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Why Do People in New Orleans Talk That Way?
Slate ^
| 9/8/2005
| Jesse Sheidlower
Posted on 09/10/2005 12:46:45 PM PDT by Mike Bates
If you've been listening to coverage of Katrina's devastation on the radio, you've no doubt heard the distinctive New Orleans accents of victims, officials, and rescue workers alike. Some of them speak with a familiar, Southern drawl; others sound almost like they're from Brooklyn. Why do people in New Orleans talk that way?
(Excerpt) Read more at slate.com ...
TOPICS: Culture/Society; News/Current Events; US: Louisiana
KEYWORDS: dialect; neworleans
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To: Mike Bates
2
posted on
09/10/2005 12:47:40 PM PDT
by
Dick Vomer
(liberals suck......... but it depends on what your definition of the word "suck" is.)
To: Mike Bates
3
posted on
09/10/2005 12:48:21 PM PDT
by
CAWats
(I don't have any confidence in my ability to fail - Kenneth Copeland)
To: Dick Vomer
They're lettin' Mary Landrieu do their talkin' for 'em.
4
posted on
09/10/2005 12:48:45 PM PDT
by
Mike Bates
(Irish Alzheimer's victim: I only remember the grudges.)
To: Mike Bates
This question, if asked about blacks, would be considered racist.
And since 80 % of New Orleans is black, one might conclude that it is, in fact, racist.
Or, at the very least, ignorant.
5
posted on
09/10/2005 12:51:07 PM PDT
by
airborne
To: Mike Bates
I just heard one man on the Fox News say, "We want $20,000 f#@king now." I will let you guess the race.
6
posted on
09/10/2005 12:53:01 PM PDT
by
GarySpFc
(Sneakypete, De Oppresso Liber)
To: airborne
Or, at the very least, ignorant.Read the story.
7
posted on
09/10/2005 12:53:34 PM PDT
by
Half Vast Conspiracy
(The left won't be happy until Judge Roberts performs an abortion on the Senate floor.)
To: Mike Bates
What kind of a question is that? Why do folks in the Carolina's speak the way they do> Why does anyone speak with a particular accent?
http://www.cofc.edu/~jacobsl/AmericanTongues.htm
8
posted on
09/10/2005 12:53:34 PM PDT
by
Banjoguy
(I will rot in Hell before I buy another Dell!)
To: Mike Bates
9
posted on
09/10/2005 12:53:50 PM PDT
by
lonevoice
(Vast Right Wing Pajama Party)
To: GarySpFc
That's not exactly what he said (I was watching also), but I think you got the sense of it.
10
posted on
09/10/2005 12:55:01 PM PDT
by
Mike Bates
(Irish Alzheimer's victim: I only remember the grudges.)
To: Mike Bates
A lot of Italians from New York migrated down there around the turn of the last century. Ironically settling in an area called the Irish Channel..
11
posted on
09/10/2005 12:55:06 PM PDT
by
cardinal4
("When the Levee breaks, Mama, you got to move....")
To: Mike Bates
The Cajun accent does sound a lot like Brooklyn.
To: Mike Bates
13
posted on
09/10/2005 12:56:06 PM PDT
by
Prince Caspian
(Don't ask if it's risky... Ask if the reward is worth the risk)
To: Mike Bates
others sound almost like they're from Brooklyn.
They're from old neighborhoods that have the same ethnic (mainly Irish) makeup of many of the old neighborhoods of NYC and New Jersey and arrived in NO roughly at the same time. There's an explanation about this in the intro of the great novel A Confederacy of Dunces. I'd post it here, but I lent my copy out.
To: airborne
Oh come on now. It wasn't asked about "blacks". If you had ever been to NO, you would have known just what the poster was talking about. Having spent much time in New Orleans myself and on the phone with business people there, I always thought it was so odd that they spoke with a New Joisy accent.....or as someone else said Brooklyn? At any rate, there are all kinds of accents in south Louisiana.
15
posted on
09/10/2005 12:57:33 PM PDT
by
daybreakcoming
(May God bless those who enter the valley of the shadow of death so that we may see the light of day.)
To: Mike Bates
Maybe the writer
hears differently?
Like a north eastern urban white liberal with faux superiority showing.
16
posted on
09/10/2005 12:58:41 PM PDT
by
llevrok
(Agassi Rules!)
To: Mike Bates
Everyone sounds like 'The Waterboy'... and as if they're in the 'Bourbon Bowl'.
17
posted on
09/10/2005 12:59:49 PM PDT
by
johnny7
(“And now, little man, I give the watch to you.”)
To: llevrok
Maybe the writer hears differently?Funny, you mention that. Whenever I'm out of the Midwest, I'm amazed at all the people with accents.
18
posted on
09/10/2005 12:59:58 PM PDT
by
Mike Bates
(Irish Alzheimer's victim: I only remember the grudges.)
To: airborne
I don't believe he is talking about the blacks in particular. He is right, a lot of people in New Orleans do sound like they are from Brooklyn. I really don't know where that comes from. A lot of people in the area obviously have a French accent too.
I was watching a re-run of Charlies Angels one day that supposedly took place in New Orleans. Everyone had a heavy southern accent and there was a car chase scene in the mountains. So much for research!
To: Mike Bates
Most American port cities are something of linguistic "islands" because of the large volume of immigrants, both foreign and domestic, who settle there. In the case of New Orleans, there were large numbers of immigrants from Ireland, Germany, and Italy, three of the five main ethnic groups in pre-World War II New York City. (Jews from Eastern Europe and Protestant descendants of British and Dutch settlers were the other two.) With much the same people as settled in New York residing in New Orleans, it is understandable that there would be common elements in the local dialect.
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