hey Ya'll I'm Fixin' to get me a Coke

hooah_mj
hooah_mj Posts: 1,004 Member
edited September 20 in Chit-Chat
Ok, I grew up (in West Texas) and have always said "ya'll" and spelled it that way, NO not Y apostrophe ALL....regardless of my husband's corrections!

The hubs grew up in upstate NY...now that's hilarious! (no offense, so don't go off on me)...he still says EARL, get it.

Anyway, I also say "fixin'" WITHOUT the g...

& when I ask him to bring me a "COKE" I don't want the brand! I want a Big Red (fairly exclusive to Texas)...

I LOVE THIS KINDA STUFF...the hubs says that Texas "AIN'T" the only place with this kind of nutty stuff...

What can "Ya'll" share...?!

I'd love to educate myself
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Replies

  • khskr1
    khskr1 Posts: 392
    I grew up in Nebraska, but now live in Virginia. I hear people say "makin groceries". It drives me nuts!! My husband is from upstate NY too (west side), and he says "blatting". that was a new one for me. As in "quit your blatting or I've give you something to blat about".
  • sinman22807
    sinman22807 Posts: 66 Member
    I just moved back to MI from Texas. I loved Texas!!!!! Anyways i was raised in NC and we talked the same way you do! When i moved to MI I was about 10 years old. They MADE me go to speech class cause no one could understand my accent and the way i talked. it took 5 whole years for me to talk like they do here in MI. But i still talk the southern way half the time. Just without the deep southern accent.
  • I have always done it ::: y'all ::: b/c it was the compound of ::: you all :::, but that is just me, and I type it and talk it all the time. Another one my grandma always says is ::: tumpted ::: like the vase tumpted over and water got everywhere...:huh:
  • AnneElise
    AnneElise Posts: 4,206 Member
    oh my this is funny! We moved to Tennessee from Michigan and I have had this SAME convo with my kids (I am a high school teacher).

    The biggest arguement that we have is the Coke one! I am trying to explain to them that COKE is a brand and that they should be saying Soda or Pop or Soda-pop. I say Pop and they think thats the funniest thing they have EVER heard.

    Here in TN (not for all some still use "fixin") the new working for "fixin" is "finna"... it means the same thing and they say it like crazy. It drives me up a WALL. I make them correct it with "about to".

    I think its a regional thing!
  • elf1590
    elf1590 Posts: 28
    i live in southwest virginia, and work with a bunch of guys from ohio. they say that i've got a 25 letter alphabet, meanin i leave off my "g"s. like you said, fixin, walkin, talkin, etc. they also think it's weird that i call it soup beans....they seem to think it's called bean soup. also the fact that i say tin and ten the same way. aunt is the same as ant. i'm sure there are plenty more but those are the main ones i can think of at the moment!
  • I spent some time in Kansas (originally from Buffalo) and I always say that "I am fixin to do somethin" My husband....being a smart *kitten*.........says "what are you repairing to do?" hysterical!
  • questionablemethods
    questionablemethods Posts: 2,174 Member
    I'm getting my PhD in linguistics, so I have a healthy appreciation for regional differences. I'm from Minnesota and we have a pretty hilarious accent (or so I've been told). Coke/soda is called "pop" here and we pronounce "milk" like "melk".

    I really like when people say "might could" (like "We might could go to a movie tonight.") It isn't part of my dialect, but I think it sounds pretty great.
  • I was born in Yonkers, NY but lived first 12 years of my life in Monroe, NY which then was the country, 50 miles north of city. Then moved to GA. So been in south 30 years or so and have picked up on the Y'all for sure but get me around my N-yorker family and my Yankee accent comes out! Love the south but a Damm Yankee and proud of it! This is fun to see where everyone is from as lots of people don't stay where they were born.
  • I was born in Yonkers, NY but lived first 12 years of my life in Monroe, NY which then was the country, 50 miles north of city. Then moved to GA. So been in south 30 years or so and have picked up on the Y'all for sure but get me around my N-yorker family and my Yankee accent comes out! Love the south but a Damm Yankee and proud of it! This is fun to see where everyone is from as lots of people don't stay where they were born.

