Differences between the north and the south.
Replies
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EDIT: to clarify, I mean the Northeast, not the whole north :laugh:
Things I never heard/heard of growing up in the south:
Grinders
Package store or packie
Friendly's
Trader Joe's
Leafers
Johnny cake
Jimmies or shots
Paczki
To those of you that are going, HUH?!, that is, respectively
A sub or a po' boy
Liquor store
A restaurant
A grocery store
Tourists that come to New England to see the leaves in the fall
Like a cornmeal cake
Sprinkles
A jelly doughnut
Here are some southern terms/places that I grew up hearing/going to that I don't hear or find up here:
Catty cornered or kitty cornered (Diagonally)
Alligator pear (Avocado)
Sub (Grinder)
Chunk (Toss or throw)
Fix (not to repair, but as in "I'm fixin' to go to the store." Meaning, "about to.)
Coke (refers to pretty much any soda, or pop lol)
"I reckon" (I suppose.)
Hissy fit (temper tantrum)
Ain't
and my personal favorite, Well, bless your heart! Contrary to how it may sound, this is an INSULT! lol
Any others?
Are you sure we only lived 2 towns apart? Haha. Because I have NEVER heard of some of those Southern ones. I do use variations of 2 of those, though--I don't say "catty corner," but "cat-a-corner" (and that's how I've always heard it, as well), and I say "chuck" not "chunk." I've never heard chunk being used that way before, haha. As for the Coke being used as any soda, that's a new one to me, as well, and I've lived most of my life here in the South. They usually just say "Coke products" or "Pepsi products" and then go into the list of exactly what those are, usually followed by "sweet tea," if sweet tea wasn't mentioned first.
I lived in Michigan during the winter of 2008-2009, and I worked at a coffee shop, and it used to annoy me like crazy when people would ask "Got pop?" I couldn't understand them. They said it so fast, "GOTPOP!" I had to have a coworker explain to me that they were trying to ask if we sold soda. To this day, I hate hearing people say "pop" instead of "soda."
My family is from Baltimore originally, and they all say "warsh." I'm glad I didn't get into that habit.
A lot of my friend who are originally from New England say "wicked." But I like that one. It's different from what I hear here in Florida. I also love "Hella" because, again, I don't hear it often here!
One thing I have definitely also noticed between the north and south, having lived in both, are what I call "fashion mannerisms." Girls here in Florida will wear Ugg boots and sweaters in 80+ temps, and then complain nonstop that they're so hot, while girls up north will wear mini-skirts in below freezing temps and complain that they're so cold. I have to hand it to the North, though--it seems like here in the South, people wear their trashyness with pride...racist bumper stickers, signs, and t-shirts abound, while I didn't see any of that when I lived up North. I'm sure there's trashy racist people up north, too, but at least it wasn't encouraged behavior, like it is down here.
Haha, maybe it's because my mom grew up in Texas? IDK. And I totally know what you mean, like those stupid *kitten* "heritage, not hate" stickers and shirts. No, racist, it's hate. I hate rednecks :grumble: lol
Yeah, me too. And for many reasons!
Haha, the talking really fast thing definitely applies to me. My dad used to yell at me if I talked "too fast" when I was a kid. Though I never noticed if certain regions did it or not...0 -
uffda...what you don't say it?? I guess it's sorta a North Dakotan swear word
We also say 'ofer' Like you see a cut dog in the window, and you exclaim 'OFER CUTE!!"
apparently we say bag wrong as well, it sounds more like 'beg' but I don't hear it, I've tried a million times to pronounce it the way my husband does, but I just can't do it. My kids are starting to get confused when I tell them to go get the bag
and don't for get the extra long O we add DakOOta and MinnesOOta...
I would have never noticed things if my husband, being the military guy he is, hadn't moved me away from there 10 years ago!0 -
I have to add this:
When my son was little I would tell him to go in "yonder", meaning other room...got that one from my grandma.
I grew up in the city, but we moved to the country when my daughter was a year old. A few years ago, we were at my mom's house (in the city) helping her do yard work. Grandma told her to sweep the grass off the "curb" - she had no idea what a "curb" was - we don't have curbs on rural country roads. Then she asked Grandma where I had gone & grandma told her that I was in the "Alley" (easement behind houses) & my daughter was "the Bowling Alley"??? :laugh: :laugh: :laugh:
Gotta love us country people!0 -
How about being courteous or polite?
