Southern English

/ Southern English #301  
I always took it as people that live and walked the hills,, like mountain goats.. or hill billy,, Hill being mountain,, goat being billy.. Lou

It's actually an Irish term & was first applied to Irish arriving in NY.
 
/ Southern English #302  
It's actually an Irish term & was first applied to Irish arriving in NY.

Interesting. Do you have a reference. I'd never heard that but given the hills of Ireland it does seem plausible. It seems odd though that the term quickly became associated with southern Appalachia which isn't an area that lots of Irish settled.
 
/ Southern English #303  
Interesting. Do you have a reference. I'd never heard that but given the hills of Ireland it does seem plausible. It seems odd though that the term quickly became associated with southern Appalachia which isn't an area that lots of Irish settled.

I thought Appalachia was settled by English, Scots and some Irish. There is a Celtic cultural link there of some sort.
 
/ Southern English #304  
Originally Posted by IslandTractor View Post

That's not Southern, that's non college black.

Yep Ebonics

Y'all have obviously never lived in Memphis. If you moved there and wondered why they talk about Memphis city schools being so poorly ranked all it would take to convince you is one local news story on the TV that involved a (college educated) teacher and hear them talk.
 
/ Southern English #305  
It's actually an Irish term & was first applied to Irish arriving in NY.

Source?

Another item from Wikipedia:

The Appalachian region was largely settled in the 18th century by the Ulster Scots, Protestants who migrated to the Irish province of Ulster during the Plantation of Ulster in the 17th century. The majority of these people originated in the lowlands of Scotland. In America, the Ulster Scots became known as the Scotch-Irish. Harkins believes the most credible theory of the term's origin is that it derives from the linkage of two older Scottish expressions, "hill-folk" and "billie" which was a synonym for "fellow", similar to "guy" or "bloke".

Although the term is not documented until 1900, a conjectural etymology for the term is that it originated in 17th-century Ireland for Protestant supporters of King William III during the Williamite War.[1] The Irish Catholic supporters of James II referred to these northern Protestant supporters of "King Billy", as "Billy Boys". However, Michael Montgomery, in From Ulster to America: The Scotch-Irish Heritage of American English, states "In Ulster in recent years it has sometimes been supposed that it was coined to refer to followers of King William III and brought to America by early Ulster emigrants? but this derivation is almost certainly incorrect In America hillbilly was first attested only in 1898, which suggests a later, independent development."


Steve
 
/ Southern English #306  
That all sounds well and good but I think I will stay with my grandfather's wording.. He came to Oklahoma from the Carolinas in the 1880s,, He was the one that said we walked those ridges so much that we were known as Hillbilly as in Mountain goats.. I am sure there are hundred other versions.. But that's the one I tell my grandkids and great grandkids. if they ever ask..:). Lou
 
/ Southern English #309  
I always liked ... Yeet yet? = you eat yet?
 
/ Southern English #310  
My mil is old school Va and there hardly a time were together that some new to me old time phrase comes out, my bil and I have talked about writing a book. lol

Does anyone ever use the term "foot accelerator" ? she and my wife do.lol

I grew up in SC hearing the term "Foot Feed".
 
/ Southern English #311  
I grew up in SC hearing the term "Foot Feed".

These youngsters don't remember when the dimmer switch was on the floor. The last one I had was 91 Ford F-150

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/ Southern English #312  
These youngsters don't remember when the dimmer switch was on the floor. The last one I had was 91 Ford F-150

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My old memory is slipping. I had so many with the dimmer switch on the floor, upper left side, of course, that I'm not sure anymore which ones; maybe my '89 F250 was the last one. And how many remember (or even knew of) cars with manual transmissions that had the starter switch under the clutch pedal; just turn the key on, press the clutch all the way to the floor and that engaged the starter.
 
/ Southern English #313  
Or you turned the key on, then pushed a button to activate the starter.

I drove something with a manually engaged starter with a pedal on top of the transmission hump. Push on the pedal to engage the gears, then a little more to operate the electrical switch. Can't remember what it was.

Bruce
 
/ Southern English #314  
Or you turned the key on, then pushed a button to activate the starter.

And just the opposite. On my 1962 Austin Healey Sprite, you turned pm the key, then pulled a knob on the dash to engage the starter.
 
/ Southern English #316  
Help me remember. I learned to drive in my Dad's 1953 Chevrolet pickup. Was there a starter button (switch) on the floorboard?

Am I correct in remembering that it had a manual choke knob on the dash?

Steve
 
/ Southern English #317  
Dimmer switches on the floor was a pretty standard thing. But then my 1955 Cadillac Coupe de Ville had an automatic dimmer switch; an electric eye (I guess you'd call it) mounted on top of the left end of the dash. The lights from oncoming traffic would cause my headlight to change to low beam, and it you wanted them on high beam anyway, you could just put you hand over that thing to shut out light from getting to it, and the headlights changed back to high beam.
 
/ Southern English #318  
Help me remember. I learned to drive in my Dad's 1953 Chevrolet pickup. Was there a starter button (switch) on the floorboard?

Am I correct in remembering that it had a manual choke knob on the dash?

Steve

Steve, I don't recall the Chevy pickups having a starter button on the floor, but I do think you had the manual choke knob on the dash.
 
/ Southern English #319  
Yep 53 chevy pickup had a foot starter switch
 
/ Southern English #320  
I seem to remember a foot starter on a '55' Willys PU I had...seems the foot button was actually part of the starter itself?
 
 
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