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T O P I C    R E V I E W
one_dog_per_acre Posted - Dec 13 2011 : 04:00:31 AM
I know what a spiggot is, because my step sisters live in Lowell, MA.

They know "I'm good," means I don't want anymore coffee, "Give me a pop," means I want 7-up, not a punch in the face, because I am from Oregon.

What do you say, that will make me go, huh?



“It always looks darkest just before it gets totally black.”-Charlie Brown
25   L A T E S T    R E P L I E S    (Newest First)
FarmDream Posted - Dec 14 2011 : 5:55:13 PM
Here we say "want a warmer" for a refill on coffee. There's also "shut the front door!" for something surprising. We have a chupacabra as some mythical monster. I remember they had an episode on X Files once about it.

~FarmDream is Farmgirl Sister #3069

Live Today, Cherish Yesterday, Dream Tomorrow

http://naturaljulie.etsy.com
http://julie-rants.blogspot.com
RedHoopWoman Posted - Dec 14 2011 : 1:07:07 PM
Loyce I grew up speaking both French and Assiniboin (a Native American Siouan dialect) and have since adapted and learned a bit of Spanish and a whole lot of German,I think knowing these different languages leads to a deeper connection and understanding so I love the art of language.
I have also heard alot of French butchered as well!
As far as all these different terms,I grew up partly in Montana and partly in Colorado and do alot of horse training but find I have to translate alot of my terms when working with people and thier horses,such as:

Rimfired:Means you got your rope under your horse's tail and had a hell of a wreck.
Farted Off:Bucked off,usually after you've gone and rimfired your horse,example "That young buckaroo went and got himself farted off that snorty little colt"
Snorty:wild eyed and ready to buck with no prior notice,can also be referred to as "having a belly full of bedsprings"
Chilled:someone who's afraid to get back on thier horse after rimfiring or getting farted off example,the guy that rimfired his colt and got farted off yesterday
Rodear:gathering cattle in the open without pens and holding and working them with horses
Jingler:the first guy up in the morning catching the horses
Outfit:The cattle ranch you ride for,your pickup truck or your saddle
Riggin':your saddle or all your gear or maybe just the cinch and latigo,if your saddle ends up under your horse's belly and he's tearing it up bucking then your riggin wasn't tight enough
Chouse:to put pressure on and move cattle or pre-ride workout for your horse
Brogans:lace up packer boots worn in toe numbing cold weather
Crock:old cripple cow
Leppie:orphaned cow
Dink:usually an unkind reference to a poorly bred horse,my Husband's horse is a good example of a "Dink" but he loves him so I've quit lying and telling people we're just boarding him for someone else
Gunsel:a person with little knowledge related to horses or cowboying,example: someone who doesn't know which end of the horse gets up off the ground first or who ties thier bridle reins to the tie post
Rimrocked:can't ride any further,country too rough (very dependent on perception of horse and cowboy riding him)
Springer:cow that's due to calf soon
Sougan:bedroll
Slick:unbranded cow
Wild Rag:a scarf tied around the neck that is perfectly acceptable for rough cowboy heterosexual men to wear in wild colors or even in pink with polka-dots

I could go on all day at this but you all get the idea I'm sure



"Today's Mighty Oak is just Yesterday's Nut"
traildancer Posted - Dec 14 2011 : 10:00:01 AM
Another one--in Oregon there is a coastal town called Coquille. Being a French speaker I pronounced it correctly--"kohkeeyuh". That is as close as I can get with English spelling. No one knew what I was saying. They pronounce it "kokeel".

And Coeur d'Alene, Idaho. Again, I pronounced it in French. Not so. And I find myself pronouncing Spanish placenames, surnames, or words definately in Spanish. I have just begun to notice this. It's almost as if I have mental block against anglicizing them.

The trail is the thing.... Louis L'Amour
traildancer Posted - Dec 14 2011 : 09:54:06 AM
When a friend of mine worked on a ranch in Colorado an individual from the South called it a "willbarrah". Becky told him it was "wheelbarrow". He argued so they looked it up in the dictionary and he said the word was not in there. He was looking for "wi".

The trail is the thing.... Louis L'Amour
musicmommy Posted - Dec 14 2011 : 06:39:50 AM
My friend from Canada and I were just talking about this a bit and how you say 11:45. Is it "quarter to 12", "quarter of 12", ?

