I Hate Dialysis Message Board
Off-Topic => Off-Topic: Talk about anything you want. => Topic started by: twirl on August 05, 2009, 02:46:44 PM
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fixin' to
( fixing too) is the national verb of Texas do you know anymore for Texas
what is your national verb
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no clue
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I live in Michigan - highest unemployment rate in the nation, so I think ours is "laid off".
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The really official verb for Tennessee is volunteer.
But it ought to be "care to"
As in I don't care to help out, which means, I am glad to help.
Backwards. I know.
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"cut off" as in I am going to cut off the lights. No one who is local says "turn off".
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California
"be back"
as in "I'll be back" (the terminator is governor)
:rofl;
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it does not have to be the real national verb :cheer:
and a state can have more than one :flower;
and you can make it up ;D
another Texas verb
gettin'
I will be a gettin' home.
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jeet
As in are you hungry? Jeet?
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Washington State: Hella - as in Hella Cold or Hella Hot....
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That's more of an adjective :)
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freakin' is another verb used many times in Texas
we consider it the politer choice of words
I wish crawford would come up with a few --- ha ha
and gonna
I'm gonna git to it..... ( git - get )
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California......................" we be broke"
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i've been trying...did you do y'all come?
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ya'll come is perfect :thumbup;
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whatcha
As in "Whatcha doin' tonight?" TEXAS
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That must be a transplanted yankee Texan talking.
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" fixin' to" is well-used in North Carolina, too (as in ... I'm fixin' to go to the store. I'm fixin' to cook supper. I'm fixin' to whip your ass.)
"don'tcha" is another NC verb (as in ... Don'tcha love yankees who don't talk like we do?)
"ain't" is another -- NC talk for "aren't" (as in ... Ain't you fixin' to tell me something?)
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how about "come go" used together (as in ... Y'all come go with us.)
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The other California ones listed above are good. I used to live in the San Francisco Bay area and I would have to say it was "chill" as in chill out dude. Which of course took the place of "mellow" as in DUDE! mellow out.
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check-it out
Short for "look here"
sharp
an answer to: "how are you?" in place of fine thanks you say "sharp"
I "tune" you instead of I am telling you.
How zit? instead of How are you?
we say walk on the "pavement" instead of sidewalk
and we call a traffic light a "robot"
vans or trucks are called "bakki"
izit? instead of "is it so?"
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That must be a transplanted yankee Texan talking.
Actually, no. I was born and raised in Texas, never lived anywhere else. BUT I am told all the time that I sound like a Yankee!!! I talk really fast and I don't really have a Texas accent.
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I don't have a Texas accent either -- unless I choose to.
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Exactly! Me too! :rofl;
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I have enough accent for everyone in Texas
>:(
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cool...
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I think it would be cool if we could compare all our accents somehow. Mine is a bit odd. I speak very clearly, say some things with a little hint of Jamaican accent which gets very strong if I'm talking to another Jamaican.
In Jamaica we say "Walk Good" instead of "Take Care".
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I have enough accent for everyone in Texas
>:(
I have enough of my remnant NY accent for everyone in Virginia ;^)
Lived in NY for 20 years and Virginia for 34, but no one would ever mistake me for a native Virginian.
I haven't heard this in a bit, but I do recall in younger years hearing locals use of the term "throw down" as either a noun or a verb.
We're going to throw down this weekend.
We're having a throw down this weekend.
As in party, party, party.
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For Vermont my first guess would be "Ayot" - probably not spelled correctly. It just means kind of like - well, ayot - mostly it means yes, sometimes it means I heard what you said, and sometimes the old timers just say it when there isn't anything else to say
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Another local verb is "pull to" as in close. Could you pull to the door?
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I have enough accent for everyone in Texas
>:(
I have enough of my remnant NY accent for everyone in Virginia ;^)
Lived in NY for 20 years and Virginia for 34, but no one would ever mistake me for a native Virginian.
I haven't heard this in a bit, but I do recall in younger years hearing locals use of the term "throw down" as either a noun or a verb.
We're going to throw down this weekend.
We're having a throw down this weekend.
As in party, party, party.
Bobby Flay does a throw down cooking shot...
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I have enough accent for everyone in Texas
>:(
I have enough of my remnant NY accent for everyone in Virginia ;^)
Lived in NY for 20 years and Virginia for 34, but no one would ever mistake me for a native Virginian.
I haven't heard this in a bit, but I do recall in younger years hearing locals use of the term "throw down" as either a noun or a verb.
We're going to throw down this weekend.
We're having a throw down this weekend.
As in party, party, party.
Throw down also refers to fighting. I grew up in Connecticut, close to NY so I have a slight New York accent you can hear when I say couwfee. Like I have a cup of couwfee in the morning. We were close enough to Massachusettes that sometimes I say get in the caa. I would have to call it a New England accent.
Not fo nuttin but fuhget aboud it!
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For part of my life I lived in Yorkshire, in the UK. Locals there used the second person singular, for example:
Wheear 'ast tha' bin since ah saw thee? On Ilkla Moor baht 'at.
Where have you been since I saw you? On Ilkley Moor without a hat.
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Growing up in Jamaica, one of the funniest things was listening to British tourists in particular trying to understand a very broad Jamaican accent and be understood in return. The stuff of farce I tell you. My Grandad was English and, 'cor blimey, he lived in the West Indies from the age of twenty but never did get a handle on the Jamaican patois thing. The cook would say something to Grandpa and he'd turn to Bama (my Granny, who was born in Jamaica herself) and say "Molly, what is the good woman trying say?" As kids we'd die laughing.
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Places I have lived in order and length of time...
Richmond, Virginia - 12 years
Scottsdale, Arizona - 2 years
Longmeadow/Springfield, Massachusetts - 4 years
Roanoke, Virginia - 2 years
Eastern North Carolina - 7 years
Woodstock/Atlanta, Georgia - 6 years
My accent depends on who you ask. Most southern friends (used to anyway) say I sounded like a Yankee. My best friend who lives in Maine says I have a sweet southern honey accent.
My favorite local saying is a New England one. Wicked, meaning really cool. "Are you going to the party tonight? It's gonna be wicked." Keep in mind I lived there for high school.
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In Jamaica we say "Walk good", instead of "Take care" when we say bye to someone.
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Awesome is the word of the day today. Old lady here. Not up with the groove yet.
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Bubba (your best guy friend and Twirl's Alan)
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"He's country as cornbread" = he was born and raised in the country, and his speech pattern and behaviors are not very sophisticated
"Bless her heart" = you can say anything you want about a person as long as you precede it with, "Well bless her heart". Basically, she's very sweet, you'd never say anything bad about her, but she just did something you can't help but comment on.
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donchano that fuggeaboudit is one word? I'm from new York too. (and Itailian)
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Crabbin'. Never to catch crabs, fish for crabrs, or crabbing. Crabbin'. Western WA.