Southerners Answer the Most Searched Questions about the South

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  • Опубликовано: 1 июн 2024
  • We dug into Google auto-complete search results to see what questions people were asking about the South, like why we refer to all sodas as "coke" and the way we pronounce "oil" (the right way, of course).
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Комментарии • 3,1 тыс.

  • @benjaminnelson3477
    @benjaminnelson3477 Год назад +167

    Matt is actually correct. There was a study done by a linguist and Appalachian southerners accents are closer to Old English than the rest of the U.S. dialects.

    • @milajade2011
      @milajade2011 7 месяцев назад +2

      I was just about to say this.

    • @larissa-je8dc
      @larissa-je8dc 7 месяцев назад

      Yep

    • @AngelfromGenX
      @AngelfromGenX 7 месяцев назад +10

      The southern accent is just the British accent played at half speed, or the Southern played at 2x speed is British. Try it.

    • @kimberlycoltrainrsrccr2626
      @kimberlycoltrainrsrccr2626 6 месяцев назад +3

      Also depends on the drawl of the region. My 'Bama born parents were raised in TN. Their accents are slightly different than my LA (that's lower Alabama) relatives compared to the Cajun born & raised ones. Then there's my Geechee ainties who speak Gullah and that's just a whole nother world of encyclopedic proportions 🤣

    • @nancykilbourn836
      @nancykilbourn836 6 месяцев назад +1

      There are many Southern dialects. Each is interesting and lovely.@@kimberlycoltrainrsrccr2626

  • @VoodooLegacy369
    @VoodooLegacy369 Год назад +466

    I love the South because:
    1) The people are genuine.
    2) Life is slower and enjoyable.
    3) The food makes you pass out into a deep sleep.
    4) Folks appreciate us who are in the military.
    5) Again, sincere people.

    • @Pharaoh_Tutankhamen
      @Pharaoh_Tutankhamen Год назад +5

      Same bro

    • @celemirelewen4348
      @celemirelewen4348 Год назад +21

      Some of us have an appreciation for the military that toes the line of hero worship.
      It's me. I have an appreciation for the military that toes the line of hero worship.

    • @thethrashyone
      @thethrashyone Год назад +21

      Sincerity is a four letter word in a world dominated by cynicism, which is probably why many interpret southern sincerity as some kind of social ill. Personally I find sincerity quite refreshing.

    • @Pharaoh_Tutankhamen
      @Pharaoh_Tutankhamen Год назад +2

      @@thethrashyone How's it a 4 letta word?

    • @ijustdocomments6777
      @ijustdocomments6777 Год назад +24

      A little bit of Googling on the military aspect shows that the south-eastern states specifically contribute more than their fair share of the population as armed services recruits. We appreciate ya'll more partly because we've got family who served or are actively serving. Lot of generational military families down here.

  • @carolallison9685
    @carolallison9685 Год назад +435

    I grew up in California but have lived my whole adult life in the south, so I've actually lived here longer than i did in California. I remember back when my husband and i decided to buy a house out in the country, all of my friends were really concerned about how i was going to use the bathroom, or how we were going to have lights. I live like 15 minutes outside of a large city in Tennessee. It's ok guys, we have plumbing and electricity. I even had one friend ask how i was going to buy groceries. I told them i planned on hunting and gathering, and if that didn't work out, i would just get in my car and drive to the grocery store 5 minutes from my house.

    • @teawithc8303
      @teawithc8303 Год назад +18

      Wooo. Tennessee crew!

    • @mizlaveraent3652
      @mizlaveraent3652 Год назад +5

      😂😂😂

    • @KennyJohnson-ym6ux
      @KennyJohnson-ym6ux Год назад +27

      Born and raised in Tennessee, and I haven't met a single person upset about being in the south. However one dude thought we had no phones.

    • @xjood805
      @xjood805 Год назад +14

      @@KennyJohnson-ym6ux yeah we pretty much live in caves here in ga

    • @floydkendall2703
      @floydkendall2703 Год назад +4

      My life started in California, also. Been living in Nashville for 50 years.

  • @jimthompson606
    @jimthompson606 11 месяцев назад +23

    My friend from Georgia was in the Army in the early 60's. He had convinced some Army buddies from Brooklyn that in order to get to Atlanta, you took a plane to Chattanooga and then had to take a stagecoach to Atlanta.