One good thing about music, when it hits you, you feel no pain.
Bob Marley

www.becomingwendy.wordpress.com
kristin sherrill Posted - Dec 14 2011 : 06:07:44 AM
Last night while talking to my daughter about how mild the weather has been here so far, she said we did get a little snow already. And I thought of my MIL, who would say when it snowed just a little bit to lightly cover the ground, that we got a "skif" of snow. And she'd hold up her index finger and put her thumb right down below her nail. "Just a skif", a light covering of snow.

When I first met my MIL, she said things I had never heard before. Or done either. She'd say y'inz too. And called all the girls sis. I'll have to think some more on her. My husband says tar for tire. Far for fire. Ruf is roof. I had a really hard time understanding them.

Kris

Happiness is simple.
Annab Posted - Dec 14 2011 : 03:58:23 AM
A tap is a water faucet (my folks call it this, I call it this as do some people from The Great White North)

An eye is the stove burner...learned this from my Southern husband

A tile is the concrete pipe water runs through

a buggy is the shopping cart

dinner is what you eat late at night as in 6 p.m. or there abouts supper is something like Sunday afternoon lunch

you crank your vehicle to turn it on

mash buttons means to press


batznthebelfry Posted - Dec 14 2011 : 02:52:56 AM
oh another thing that drives me 'batty' up here is they call corned beef- beef brisket, but if your southern you know this just ain't right!!!! Drove me nuts for years & still can't get anyone to give me a real beef butt or shoulder if I call it a brisket...I hear a lot of kids call their Mom or Mother, Mummy like the english do...that must be where the coffee regular came from...all that tea drinking with milk & sugar...lol...I call steel cut oats as stone cut oats...that throws alot of people...I have always said corned meal to mean cornmeal...have no idea where that one came from...lol.....Home we always said the war of northern aggression instead of the Civil War....If you ain't southern your a yankee is one I heard alot growing up....& one of my all time favorites...Why butter my biscuits! meant to express surprise or amazement...'Who let the cows out' when there is a lot of traffic....Michele'

Chickens rule!
The Old Batz Farm
Hen #2622
acairnsmom Posted - Dec 13 2011 : 8:33:00 PM
I said something about the grocery buggy at church a couple of years ago and literally had a young man I didn't know stop, turn around and say what? Then berate me for calling it a buggy instead of a cart. Couldn't believe he reacted so violently! In church no less! I showed him! I still call it a buggy! LOL

Audrey

Good boy Hobbs! I love and miss you.
Ninibini Posted - Dec 13 2011 : 8:07:29 PM
Back home we called it a carriage, Mary Beth, but here in Pittsburgh they call it a buggy. I don't like the thought of putting my food in anything related to a buggy, so I just call it a shopping cart - can't go wrong there! ;)

Farmgirl Sister #1974

God gave us two hands... one to help ourselves, and one to help others!

www.papercraftingwithnini.myctmh.com

Okie Farm Girl Posted - Dec 13 2011 : 7:23:02 PM
How about this? Evidently, what you call that thing you push around in the grocery store to load your groceries in indicates where you live in the US. I call it a grocery buggy. What about you?

Mary Beth

www.OklahomaPastryCloth.com
www.Oklahomapastrycloth.com/blog
The Sovereign Lord is my strength - Habakkuk 3:19
Ninibini Posted - Dec 13 2011 : 5:56:31 PM
SUCH a great subject!!! LOVE IT!!!

Growing up in Massachusetts and Rhode Island:

A "bubbler" is a water fountain.

A "blinker" is your vehicle's turn signal.

"Soda" and "pop" and "tonic" all mean the same beverage - just depends upon what part of the states you were from.

A "hoagie" and "grinder" and "sub" - yep, got those, too!

A "cabinet" (or more specifically, a "COFFEE cabinet") is a shake - not made with milk, but rather heavy cream (to DIE for!!!).

If you're near "New Beige" - that's actually New Bedford, MA.

If you want to grab a bite with your friends, you ask, "Jeet?" to which the response is, "Jew?" (Here in Pittsburgh they say - "Jeet Jet?" "Nah - Jew?")

A dynamite is a sloppy joe.

A "gagger" (well actually, it's pronounced "gaggah") is a really nasty, tightly packed small hot dog/weenie covered in a weenie sauce that contains only-God-knows what... You eat 'em cuz it's tradition, but once you do you always wonder what the heck you were thinking... Let's just say, not even Alka Seltzer can spell relief for it! LOL!

