perrjojo
06-24-2013, 06:25 PM
Do you push a grocery cart, buggy or basket?
Serenoa
06-24-2013, 07:26 PM
What do you wash the car with; a water hose or a hose pipe?
lovsthosebigdogs
06-24-2013, 08:25 PM
I don't know where she was from, but my sister brought her college room mate home who said my mother's home cooked dinner "tasted like seconds". She meant that it tasted good enough to eat two helpings. My mother said, "Oh no, I cooked it fresh tonight."
Bill-n-Brillo
06-24-2013, 08:42 PM
What do you wash the car with; a water hose or a hose pipe?
That's not the way I do it, Serenoa.
I "worsch" our cars..............(with a water hose)!!
:pepper2:
Bill :wave:
CFrance
06-24-2013, 08:59 PM
I heard a sweet southern lady say recently, "Oh, when ah fell out and hit mah hay-ed, ah needed a lot of stitches."
"Fell out".....I heard this for the first time years ago in Indiana and it took awhile to learn that meant "passed out" or "fainted"!
And how about how friends in Pittsburgh and area say "torenament"...."have to take the kids to a soccer torenament".
.....And then we'll have THANKSgiving dinner (not Thanksgiving)....
It's all fun! We live in a great country!
Tounament. Ahem... How do you pronounce the word "four"? I believe we Pittsburghers are on to something there.:smiley:
mgjim
06-24-2013, 09:16 PM
I grew up telling time by using the terms "until" and "after", such as 10 until 5 or 20 after 6. I was in Washington DC once and asked a police officer for the time and he said it was 10 of 10. I wasn't sure if that was 10 minutes until or 10 minutes after 10. I've since adopted the digital method, 10:15, 4:45, etc. It seems to be more universal.
ssmith
06-24-2013, 09:20 PM
nothing wrong with warsh....My sister in Boston isn't using her rrr's so we are ;-)
Quixote
06-24-2013, 09:22 PM
I was born and raised in central New York. Folks from that part of the country have flat A's For instance aunt is pronounced ant. They also have there own version of a sandwich. Its called a sangwich. They all like to add drama when they speak as in All I know which is really suppose to be All's I know. Locally in my hometown is the word jabeep. What is a jabeep think Joey Buttafuoco.
I never heard "jabeep," but you have the only "speidies" in the country, I believe. On the other hand, if you lived just a little further west in NYS, you'd have a "beef on weck"—a real Buffaloism!
Here in TV they call living on a retention pond "waterfront". On LI we call retention ponds SUMPS, nobody wants to live on the SUMP, so they put a big high fence and shrubs to hide it-LOL
Well, in truth, as explained to me by a Villages construction employee, what are called "water views" here are indeed "retention ponds" or "sumps." As he said, to dig a necessary hole in the ground to allow for rain water catchment and call it a premium lot with a "water view" is a bit of a stretch!
According to my wife, if some one is not wearing any clothes, they are nekkid.
Is your wife from Iowa? That's what Radar O'Reilly (M*A*S*H) used to say ("nekkid"), and he was from Ottumwa, Iowa. At a workshop I once met a woman from there, who told me when people heard she was from there, they would invariably ask her if she knew Radar....
Maybe because they're from the Bronx.
Actually that's pretty close; the Kennedys did live for a period of time in Bronxville!
I've been told that nothing ever completely disappears from any dialect; it always turns up somewhere. For example, the R's missing in Massachusetts and Rhode Island ("pahk the kah") turn up in Texas and parts of the Midwest (when one does "the warsh"). There is no escape.
A young fellow in Casablanca, Morocco who was studying English once asked me if there are dialects in the U.S. I told him there are. He then asked if people from one region can understand the dialects of people from other regions. I replied as honestly as I could that sometimes it's yes, while at other times one is left completely clueless....
If anyone is particularly fascinated by this subject, I suggest reading the Bill Bryson book The Mother Tongue: English and How It Got that Way. At the same time it's both hilarious and very well researched. You'll find out how "colonel" came to be pronounced the same as a corn "kernel," what the only word in the English language is that is derived from Tagalog (the native language of the Philippines), and that in writing his plays, William Shakespeare created so many new expressions, of which some 1,800 still commonly exist in our everyday language—all created by one man!!!