    • @telisabearden2961
      @telisabearden2961 Месяц назад

      😂😂😂

    • @BrokeToBlessed
      @BrokeToBlessed Месяц назад

      😂😂😂 sounds like something my papa would have said to his Army buddies

    • @lordneeko
      @lordneeko Месяц назад

      DELTA= Delivering every living things to Atlanta. 😏

  • @elainehill6504
    @elainehill6504 Год назад +1312

    I'm a west coast transplant and the way people here seem to know who you are through who your relatives are and how everything's connected seems to me to be a uniquely southern thing. I never experienced it before anyway. Here's an example: we lost my mother in law a few months ago. They had been at the same credit union for decades, and of course after she passed we had to do the usual paperwork involved at the bank, death certificate, take her name off the accounts, close the credit card that was in her name etc. They were very sympathetic of course, that's normal. Well, a couple weeks ago my husband got a paper check in the mail (weird I know!) and we went to deposit it--we use the same bank. We were in the drive up lane, like the third one over from the window, so not like we were face to face with the teller or could even see her. She gets the check from the little tube and as she's processing it asks "How's Mr.(FIL) doing? We're so sad about Miss (MIL) I hope he's getting along okay." We were kinda shocked, we do 99% of our banking and bills online so it's not like we go into the bank and know the employees. But this lady saw his name on the check, knew who his dad was, and remembered that his mom had passed and genuinely seemed to care how we were doing. That's not something I ever experienced until I moved here.

    • @auburnkim1989
      @auburnkim1989 Год назад +104

      To be honest, I'm surprised that you didn't get a sympathy card from them. Did people bring food like they do in my area?This is why I love the South, the friendliness. Of course it also means everyone knows your business but that's ok with me. May I please suggest Jeanne Robertson's "don't send a man to the grocery store" on RUclips. She is the epitome of the southern lady and a humorist. It focuses on the requirement to take food when someone is sick or passes. Hilarious but true.

    • @sweetbamabelle
      @sweetbamabelle Год назад +30

      It's an art

    • @levelselect6800
      @levelselect6800 Год назад +27

      I don't think it's uniquely a southern thing. I was born on Guam, but lived around the states. With how my family from Guam and how I've lived, I've been able to laugh a lot and relate to a lot that has been shown on this channel.

    • @meagananterola1465
      @meagananterola1465 Год назад +15

      We are very thoughtful here

    • @Geoffrey___
      @Geoffrey___ Год назад +7

      I'll speak for California and the West Coast as well as for those from other REAL cities...
      A) Nobody asked you to move to the West Coast
      B) In-N-Out is NOT good. STOP praising it. It doesn't endear you to anybody in California. It just shows you're a tourist. Just visit Universal Studios and Disneyland...

  • @tvdan1043
    @tvdan1043 Год назад +364

    So the "when" vs. "whenever" thing, I think the question was probably aimed at people who say "Whenever you go to the store..." instead of "When you go to the store..." and it's about managing expectations. If you ask someone to pick up milk "when you go to the store", there's an assumption that a trip to the store is imminent, or it's being strongly suggested that you go to the store right now. If you ask the same thing, but say "whenever you go to the store", the immediacy is removed and you're just asking for milk to be added to the shopping list for the next scheduled Walmart run.

  • @calvinbrown5252
    @calvinbrown5252 Год назад +177

    My mother's cousin grew up in Georgia. Was sent up north one winter by a company he worked for. His coworkers didn't want to believe him when he told them he'd never been out of Georgia before then because of how well he handled driving in the snow, and on icy roads. He asked them if they had ever driven on a Georgia red clay road after it had just gotten done raining, or while it was raining

    • @melissapyle7879
      @melissapyle7879 Год назад +16

      Country folk know how to handle a lot of different situations..

    • @MegaKat
      @MegaKat Год назад +6

      @@melissapyle7879 on the flip side, my incredibly white Yankee father (grew up in PA, WV and almost exclusively OH) taught me (native American born in Ohio and raised in NC) taught me to drive on NC ice
      He even showed him off with a couple donuts.
      He wasn't a country boy; I, however, was a city girl. He was a city boy that just knew how to drive.