"Stuffies" are stuffed quahogs (and a quahog is a large hardshell clam, good for chowder and ground up in stuffies or clam cakes - YUMMMM!... the small soft shelled ones are called "steamers" or "little necks" - those are the ones you steam and dip in butter... the small hard shelled ones are called "cherry stones" - and THOSE are the ones you make clams casino with!) Don't even get me started on the difference between a clam bake and a clam boil....

We have rotaries in MA and RI, too - do you? They're crazy little rounds in the middle of a road that guide you to one of many different exits... Insane stuff, let me tell you!

In the winter when I was a kid, we wore "rubbers" over our shoes. I never heard the term "galoshes" until I was a young adult. I'll never forget it... We were at a church dinner at the holidays, discussing winter wear... I caused quite a stir when I declared we ALWAYS wore "rubbers" when we were kids! LOL! Good grief!

Here in Western PA you "woosh" or "worsh" your clothes....

A "nebby" is a person who is just plain nosey...

Y'inz isn't a form of vegetable - it means "you all" or "you ones" in Pittsburgh-ese. It also may be pronounced "Yunz." In RI and MA, however, we just say, "you guys."

"Dahntahn" is Pittsburgh's way of saying "downtown..." "Uptahn"... well, you get the idea...

In the winter, the roads and sidewalks aren't slippery here in the 'Burgh - they're "slippy."

People here also like to drop the phrase "to be," when something needs to be done... I.e. "The car needs wooshed."

A lot of people here do their grocery shopping at Gine Iggle (Giant Eagle).

"Jumbo" is baloney, which really confused me when I moved here, because when I was a kid, "Jumbo" was the main attraction - the big elephant - at one of the local zoos... 'Freaked me out when I heard they ate it!

"Chipped ham" is what we RI-ers refer to as "ham sliced paper thin." But it's not regular ham... it's kind of a pressed ham with extra fat inside from what I can tell. My hubby loves it - especially in "ham barbecues" (a slow-cooked combination of chipped ham, barbecue sauce, sweet pickle relish on a knot roll).

What drives me cuckoo is when they call sandwiches "sammitches," or "sammeetches." Dear Lord, I'd gladly pay higher school taxes just to hear people say that correctly!

A "dill" is a "good deal."

When people clean their homes they say they've got to "red up" (get ready).

When they want to see their kids clean up, they say, "Your face (or your hair) needs scrubbed!"

And every Sunday, the stores, the malls, the roads - EVERYTHING - looks abandoned and desolate... and yet, every so often, an entire neighborhood echos with screams from all kids aged from one to ninety-two... Why, you ask? Well, after all... It's "Stiller" time! EVERYONE - and I mean EVERYONE - is completely decked in Black and Gold (something I learned quickly to do when I first moved here - it's a matter of life and death!). And everyone at the stadium is swingin' their "terrible tahl" to cheer on our team - GO BLACK AND GOLD!!!

Giggles -

Nini



Farmgirl Sister #1974

God gave us two hands... one to help ourselves, and one to help others!

www.papercraftingwithnini.myctmh.com

batznthebelfry Posted - Dec 13 2011 : 2:29:25 PM
I love this. i have lived in so many states...Calif, Oregon, Missouri,Georgia, Arkansas & now massachusetts & I love all the different way people say things...up here a regular coffee is not black but with cream & sugar.....I still have so much of my southern ways that after 15 yrs I still get looks when I say Ya' all,Supper (for dinner)...I say soda for soda pop,crik for a tiny shallow creek, crawdads for what they call crawfish up here....they say tire for tar like on a roof up here, patten for pattern also....Caa for Car.....I say What's up to mean how are you? ..frapp is said for a thick milkshake up here....I still say alot of things where you drop the g's like goin' fixin'...lol....Michele'

Chickens rule!
The Old Batz Farm
Hen #2622
Okie Farm Girl Posted - Dec 13 2011 : 2:27:18 PM
Well, I guess this Okie who had a stopover in East Tennessee will join in. In Blaine, TN we asked if we could "carry you" anywhere (drop you off), if you wanted a "code drank" (a coca cola, etc), "straked mate in a poke" (a piece of fatback with a streak of meat in a sack), "of the night" instead of "at night" and if you 'reckoned' where something was.

In Oklahoma, we have 'bar ditches' (the dip alongside the road), 'pond dams' (the rim around a pond) and if you are cheap, you're "tight as Dick's hatband". Oh, and if you want something really badly and quickly it's "Like a duck on a Junebug."

