Posted on 05/18/2004 8:09:41 AM PDT by OldBlondBabe
Not to be outdone by Ebonics in California, the Southern Association of Colleges & Schools is requesting billions of federal dollars to teach "Y'allbonics" in all classrooms south of the Mason-Dixon line. Included here are some samples of "Y'allbonics." If you do not understand any of them, contact a Southerner for an explanation.
HEIDI: (noun) Greeting.
HIRE YEW: (complete sentence) Remainder of greeting. Usage: "Heidi, hire yew?"
BARD: (verb) Past tense of the infinitive "to borrow." Usage: "My brother bard my pickup truck."
JAWJUH: (noun) The state north of Florida. Capital is Lanner. Usage: "My brother from Jawjuh bard my pickup truck."
BAMMER: (noun) The state west of Jawjuh. Capital is Berminhayum. Usage: "A tornader jes went through Bammer an' left $20,000,000 in improvements."
MUNTS: (noun) A calendar division. Usage: "My brother from Jawjuh bard my pickup truck, and I ain't herd from him in munts."
THANK: (verb) Cognitive process. Usage: "Ah thank ah'll have a Coke."
RANCH: (noun) A tool used for tight'nin' bolts. Usage: "I thank I leff my ranch in the back of that pickup truck my brother from Jawjuh bard a few munts ago."
ALL: (noun) A petroleum-based lubricant. Usage: "I sure hope my brother from Jawjuh puts all in my pickup truck."
FAR: (noun) A conflagration. Usage: "If my brother from Jawjuh don't change the all in my pickup truck, that thing's gonna catch far."
TAR: (noun) A rubber wheel. Usage: "I hope that brother of mine from Jawjuh don't git a flat tar in my pickup truck."
TIRE: (noun) A tall monument. Usage: "Lord willin' and the creek don't rise, Ah sure hope to see that Eiffel Tire in Pars sometime."
RETARD: (verb) To stop working. Usage: "My grampaw retard at age 65."
FARN: (adjective) Not domestic. Usage: "I cuddint unnerstand a wurd he sed .must be from some farn country."
DID: (adjective) Not alive. Usage: "He's did, Jim."
ARE: (noun) A colorless, odorless gas; oxygen. Usage: "He cain't breathe give 'im some ARE!"
BOB WAR: (noun) A sharp, twisted cable. Usage: "Boy, stay away from that bob war fence."
OURSELFS (noun) "our selves" or "ourselves" Ex. "We brung some stewed turnips to Aunt Vespa but sheuz already dead so we ate um' ourselfs."
You know I'm Southern, because I'm thinking a deep fried hotdog doesn't sound too bad. Have you ever heard the KY Headhunters song that refers to a "slaw-burger, fries and a bottle of Ski?"
born: barn
borned: birthed.
don: having a terminal illness
dayid: dead
paints: pants
Not most of the ones I've met. *sigh* :^)
Thisun ain't rite. It's not "did"...."He's day-ud Jim" if you're from Bamma. If you're from Tin-nasee it's "He's daid Jim."
You-ins is another frequently used term in Tenn. as in "Youins ain't been hrere much of late."
Idano bout that ole boy.
Peel---peel a potato, or take a peel (pill).
Others: "Dern tootin'", "sho'nuff", "britches" "well ah'll be...." and we eat supper in the South.
The Southern language is so colorful.
Agreed. Singular person is still "you".
"Y'all" is reserved for the collective.
"Y'all's" is possesive for the collective.
Using "y'alls" as plural is just bad grammar in these parts.
Has tarnation been explained? Like "what in the tarnation is that?" (I'm thinking it's short for "the entire nation"?)
One of the joys of my life is listening to old hillbillies talking...
shed: Rid of "He got shed of that girl purty quick when his missus found out."
and one my grandfather (Tenn) used: "Them jaspers" = crooks.
"Them jaspers stole that propitty clear as day."
Hey, on the way back from my father-in-law's house the other day, Lynyrd Skynyrd came on the radio.
My wife was cracking up when I was getting our 3-year-old daughter to say:
"Hey, how bout playing sum Skynyrd, mayun!"
Yes, "yuns" is "you ones."
We also do a lot of figuring here too - "Ah figure so" = "I agree" or a different meaning would be, "Ah figured she got a hitch in her git along" = I think she has bee in her bonnet" (or are bees in bonnets also Southern?).
The plural of y'all is all-a-y'all.
LIB (Southern shorthand)
It's singular or plural just as "you" can be either.
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