I was shocked when I was up in PA once (I'm from TX) and the person in front of me (we were going to the mall) just let the door close right in my face. It happened several times while I was up there. Here, people will usually hold the door for you and say thank you if you hold it for them. Up in PA, I didn't get any of that sort of politeness from people. Not even from the person I'd gone to visit. And the whole time, I was thinking, WTF, RUDE! :laugh:0 -
I'm a Hella girl here.
Lived in northern Minnesota for 8 years and innevitably adopted the regionalism of "borrow me".
Example
"Hey, can you borrow me $5"
other regionalisms include: dontcha know and you betcha0 -
and my personal favorite, Well, bless your heart! Contrary to how it may sound, this is an INSULT! lol
Any others?
LOL, that one cracks me up, I was just having a discussion about that phrase. Also, in my house I say Dinner my husband says Supper. Sheesh.................Supper, silly.
What's wrong with Supper? ;-)
Haha, Supper to me is a non existant meal. It makes me giggle that he's trying to teach our 2 year old to say Supper instead of Dinner. Supper as lunch just threw me off.0 -
How about being courteous or polite?
I was shocked when I was up in PA once (I'm from TX) and the person in front of me (we were going to the mall) just let the door close right in my face. It happened several times while I was up there. Here, people will usually hold the door for you and say thank you if you hold it for them. Up in PA, I didn't get any of that sort of politeness from people. Not even from the person I'd gone to visit. And the whole time, I was thinking, WTF, RUDE! :laugh:
See, I'm the opposite. I find people up north, at least the areas I've been, to be much nicer. Honestly, some of the nicest, most polite people I've encountered, especially in hospitality places, were in New Jersey! haha. Down south, the whole "southern hospitality" thing is completely lost on me...the most "southern" people who claim to be all about their "hospitality" only seem to offer it if you look like you've just went "muddin'" or "wrassled" a few pigs, or participated in a rodeo.
I never did understand the supper thing, either. "Supper" to me is non-existant. I eat breakfast, then lunch, then dinner. Anything in-between or after those is a snack.0 -
Being from the south here are some of my personal favorites
chester draws = chest of drawers
bigger than all get out = extremely big cause all get out is apparently huge!
rainch off that rainch = rinse off the wrench
she's got a case of the red *kitten* = she's upset about something
its comin' a turd-floater = a very heavy downpour
AND MY #1 personal favorite
"well thats gonna go over about like a turd in a punch bowl" = which means people arent really gonna take to kindly to it = someone is going to have a case of the red *kitten* over it.0 -
How about being courteous or polite?
I was shocked when I was up in PA once (I'm from TX) and the person in front of me (we were going to the mall) just let the door close right in my face. It happened several times while I was up there. Here, people will usually hold the door for you and say thank you if you hold it for them. Up in PA, I didn't get any of that sort of politeness from people. Not even from the person I'd gone to visit. And the whole time, I was thinking, WTF, RUDE! :laugh:
See, I'm the opposite. I find people up north, at least the areas I've been, to be much nicer. Honestly, some of the nicest, most polite people I've encountered, especially in hospitality places, were in New Jersey! haha. Down south, the whole "southern hospitality" thing is completely lost on me...the most "southern" people who claim to be all about their "hospitality" only seem to offer it if you look like you've just went "muddin'" or "wrassled" a few pigs, or participated in a rodeo.
I never did understand the supper thing, either. "Supper" to me is non-existant. I eat breakfast, then lunch, then dinner. Anything in-between or after those is a snack.
i loved the people i have encountered up north and I need you to come back down to the south! dont let a few jerks be the poster children for southerners. Fort Worth Texas has some of the nicest people you have ever met and if they treat you like crap let me know! lol0 -
I've lived in both.....for the sake of keeping peace I will just say I prefer the North and leave it at that.0
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I lived in Michigan during the winter of 2008-2009, and I worked at a coffee shop, and it used to annoy me like crazy when people would ask "Got pop?" I couldn't understand them. They said it so fast, "GOTPOP!"
..and it doesn't bother you that everyone down south calls everything Coke.....even when it's a Pepsi product?
**EDIT**
My bad, your from FL....they don't do that there. Although it's about as south as you can get, I don't count most of FL as a "southern" state. The Northern bits I do...but the rest, not so much. I've lived there too ;P0 -
East coast - soda West coast - pop
If you ask for a soda on the West coast,
they will tell you they don't make them.