Mary Beth

www.OklahomaPastryCloth.com
www.Oklahomapastrycloth.com/blog
The Sovereign Lord is my strength - Habakkuk 3:19
FebruaryViolet Posted - Dec 13 2011 : 12:51:58 PM
Hiccup! Me, too ;)

"Hey, I've got nothing to do today but smile..."
The Only Living Boy in New York, Paul Simon
acairnsmom Posted - Dec 13 2011 : 12:47:26 PM
Slurp, ahhhh....love gin!

Audrey

Good boy Hobbs! I love and miss you.
FebruaryViolet Posted - Dec 13 2011 : 12:35:48 PM
I'll happily join you in a Gimlet, Audrey--one of the "original" cocktails from the 1900's! My husband was a mixologist in a revived prohibition era speak easy and I was his guinea pig. Out of all the experiments, I really fell in love with the Sidecar and The Gimlet!!!

"Hey, I've got nothing to do today but smile..."
The Only Living Boy in New York, Paul Simon
acairnsmom Posted - Dec 13 2011 : 12:15:17 PM
"Oh shoot!" Yes, that's one we use a lot! And then I forgot the obligitory "Whoa!" when you want someone to slow down, be it talking or driving their car. And "get your giddy-up on" when you want some one to move a little faster.

Jonni, I'm not sure I knew the ingredients in a gimlet. That sounds right up my alley! Anyone wanna join me in one?

Audrey

Good boy Hobbs! I love and miss you.
Catherine L Posted - Dec 13 2011 : 10:54:09 AM
In Texas when we are about to do something we say "fixin to". For instance I might say "I am fixin to go to town".

~Cathy~
Farmgirl 2428 http://www.my-fairhaven.blogspot.com/
http://adaywithnonnaandboompa.blogspot.com/
FebruaryViolet Posted - Dec 13 2011 : 10:39:46 AM
Well, a "gimlet" to this girl is a refreshing summer cocktail with half parts gin (or vodka) and Rose's lime juice ;)

We also say "warsh" here, for wash. Well, I don't, but my family does.

"Hey, I've got nothing to do today but smile..."
The Only Living Boy in New York, Paul Simon
heritagehunter Posted - Dec 13 2011 : 10:34:19 AM
I grew up with mid-western farm folk, so everyone thinks I talk funny.

The three meals a day are breakfast, dinner (lunch to most), and supper is the evening meal.

I took my dinner to school in a bucket (what everyone else calls lunchboxes).

The grocery carts in stores are buggies.

That's all I can come up with at the top of my head, but I know there is more.
beekeepersgirl Posted - Dec 13 2011 : 10:34:04 AM
A gimlet "up North" is a little tool with a wood handle used to start a hole prior to inserting a nail or a screw.

beekeepersgirl #691

Pleasant words are as an honeycomb, sweet to the soul, and health to the bones.
acairnsmom Posted - Dec 13 2011 : 10:28:57 AM
Let's see, we have draws here and they are not sketches they are depressions in the grounds (like a dry river bed). We have a creature here called a Jackalope. It's a cross between a jack rabbit and an antelope.



A soddie is a house made with chunks of sod usually erected by a Sodbuster.

Luanne, isn't a gimlet an evil eye?

Audrey

Good boy Hobbs! I love and miss you.
traildancer Posted - Dec 13 2011 : 09:42:15 AM
Growing up in Alaska, we called them "snowmachines" or sometimes by the brand name if we had more than one as in "I get to ride the Ski-doo" or "No way, (insert little brother's name!) I get the Polaris." Down in the Lower 48 people looked at me funny when I would say that. Apparently down here one rides a snowmobile and ski resorts use snowmachines to create snow. Obviously that was not necessary in Alaska!

Also we called it "Washington State" to not be confused with "Washington" the Capitol.

And we used, "I'll go with."

And I disagree with the detractors who criticized Sarah Palin for droppin' her final "g's" People down here do it also!

I grew up calling it a "crick" instead of a "creek".

I know that "rubber" in New Zealand means "eraser"!!!! And to "take a douche" is to take a shower. Needless to say, some very embarrassed foreigners.

The trail is the thing.... Louis L'Amour
one_dog_per_acre Posted - Dec 13 2011 : 06:33:42 AM
People from New England have referred to us as Western. I always associated it with Country and Western, which I am not.



“It always looks darkest just before it gets totally black.”-Charlie Brown

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