Yes, Mr. Skagen. I would imagine that would cause some commination in Nordic nations where Southern isn't generally found. Tell ya what, I'll jump a plane to Copenhagen and start caddywompusing it up and it'll catch like fire. We'll have them handing out shotguns and shew by 2024!
Y’all’d’ve…..that’s a real word. If y’all’d’ve been raised right y’all’d know better than to question a southerners language skills. Bless your heart and quit gettin your panties in a wad.
Actually southerners have one of the most advanced languages, turning 3 words into one and it still makes complete sense. Not many languages have evolved like that
@@MelissaThompson432 I was just gonna say this! there was a recreation of Shakespeare's English (based if off of rhythm and rhyming) and when I heard the recording and they were like "see, this sounds like a mix of Queen's English and American English since they slip and went in different directions" and my first thought was, "Nooo, this sounds like Georgia Old lady Southern."
lol my dad is from massachusetts and he never get the jeet!!! i’m from south mississippi and that’s all we use in my household. my momma is the most southern thing😂😂
Oh my goodness! I think I've said this! Absolutely everything in the south can and will be used as a contraction. It drove my high school English teacher crazy! 😮
When I was little, I would ask how to spell certain words, only to be told they weren't "real" words. If they're not "real," why is everyone I know using them regularly? LOL
The closest I've ever been to the South is St. Louis, but my vernacular is oft peppered with a "y'all" or two. I've always wondered what the limit is on concatenating that kind of contraction. I'm happy to find now that there ain't none! Thanks, y'all! 😁👍
if something like selfie can make it into the dictionary because a lot of people use it then there is a whole mess of 'real' words that the south uses that should be in the dictionary
Ain't is now in the dictionary but I don't think it was then. My teachers got mad if you said it back then. They also didn't like you to use most contractions. I gotta go gitt'em,.y'all, actually anything really. I think I heard and old recording of myself as a kid. I think almost all the words ran together. I've lived all over the United States in the last 20 years, so I've lost the accent unless tired or mad. Lol😂
Clues: Non-Southerners believe this is ‘always’ a term of endearment, a phrase that is a double edged sword, it is favoured by grandmas and always uttered at the perfect moment. Answer: Bless Your Heart 😅
Growing up in the south as a child I heard the term bless his heart so much from friends of the family in church at BBQ or any occasion were adults were around and I thought it was because they liked me. Now I laugh anytime I hear someone say it to someone else
Love cattycorner. When I was little, we had two sectional sofas that were placed cattycorner. When we had to go to Catechism (religious ed.) classes, we used to call it "cattycorner."
Cattywampus. I've wondered about that word all my life. My Northern family used it all the time, but when I used it with others, they didn't have a clue.
By the time you travel west to old No Man's Land, cattywampus means diagonal. Diagonal would be at a 45° angle off of a true cardinal direction, if on land. On water, it would be like tacking the sail in relation to wind direction.
I can’t get over this southern word… “”wa’me”. It’s “want me to”. Like… wa’me stop by the store on my way home? There are so many words I pronounce that I just can’t write phonetically lol. But I definitely dont pronounce them like I’m suppose to.
Being Southern and living in Florida with the changing demographics, ain't many people left that understand me when I talk. Gets annoying as all get out. Took my late husband a few years to get the hang of it. Then along comes that comedian, “You might be a red neck if...” back when he was speaking Southern and holding it up on signs . Friends recorded it, and played it when we came to visit. I'm from central VA, this guy's wife is from the Shenandoah Valley. Our husbands laughed so hard they fell off of the sofa, pointing at us saying y'all talk just like that. I didn't find it funny, just a fact of life. How was I supposed to know “y'all'unt s'more'dat” isn't understood as Y'all want some more of that? Made sense to his wife and me. May the 3 of them rest in peace. 🕊️ Thank you for the video, greatly appreciated. Take care, stay safe, have a nice day. 👵🙂✌️🖖 😷 🙉🙈🙊 🌎☮️🕊️