    Oh, forgot to mention in NY we call it Soda or Soda Pop not Coke! And...."How Ya Doin?" lol
  • snorker88
    snorker88 Posts: 179 Member
    I'm from the UK, and you all pretty much confuse me....!!

    Although I'm sure you wouldn't have a clue what I'm talking about either!!:laugh:
  • tntrav44
    tntrav44 Posts: 100 Member
    In Pittsburgh, we called chopped ham "chipped ham," say "pop," instead of "soda" or "soda pop," and we say "yinz guys" instead of "you" or "y'all." Pittsburghers are also famous for saying "sammiches" instead of "sandwiches." We also pronounce our own town name as "Picksburgh."
  • LongMom
    LongMom Posts: 408 Member
    Eh? We call it POP up here in Canada :) Coke is a brand name for Petes Sake ;)
  • xecila
    xecila Posts: 99
    Oh gosh, I've got a ton of these.. I've lived in Iowa most of my life, but my fiance's family is all from Kansas and Tenessee. His mother has spent years in both states, and my fiance has picked up her very mixed accent. He tends to pronounce his E's like I's.. like one time he said the word "sentence" like "sintince" and I giggled. A lot. He also has a lot of gramatical errors in his speech. He uses "is" when he should use "are" like: "Is you gonna eat that?" Also, instead of putting your veggies in the fridge, he puts them in "the icebox".. that one still makes me laugh, because I always picture little old grannies sayin' that, not my 22 year old fiance.

    My mom's ex boyfriend, now he had a ton of linguistic quirks. He's lived in Iowa, Arizona and Texas, I believe.. Pants were called "Britches", the floor was called "the deck", and he didn't wash the car, he "worshed" it.
  • bellinachuchina
    bellinachuchina Posts: 498 Member
    Me too!!!

    I'm from the Buffalo, N.Y. area, and I've been stuck in G.A. for a little over 5 years & will be here until I finish my degree! It's been a great experience for me, as I met my Husband and we've had two children, but I miss home. My Husband is from Atlanta, and we couldn't be more different, regionally! He says "finin' to", as in going to do something, and I say "pop". Our accents are completely different! People look at me like I'm an alien when I speak in public. lol
    I was born in Yonkers, NY but lived first 12 years of my life in Monroe, NY which then was the country, 50 miles north of city. Then moved to GA. So been in south 30 years or so and have picked up on the Y'all for sure but get me around my N-yorker family and my Yankee accent comes out! Love the south but a Damm Yankee and proud of it! This is fun to see where everyone is from as lots of people don't stay where they were born.
  • Capucine7
    Capucine7 Posts: 40
    I'm from Quebec in Canada and we actually call pop a "soft drink".
  • tlilly80
    tlilly80 Posts: 27
    In Wisconsin we drink from a BUBBLER not a water fountain. A water fountain is something you throw your pennies in!
  • esco2186
    esco2186 Posts: 50 Member
    Ok, I grew up (in West Texas) and have always said "ya'll" and spelled it that way, NO not Y apostrophe ALL....regardless of my husband's corrections!

    The hubs grew up in upstate NY...now that's hilarious! (no offense, so don't go off on me)...he still says EARL, get it.

    Anyway, I also say "fixin'" WITHOUT the g...

    & when I ask him to bring me a "COKE" I don't want the brand! I want a Big Red (fairly exclusive to Texas)...

    I LOVE THIS KINDA STUFF...the hubs says that Texas "AIN'T" the only place with this kind of nutty stuff...

    What can "Ya'll" share...?!