Patty55
06-24-2013, 10:11 PM
[QUOTE=Quixote;697
Actually that's pretty close; the Kennedys did live for a period of time in Bronxville!
[/QUOTE]
They also lived on Independence Ave in Riverdale.
Schaumburger
06-25-2013, 01:36 AM
Do you push a grocery cart, buggy or basket?
I push a grocery cart. And I put pop in my grocery cart. Not soda.
Long ago I almost married someone from Texas. While we were first dating the first time I heard him say "I am fixing to go to the store" I asked him what was broken that needed fixing.
Schaumburger
06-25-2013, 01:37 AM
What do you wash the car with; a water hose or a hose pipe?
I wash my car with a water hose.
Schaumburger
06-25-2013, 01:39 AM
I grew up in Iowa, but moved to Chicago 34 years ago. For your last meal of the day do you call it supper (Iowa) or dinner (Chicago)?
Schaumburger
06-25-2013, 01:45 AM
I called my grandmothers "Grandma." My nieces who grew up in Wisconsin call their grandmother "Grandma." My niece who lives near Cincinnati calls her grandmother "Nana."
So what do your grandchildren call you, Nana, Grandma, something else, or what did you call your grandma? And is the grandma vs. nana title a regional difference?
TrudyM
06-25-2013, 02:33 AM
In Massachusetts:
grinder = sub sandwich
bubbler = water fountain
elastic = rubber band
soda = pop
cellar = basement
wicked good = awesome!
And of course we do not pronounce our r's... lol
I remember seeing signs in southern New Hampshire and parts of mass when I was a kid that read Tonic and grinders. Which was soda and a sub. Also I remember drug stores having signs that read Rx and sundries.
When I moved to Hawaii, I didn't understand a thing. Most locals are bi lingual , Mainland English and Pigin. Everything was try. Ie Try wait, Try think. and more betta (much better). And of course "Da kind" The one Hawaii term I always thought was descriptive was " talk story" As in " I don't go there for Da Kind food, just go for talk story"
I picked up the slang and my husband started talking like he was from New England go figure.
Quixote
06-25-2013, 02:49 AM
They also lived on Independence Ave in Riverdale.
Geez, that's right�in an appropriately stunning mansion overlooking the Hudson River; in my old age I'd forgotten that.... For those who'd have no reason to know, Riverdale is part of the Bronx; the nature of the area is such that people who live there never say they're from "the Bronx" but rather from "Riverdale"....
queasy27
06-25-2013, 07:38 AM
I grew up telling time by using the terms "until" and "after", such as 10 until 5 or 20 after 6. I was in Washington DC once and asked a police officer for the time and he said it was 10 of 10. I wasn't sure if that was 10 minutes until or 10 minutes after 10. I've since adopted the digital method, 10:15, 4:45, etc. It seems to be more universal.
Huh. I've never thought about it before, but I'd only use the "X of X" wording if the time was less than 30 minutes before the hour. And usually only 5 or 10. Like, I'd never say "30 of 4." I guess you need to be creeping close to the hour to make that phrasing useful.
I was taking a Samoan language class once and we were learning how to tell time, for which there is a specific syntax. The instructor told us if we used numbers to say something like "2:15," a Samoan would think we were referring to a hotel room number or the price of rice.
Being a perverse person -- and because I could never remember the correct syntax -- I determined that I would henceforth use the "2:15" wording, just to see what kind of looks people gave me. Sadly, no Samoan person ever asked me the time.
AriaGrandparents2013
06-25-2013, 07:50 AM
I grew up in Massachusetts and upon graduating from college started my first job in Harrisburg, Pennsylvania, where I often heard the following:
Living room suite........pronounced as "living room sweet" in PA.......suit in MA
Up the creek.....pounced as "up the crick"
Outen the lights........for shutting lights when leaving the room
Positive response especially from females to a statement with......"Ah Ahh"
buggyone
06-25-2013, 08:29 AM
I had a college roomie from the Laurel Highlands area of Pa. I asked him which can of soda was mine. He pointed to one and said, "That's urine." He meant "that's yours".
Quixote
06-26-2013, 03:56 AM
I had a college roomie from the Laurel Highlands area of Pa. I asked him which can of soda was mine. He pointed to one and said, "That's urine." He meant "that's yours".
