crash325
Elite Member
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.
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.
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.
Originally Posted by IslandTractor View Post
That's not Southern, that's non college black.
Yep Ebonics
It's actually an Irish term & was first applied to Irish arriving in NY.
I can believe that. Most of us don't pahk ah cahs in Haavad yahd either except when the tourists are around.
Lol!:laughing:No, most of us don't as I believe Hahvid Yahd is pedestrian traffic only. :laughing:
Wow, 999th post!!!
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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".
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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Or you turned the key on, then pushed a button to activate the starter.
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