    I'd love to educate myself





    good lord big red! ohhh how i miss it! :( haha i miss having big red and some blue bell vanilla ice cream haha but now you can get blue bell anywhere, but not big red (breaks my heart a little) lol
  • hollymires
    hollymires Posts: 117
    the accent sounds cute even just reading it! hahaha
  • Behavior_Modification
    Behavior_Modification Posts: 24,482 Member
    I am from Milwaukee, Wisconsin.

    We call it soda.

    We call a water fountain a bubbler.

    We say "ya know" after a sentence a lot. Ex: It sure is windy outside today, ya know?

    We tend to hold out our long O's, so it is more like, ya knooow?
  • spicy618
    spicy618 Posts: 2,114 Member
    I'm from NY and have been living in Florida for years.

    Mash as in "mash the numbers on the phone"
    do, fo, mo - door, for, more
    "didn't pretty much do nothin"

    LOL. I love it!
  • Lisa03
    Lisa03 Posts: 18
    I'm from Chicago & married a man from Minnesota lol We are so different in how we talk he calls that body of running water a Crick I say creek (like a creek in the floor) We say couch he says sofa or davenport, we call them gym shoes or sneakers he say tennis shoes. We always have debates on how things are said. His Minnesota friends say that I have a Chicago accent!

    Lisa
  • toots99
    toots99 Posts: 3,794 Member
    I'm originally from Jersey and I live inTexas...you can't imagine how I get teased about my accent! :laugh:

    One of my good friends is from Nebraska and she has a funny accent...we'll tease her because she'll say something like "Bring it" and it sounds like "Breen it". She doesn't "hang out", she "hanes out". And a hanger isn't a hanger, it's a "haner". :laugh:

    I've found that in Texas, most people either have no accent at all (even the Texas natives) or their accent is so strong I can hardly understand them!

    I think the "melk" accent is funny. Also, my boss says mill instead of meal, dill instead of deal, and pell ell instead of pale ale. I've never heard that accent before moving to Texas!
  • hooah_mj
    hooah_mj Posts: 1,004 Member
    I'm from the UK, and you all pretty much confuse me....!!

    Although I'm sure you wouldn't have a clue what I'm talking about either!!:laugh:

    @ Snooker88

    UK, now there's a place to go if ya wanna get the LOOK! When we where stationed near Harrogate it just about made me bonkers to ask for the potty! Here's just a smidget of what we got out there:

    "No. We don't have a bath room, you will have to go down to the Bath House for that. The Loo is in the back."

    "I can get you a serviette, we don't provide napkins." (took me a month to figure that one out!)

    I still say "pram" and I love "tea" esp. "high tea" only I could never get any ice out there! Hilarious, one of the best places I've ever lived!
  • LittleSpy
    LittleSpy Posts: 6,754 Member
    I really like when people say "might could" (like "We might could go to a movie tonight.") It isn't part of my dialect, but I think it sounds pretty great.

    I'm from South Carolina but I don't really sound like it. I still live in SC and people ask me where I'm from (yep, ended that phrase with a preposition) all the time.

    So, while I tried hard in middle & high school to train away my southern accent, the things my high school friends from MI and NY mad fun of me for were the "might could" and "listen at" (instead of "listen to"). They said I talked all normally and then I'd catch them off guard when I threw in some southern crap like that. So, of course I trained myself out of saying those things, too. :laugh:

    So, yeah, I've lived in SC all my life and I had never heard of the southerners calling soda "coke" thing until just a few years ago. And I've still never actually heard anyone do it. Or, maybe I have and I just assumed they were actually talking about Coke. :tongue:

    My 86 year old gramma says "kindly" instead of "kind of" or "sort of." For example, instead of saying "I kind of twisted my ankle" she would say "I kindly twisted my ankle."