I believe in that context it would be spelled "your'n".... When I was in college, back in the days when college was first being invented, I had a friend whose mother was a public school teacher who had a student named "Urine." Exactly this spelling. The teacher found it awkward and uncomfortable to address the student by her name like this, instead altering the pronunciation to "You-Rine" or "You-Reen," but the girl always corrected the teacher back to "Urine"....
Buckeyephan
06-26-2013, 05:29 AM
Great thread! I grew up in suburban Cleveland and was surprised when attending OSU in Columbus. People here put groceries in a sack not a bag. In Southern Ohio, they poosh the door open. Our neighbors had a dog named Bootch (Butch). Of course, there they warsh and wrench their laundry. My neighbor wouldn't let her son piece (snack) between meals. People on the East Coast seem to interchange bring and take. We use bring when we keep the item with us and take it when it gets left somewhere. I bring my lunch to work but I take my trash to the curb.
bluedog103
06-26-2013, 08:46 AM
I am originally from Wisconsin but when I joined the Army, my first duty station was in Alabama. Needless to say, their choices for words were very different from what I was used to, ie. toboggan is used to describe a hat worn by robbers (in Wisconsin, we called them stocking caps or beanies). According to Wikipedia: A toboggan is a simple sled which is a traditional form of transport used by the Innu and Cree of northern Canada. In modern times, it is used on snow to carry one or more people (often children) down a hill or other slope for recreation. Th
Where I grew up in Alabama a boggin was a wooly hat we wore in cold weather. I knew it as an abbreviation for toboggan. When we moved to NY I was a teenager and wondered why in the world anyone would try ride down a snowy hill on a hat. Took awhile to realize they were talking about a sled-like platform mainly used to slide into trees.
queasy27
06-26-2013, 11:08 PM
I'm not sure if these are regional differences, but what do you call a spatula --
this: http://1.bp.blogspot.com/-yqzNGNP71l8/T6NggRWZlYI/AAAAAAAAB7g/7pxHxzweAFM/s320/Screen+shot+2012-05-03+at+10.51.49+PM.png
or this: http://i.istockimg.com/file_thumbview_approve/5739103/2/stock-photo-5739103-kitchen-utensil-series-spatula.jpg
And what's a macaroon?
this: http://www.theculinarylife.com/images/randommacaroons.jpg
or this: http://mobile-cuisine.com/wp-content/uploads/2012/05/macaroons.jpg
dndlion
07-05-2013, 03:17 PM
Mine is actually more British -- they don't got to the hospital, they go to hospital. If on the freeways (yup, I'm from California), you don't travel in a direction it seems (that is, you don't go north or south), the freeway signs say The North, The South (guess hospitals don't need articles but directions do?).
The Villages truly confused me -- I was always under the impression that an avenue was a minimum of 10 blocks. Not here, I've seen 2-block avenues.
I always loved that folks from Jersey don't live in a town, they live off an exit. More than once I've heard take "Exit 135 [fill in appropriate number] and that's where we are."
First time I heard a soda called a pop, I literally looked around for my classmate's father.
Now, can someone please explain to me why island is pronounced "aye land" and not "is land" and Arkansas is "ar can saw" and not "ar can sass"? Didn't understand that when I first heard those words (and understood to what they were referring) and still don't understand the logic behind those pronunciations.
This reminds me of friends of ours when we were stationed in England. She was in a store looking for her husband and started to yell out his name. She got some interesting looks. His name was Randy...
graciegirl
07-05-2013, 03:45 PM
This reminds me of friends of ours when we were stationed in England. She was in a store looking for her husband and started to yell out his name. She got some interesting looks. His name was Randy...
And in The British Isles, they might pop by and knock you up.
Honest.
(It means knock on your door)
DougB
07-05-2013, 04:08 PM
And in The British Isles, they might pop by and knock you up.
Honest.
(It means knock on your door)
Whew, thought a wedding would be soon afterwards.
Patty55
07-05-2013, 04:24 PM
This reminds me of friends of ours when we were stationed in England. She was in a store looking for her husband and started to yell out his name. She got some interesting looks. His name was Randy...
Good thing his name isn't Willy.
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