Southern English

/ Southern English #361  
Thread is so long to check...has anyone said....Dad Gum or Shaw ...yet ? How about when you were little in the South and in trouble and you heard..." I'll snatch a knot in your tail " or ...Now you're a gonna get a Whuppin' ??
 
/ Southern English #362  
In an earlier post, I mentioned something my dad used to say when he forgot something. It was, "I clear-light forgot it." I don't know for sure that anyone else from any other family said that, but everyone understood what it meant. Anyone else ever hear that expression?

Then, there was my mom who, when she wanted something clarified, said, "You'll have to be more pacific." I don't know it that was a southern thing or not, but I've heard lots of people say "pacific" instead of "specific."
 
/ Southern English #363  
Thread is so long to check...has anyone said....Dad Gum or Shaw ...yet ? How about when you were little in the South and in trouble and you heard..." I'll snatch a knot in your tail " or ...Now you're a gonna get a Whuppin' ??

We said snatch a not in your head

Sent from my iPhone using TractorByNet
 
/ Southern English #364  
I always heard "bust a knot on your head / in your tail". It was usually my head or tail they were talking about!
 
/ Southern English #368  
I have heard "dad-gumit" and "gol-durned" many times. Has the term for a suitcase been mentioned: "grip"?
 
/ Southern English #369  
I have heard "dad-gumit" and "gol-durned" many times. Has the term for a suitcase been mentioned: "grip"?

My Dad would say: "I'll knock a fart out of you that will whistle like a freight train!".
 
/ Southern English #370  
I have heard "dad-gumit" and "gol-durned" many times. Has the term for a suitcase been mentioned: "grip"?

My Dad would say: "I'll knock a fart out of you that will whistle like a freight train!".
 
/ Southern English #371  
Anybody in this thread marry a girl with "firewood freckles?"
 
/ Southern English #373  
Was always told that there was no g in exit, as I always and still do say egsit.
 
/ Southern English #375  
Well since I married my wife I learned what a hose pipe was= garden hose or what a boiler was =pot to heat water in but then I cut her some slack cause after all she is a Auburn Tiger fan.
 
/ Southern English #376  
/ Southern English #377  
I have heard folks in NC pronounce "chimney " as "chimley" and "trestle" pronounced as "trussel."

Are those pronunciations used elsewhere?

Steve

I think it was some of my Ohio kin that said "chimblee".

- Jay
 
/ Southern English #378  
Anybody in this thread marry a girl with "firewood freckles?"

No, but a friend of mine once said his wife was from so far back in the woods her breath smelled like stove wood.
My dad "crunk" an engine. If it didn't stay running it "come uncrunkt".
 
/ Southern English #379  
40 years as a paramedic heard these medical terms from patients:

"Abbominal pain" = abdominal pain

"He died from smil'in mighty Jesus" = He died of spinal meningitis

"I got the sugars" = I have diabetes

"She has athletic skeezurs" = She has epileptic seizures

"I got them cadillacs in my eyes" = I have cataracts

"He throwed a clot" = He had a blood clot

"Fester" = Become infected

"He hawked a loogie" = He coughed up phlegm

"She's got low blood" = She is anemic

"Doc said I have roaches on my liver" = Doctor said I have cirrhosis of the liver

Beanmedic
 
/ Southern English #380  
40 years as a paramedic heard these medical terms from patients:

"Abbominal pain" = abdominal pain

"He died from smil'in mighty Jesus" = He died of spinal meningitis

"I got the sugars" = I have diabetes

"She has athletic skeezurs" = She has epileptic seizures

"I got them cadillacs in my eyes" = I have cataracts

"He throwed a clot" = He had a blood clot

"Fester" = Become infected

"He hawked a loogie" = He coughed up phlegm

"She's got low blood" = She is anemic

"Doc said I have roaches on my liver" = Doctor said I have cirrhosis of the liver

Beanmedic

You forgot my favorite:

Fireballs of the ukeris= fibroids of the uterus.

And,

Sick as-**** anemia= sickle cell anemia
 
 
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