    Edit: I was just reading through others' responses, and, yep, people down here certainly say things like "mash" (instead of press) and "britches" (for pants).
    Also, something we say here that I think varies a lot regionally is "cut off the light." I think I normally say "turn off," but, as explained above, I'm a linguistic anomaly in this region. Of course there is a lot of "fixin' to" and "ain't" and "y'all" here. "Tin" and "ten" are pronounced the same. I was a server at a very southern restaurant when I was in high school & we gave customers numbers as they ordered & then called their numbers to bring them their food (ugh). Once I was standing there yelling "TEN! NUMBER TEN!" over and over again and no one would come. Finally someone was like "What?" and I repeated "TEN" And the were like "TIIIIIIN?" and I said "Yeah, tEn." They hadn't understood what number I was saying because I was pronouncing it correctly! :noway:

    And more:
    And one thing my bf makes fun of me about is I apparently say "Mu*zimm" instead of "Mus*e*um." The other day, I noticed someone else saying it that way, too.

    I also hear a lot of "a-- verbing" like "He was a-hootin' and a-hollerin.'"

    And instead of "almost" or "nearly" a lot of people said "like to." Like... "I like to died."

    And then there's this whole other language of southern ebonics. :noway: Last weekend, one of my neighbors repeatedly yelled "You is so ungrateful." And that's just one of the phrases I actually understood - about 75% of the time I have no idea what is being said. I hear people say all kinds of crazy stuff here. I can't help but wonder how in the world the sentences they say even formed in their heads. :laugh: They make talking & listening so much more difficult than it needs to be. :tongue: I have never understood a word one of my uncles has ever said except "Hey Julie!" because his accent is so weird and thick & he talks so fast. I'm not even joking. :laugh:
  • Leigh14
    Leigh14 Posts: 871 Member
    i live in southwest virginia, and work with a bunch of guys from ohio. they say that i've got a 25 letter alphabet, meanin i leave off my "g"s. like you said, fixin, walkin, talkin, etc. they also think it's weird that i call it soup beans....they seem to think it's called bean soup. also the fact that i say tin and ten the same way. aunt is the same as ant. i'm sure there are plenty more but those are the main ones i can think of at the moment!

    Hey! I'm from SWVA, too. :flowerforyou: Where are you located? I'm near VT.

    I say Ya'll! Not the appropriate way of typing it, but definitely the way I say it! It's NOT y'all! :laugh: My boyfriend is from here, too, but grew up in a different county (seems like a different country sometimes!). Instead of saying "That reminds me of ... " he'll say, "That puts me in mind of ..." Ugh. For some reason, I can't stand that! lol, his mom does it, too.

    And, it's POP. Not Soda. Not Soda-Pop. :wink:
  • hooah_mj
    hooah_mj Posts: 1,004 Member
    Ok, I grew up (in West Texas) and have always said "ya'll" and spelled it that way, NO not Y apostrophe ALL....regardless of my husband's corrections!

    The hubs grew up in upstate NY...now that's hilarious! (no offense, so don't go off on me)...he still says EARL, get it.

    Anyway, I also say "fixin'" WITHOUT the g...

    & when I ask him to bring me a "COKE" I don't want the brand! I want a Big Red (fairly exclusive to Texas)...

    I LOVE THIS KINDA STUFF...the hubs says that Texas "AIN'T" the only place with this kind of nutty stuff...

    What can "Ya'll" share...?!

    I'd love to educate myself


    good lord big red! ohhh how i miss it! :( haha i miss having big red and some blue bell vanilla ice cream haha but now you can get blue bell anywhere, but not big red (breaks my heart a little) lol

