I'm really loving all this. Thank God our country is full of such diversity and differences in languages, dialects and expressions. I hope this doesn't change. God bless New Orleans.
The guy by himself in the grey suit is MY DAD! In a million years, I never thought I would see this again. I'd love to know where it came from. I do remember when they would play it on WYES...almost 40 years ago. My sisters and I would get so excited to see it. What a blast from the past. Thanks for posting!
Fascinating! I’m not sure what year this was filmed but I think we all can agree that bell-pepper caught on for the rest of the country. I’m in So-Cal and we call them bell peppers.
Glad that my husband's family still has the Yat sound, but every time we go into New Orleans, the dialect is not as strong. Instead, we hear more of the dull monotonous tone that is used in TV so much. Don't forget the overuse and abuse of the word "like", which is used after every single word.
Because the yat accent is the native-born local white New Orleans accent and New Orleans had a white flight happen and by the 1990’s most of the local whites left for the surrounding suburbs so now the yat accent is strong in the suburbs but weak in the city where it was born because local whites went from being the majority to now a minority in the city and since Hurricane Katrina in 2005, there has been an influx wave of out-of-town whites that has settled the city and they sure don’t have yat accents.
The new orleans accent has changed but it also depends on where you at in the city somebody from the garden district will not sound like somebody from 9th ward
When he asked, "if you wanted everything on a poboy how would you ask for it?" I paused the video and said to myself, "dressed." When I played the video and the guy said dressed I damn near fell over laughing. NOLA.
New Orleans is the only place that calls a water hose or garden hose a "hose pipe", if you go to any other city and call it that, they'll look at you funny, lol. 😂
I used to see this all the time on WYES - 12 growing up...what's up w/ this copyright nonsense?!!! Audio has been disabled because there was some un-cleared song?!!! screw yr lawyers! - I want to hear this again!
Lived in France a few years and if "langiappe" ever was a word there, I never heard it used or found anyone who understood it. But it may well have been one a very long time ago.
My dear friend from what I read in the dictionary about the word Lagniappe,they describe it as being an American French word.Which means that it probably originated right here in Louisiana,and not France.Furthermore,it stated that in Lagnipe was derived from the American Spanish expression " La Napa";lit,"The Gift".So,being a locally derived term,Lagniappe may never have been widely used overseas in France,friend.It,s original definition wad that it was a small gift given to a customer by a merchant at the time of a purchase.Later,it broadly came to mean something given or obtained gratuitously or by way of good measure; in other words,"Something extra",my dear friend.Merci beaucoup,mon Cher a,i,and God bless you,and kindly keep you well & safe.
@@dannetterousseau4095 he is "not informed" because he called them poor boys? That actually IS the original name. My late grandmother, born in 1905 and definitely not from money or Uptown, called them that.
Didn't used to be. Years ago (before 1980 or so), they were just peppers, or green peppers, or sometimes 'sweet' peppers. I watched national cooking shows and had cookbooks from outside New Orleans back then, and I remember.