Do ya'll talk funny?

   / Do ya'll talk funny? #1  

DFB

Elite Member
Joined
Dec 7, 2000
Messages
2,897
Location
Southern VT, Southern ME
Tractor
John Deere 4100 HST /410 FEL, R4s
I'm sure anyone who ever travels is quite aware of the different accents across the country but lo and behold a university level researcher created some maps showing regional favoritism of different words.

22 Maps That Show The Deepest Linguistic Conflicts In America - Business Insider

But I think wherever you live you no doubt assimilate the language. My buddy moved down to the Florida panhandle almost 20 years ago. He definitely sounds different now! ;)
After spending a decade in Maine I began to realize myself and the ex were pronouncing words just like all the local folks who grew up there.


Even living in new England there is distinct differences in Mass, Maine, NH, Vermont.
I remember when I first moved to Maine I wanted a hot sausage grinder with peppers, onion, and tomato sauce and they told me they never heard of it! :shocked:

And all they had was a sweet sausage link in a bun with mustard like a hot dog.


I grew up in a new England mill town with large Italian community. One time a visiting college student said to me "You sound like your from Chicago" :confused:


So what do folks from Chicago sound like anyways....gangsters? :rolleyes:
 
   / Do ya'll talk funny? #2  
Naw, we dont talk funny. Yall do. Heehee.
 
   / Do ya'll talk funny? #3  
I hail from Northern Vermont. Up there we tend to speak sparse and fast.

When I got down to Northern Virginia I gradually slowed down so the general public could understand me. Then later on I started training Army National Guard troops and found that down in LA (Lower Alabama) they still couldn't understand me. So I started talking like Jimmy Carter - rarely more than four words in a row without a pause. Stopped saying "depress the button" started saying "mash the button".

Pretty soon I was one of the more requested trainers.

I get back up to Ft. Drum to train, speech quickens.

You've got to adapt for your audience.
 
   / Do ya'll talk funny? #4  
Of course not! Texans don't talk funny! The rest of y'all do! :D
 
   / Do ya'll talk funny? #5  
Several years back, my family and I traveled to Cape Cod for a vacation. A waitress told me that I had a wicked accent, to which I replied that she was the one with the wicked accent, not me.
 
   / Do ya'll talk funny?
  • Thread Starter
#7  
I hail from Northern Vermont. Up there we tend to speak sparse and fast.

When I got down to Northern Virginia I gradually slowed down so the general public could understand me.
I get back up to Ft. Drum to train, speech quickens.

You've got to adapt for your audience.

I can relate to that I've been working with a fellow who hails from northern Maine and boy can he talk fast! Couple that with the accent and after he gets done I just look at him and say "now tell me that again but in English this time" Then he breaks out in a great big grin and we both have a good laugh :D
 
   / Do ya'll talk funny? #8  
If'n Y'all want to know whether you talk funny or not, use the Talk-to-text feature on your cell phones, My phone puts words up I never said,:D or maybe my cell phone is like my GPS device and talks funny;)

In Chicago they use terms like....Dis for this, dem for them, dose for those, youse guys, for Y'all, etc/
My all time favorite words was used by my Grandma, God bless her sole, She was Tennessee hillbilly, to us we use the word ( Yall ) her word was (You-un-ses) not sure how to spell that, but I hope it's close:D when I sleep over at her house I had to sleep on the ( set-tee ):confused:
 
Last edited:
   / Do ya'll talk funny? #9  
If'n Y'all want to know whether you talk funny or not, use the Talk-to-text feature on your cell phones, My phone puts words up I never said,:D or maybe my cell phone is like my GPS device and talks funny;)

No - you've probably got a Northern or California phone. Return it and ask for one that speaks your language.
 
   / Do ya'll talk funny?
  • Thread Starter
#10  


In Chicago they use terms like....Dis for this, dem for them, dose for those, youse guys, for Y'all, etc/


Hmm must be why :laughing:

I market all summer at a lake and ski resort town and many of my customers are 2nd home owners from lower NY state, New Jersey, and Connecticut. Most of them sound like the Sopranos the rest sound like Woody Allen. Then there are the locals. I have to play the crowd right so I have both a Yankees and Red Sox hat :rolleyes:
 

Tractor & Equipment Auctions

2011 STOUGHTON ZGPVW-535T-S-C-AR 53FT DRY VAN TRAILER (A50046)
2011 STOUGHTON...
Ground Hog Mini Trencher (A48837)
Ground Hog Mini...
1996 COUNTRY COACH INTRIGUE 40FT RV (A50046)
1996 COUNTRY COACH...
More info coming soon! (A48082)
More info coming...
New/Unused 12ft x 7.4ft x 8.2ft Container (A48837)
New/Unused 12ft x...
2014 Ford F-350 Altec AT200A Insulated Crane Service Truck (A48081)
2014 Ford F-350...
 
Top