    @esco2186
    You better betcha...the Base Commissary in the UK (yes, England) had a promotional thing ONCE. & my hubs backed up the PickUp and loaded ALL 52 cases of Big Red (minus 1...couldn't be that stingy) It didn't last me a season!
  • hooah_mj
    hooah_mj Posts: 1,004 Member
    I'm from South Carolina but I don't really sound like it. I still live in SC and people ask me where I'm from (yep, ended that phrase with a preposition) all the time.
    ...
    Edit: I was just reading through others' responses, and, yep, people down here certainly say things like "mash" (instead of press) and "britches" (for pants).
    Also, something we say here that I think varies a lot regionally is "cut off the light." I think I normally say "turn off," but, as explained above, I'm a linguistic anomaly in this region. Of course there is a lot of "fixin' to" and "ain't" and "y'all" here. "Tin" and "ten" are pronounced the same. I was a server at a very southern restaurant when I was in high school & we gave customers numbers as they ordered & then called their numbers to bring them their food (ugh). Once I was standing there yelling "TEN! NUMBER TEN!" over and over again and no one would come. Finally someone was like "What?" and I repeated "TEN" And the were like "TIIIIIIN?" and I said "Yeah, tEn." They hadn't understood what number I was saying because I was pronouncing it correctly! :noway:

    And more:
    And one thing my bf makes fun of me about is I apparently say "Mu*zimm" instead of "Mus*e*um." The other day, I noticed someone else saying it that way, too.

    I also hear a lot of "a-- verbing" like "He was a-hootin' and a-hollerin.'"

    And instead of "almost" or "nearly" a lot of people said "like to." Like... "I like to died."

    And then there's this whole other language of southern ebonics. :noway: Last weekend, one of my neighbors repeatedly yelled "You is so ungrateful." And that's just one of the phrases I actually understood - about 75% of the time I have no idea what is being said. I hear people say all kinds of crazy stuff here. I can't help but wonder how in the world the sentences they say even formed in their heads. :laugh: They make talking & listening so much more difficult than it needs to be. :tongue: I have never understood a word one of my uncles has ever said except "Hey Julie!" because his accent is so weird and thick & he talks so fast. I'm not even joking. :laugh:


    SUCH ARE THE THINGS THAT FLAVOR LIFE ! :love: Love-love :smooched: it...............&

    it's now TIN 'TIL TIN, so I'd best be headin' out to the gym before I go searchin' thru the "ice box" again...

    can't hardly wait to get back and fill up on ya'lls (don't even try and lecture me on this one...ha) posts!
  • mommared53
    mommared53 Posts: 9,543 Member
    I'm originally from Missouri. That's Missouree not Missoura.

    I drink pop and eat breakfast, dinner and supper.

    I now livei n "Warsh"ington State.

    Didn't know until a few years ago (and I'm in my 50's) that I was mispronouncing Wisconsin. I pronounced it "Wes"consin. Apparently, "Wis" is supposed to sound like "wish" but without the h.

    And "pin" is actually pronounced diffenently than "pen" according to my son.

    I sit on a couch.

    A number of years ago, I found out that I supposedly pronouce July wrong. As in the month of July. I pronounce in with a long u as in juju beans. My neice claims it's pronounced like Juh-lie.

    I don't know, but I think Missourians need to teach everyone else how to speak proper English. :laugh: :laugh: :laugh: Just kidding. :bigsmile:
  • LittleSpy
    LittleSpy Posts: 6,754 Member
    A number of years ago, I found out that I supposedly pronouce July wrong. As in the month of July. I pronounce in with a long u as in juju beans. My neice claims it's pronounced like Juh-lie.

    I had to look this one up because I say "Joo-lie" too. :laugh: Thought I was going to have tweak my speak again but nope -- both are correct. :wink:
    http://dictionary.reference.com/browse/july

    Just like greasy. Gree-zee or Gree-see.
    http://dictionary.reference.com/browse/greasy

    Also my name. Julie. Joo-lee or Juh-lee. But, please, never "jjjjeeeeeewwwwwwww-llleeeeeee." :sick: (which is totally how my mom says it :laugh:)
  • mama22girlz
    mama22girlz Posts: 291
    we call it pop in Canada, and we also have Ice tea, which I think is called sweet tea in some states? Ice tea is like the nestea or similar products, its cold and sweet. Sometimes I ask for Icetea in the States and I get cold TEA.. no sugar :huh:
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