East coast - frappe West coast - shake
If you go East and ask for a Vanilla shake,
you will be very disappointed. On
the West coast, if you ask for a frappe,
no one will know what you are talking about.0 -
oooh cherry co-coler
cherry coca cola!0 -
*Ya'll.*
I live in Texas but born/raised in Chicago and I can't stand it. I say "you guys" and people freak the eff out. One time this chick said to me, "I'm not a guy", I just rolled my eyes but really I want to tell her to stfu because she was an effing reknob.0 -
I'm from Georgia and we say kitty-corner. And any soda is a Co-Cola. Never heard anyone say WARSH back home, except my mom who is from California....don't know were she picked that up. For the life of me when I say toilet or boil...it comes out without the i...So it is TOY-LET and BOL. Confuses the heck out of people.
I thought Trader Joe's was from California. I did not even know that they had them outside of Cali, until I joined this site...of course I am assuming you meant the grocery store and not some trader named Joe.0 -
By the way, it's "Lose-iana" not "Louise-iana" and "Nah-Lins", not "New Or-leens."
Mildly disagree (and, yes, I'm from New Orleans).
It should be "lou-EE-zee-AN-nuh". Can't stand when people say "Lose-iana". :explode:
But, yeah, "new Or-Leens" drives me crazy! :laugh:0 -
Nods. I love this! My friends in Louisiana looked at me like I had three heads the first time I asked if we were going to "make a run to the Packie"0
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Oh! And when I lived in Florida, everyone had INsurance. (I had formerly worked at an InSURance company when I was first out of school.) I still fight with my husband about this.0
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For some bizarre reason, people in Westchester NY(Yonkers mostly) call a hero sandwich a "wedge".0
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How about being courteous or polite?
I was shocked when I was up in PA once (I'm from TX) and the person in front of me (we were going to the mall) just let the door close right in my face. It happened several times while I was up there. Here, people will usually hold the door for you and say thank you if you hold it for them. Up in PA, I didn't get any of that sort of politeness from people. Not even from the person I'd gone to visit. And the whole time, I was thinking, WTF, RUDE! :laugh:
See, I'm the opposite. I find people up north, at least the areas I've been, to be much nicer. Honestly, some of the nicest, most polite people I've encountered, especially in hospitality places, were in New Jersey! haha. Down south, the whole "southern hospitality" thing is completely lost on me...the most "southern" people who claim to be all about their "hospitality" only seem to offer it if you look like you've just went "muddin'" or "wrassled" a few pigs, or participated in a rodeo.
I never did understand the supper thing, either. "Supper" to me is non-existant. I eat breakfast, then lunch, then dinner. Anything in-between or after those is a snack.
i loved the people i have encountered up north and I need you to come back down to the south! dont let a few jerks be the poster children for southerners. Fort Worth Texas has some of the nicest people you have ever met and if they treat you like crap let me know! lol
I am down south. Never been to Texas, though, but my cousin, who is as un-Southern as you can get, loves living in Texas. I think he lives in Houston.
My parents definitely say "chester drawers." Another one I didn't pick up on.
123456654321--What part of Florida did you live in? I grew up in Tampa, and now I live in a REALLY small hick town about 20 minutes from Tampa. I've been all over South Florida and North Florida, and I've never heard people call all sodas coke, unless it was, of course, a coke. I've actually traveled all over the South, and have never heard people call every soda "coke," either. This is a completely new one to me.
Gwen--none of my California friends call soda, and I have quite a few friends living there/from there. In fact, most of the ones I know hate it when people say "pop." Also, east coast frappe, west coast shake? The only thing people here call frappes are those crappy mcdonalds "drinks," and the people who love them who try to order a FRAPPUCCINO from Starbucks, should they decide to step up their coffee game. A shake is a milkshake, here.
This is all proof that everyone, everywhere, is different. :laugh:0 -
As for the I being lost in toilet, my mother grew up in Texas and has a southern drawl, so she loses the I...therefore, I do too. I cannot say toilet right, I think it sounds so hoity toity when I say it with the I. It comes out like "toll-it". So I'll tell my boyfriend we're out of "toll-it" paper, and he'll say, you mean toilet paper? :laugh: I also say fire like fahr. Oil is still oil though, haha.0
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