    • @marianne3024
      @marianne3024 Год назад +3

      That Clay is scary!

    • @johnd5398
      @johnd5398 Год назад

      What no one bothers to discuss is the fact that northern snow and southern snow are different. Northern snow is usually dry and it packs down to a hard surface on which you can drive.
      Southern snow is slush on top of 2 inches of black ice. No one can drive safely on black ice. And those people flying off the shoulders and killing people in the southern snow?? Almost always northerners who think they're smarter than everyone else.

    • @camden336
      @camden336 Год назад +4

      Your not getting out of red clay literally the whole state of north carolina is red clay. Hope you got AAA if you get stuck after a rainstorm your screwed.

  • @kellycrawford1625
    @kellycrawford1625 Год назад +70

    Southerners are flat out more polite. I say this as a person that was born & raised in the north. I have family in TN, KY, NC & AR.
    When we are traveling to the south, I intentionally don’t pack everything we will need. I enjoy shopping in the south. No one grunts at you. No one shoves you out of their way. No one swears at you for being in their way.
    Shopping in the south is great. People smile. People say things like excuse me, please, thank you & yes ma’am/sir. They smile at you. Southern customers help others find things.
    I could go on for a lot longer. Basically shopping in the north =🤬. Shopping in the south = 😁

    • @janesharp4341
      @janesharp4341 6 месяцев назад +1

      So true, my bowling partner told me today that I was mean, (I don't remember what I said that that prompted that) and I agreed, I am mean but I am very polite so I have that going for me.😅

    • @janesharp4341
      @janesharp4341 6 месяцев назад +2

      We had a cousin from Boston visit us in TN. She went in a drug store for a bottled water and was gone way too long. She came out apologizing, when she went to pay the cashier literally took the bottle and put it back saying, "oh no honey, that water is $1.29! Here, let me get you the 2 for a dollar bottled water!" She was shocked!

    • @DarthTwilight
      @DarthTwilight 3 месяца назад +1

      They do where I live, but that's merely because New Jersey, New York, and Ohio have relocated to my State.

  • @LarryEArnold
    @LarryEArnold Год назад +333

    About basements:
    First, a building's foundation has to be below the frost line, the deepest point where the ground freezes. Up north, once you dig down several feet to the frost line, you might as well put in a basement.
    Down south the frost line is only about a foot deep, so digging deeper to add a basement is more expensive than adding a second floor or a larger first floor.
    Second, the water table answer is also valid.

    • @Arkay66
      @Arkay66 Год назад +23

      And in some parts, we live on top of a rock ledge, which makes it real hard to dig a basement... I surely would love to have one, though...

    • @jasmirris
      @jasmirris Год назад +17

      @@Arkay66 or like where I live our soil is clay so a basement is pretty expensive to dig for. We would love to have them because it's cooler but the upfront cost is whew!

    • @EthanNeal
      @EthanNeal Год назад +16

      Yet another concern is of expansive soils. Horses up and down the I-35 corridor in Texas don't have basements because the soil will put pressure on, crack, and eventually destroy concrete foundations when it absorbs water. It's gotta go somewhere!

    • @commehter
      @commehter Год назад +5

      My house has a basement but I'm not sure it was a well thought-out feature to add during the construction. Most of the time, it's fine, but when a heavy rain hits it can leak pretty badly. We see a lot of rain here at the foot of the Appalachians.

    • @ericaskye7704
      @ericaskye7704 Год назад +12

      We live in Rockansa … opps excuse me Arkansa so it takes drills and bulldozers to dig in the ground around here so no basements

  • @squeakynips
    @squeakynips Год назад +453

    As an Aussie I connect with Southern people so easily, I can tell by the accent if I’ll be able to relate. Love Southern people ❤️🐝

    • @marcusmcintire6683
      @marcusmcintire6683 Год назад +20

      Y'all have more in common than you think with us.

    • @steveharvey3054
      @steveharvey3054 Год назад +17

      As a southerner, I love y’all Aussies. Met a few and England last month and we have so much in common

    • @scottishhellcat
      @scottishhellcat Год назад +9

      I'm from Georgia and I have a delightful Aussie friend. She is 81 years young and feisty as hell. And I love to hear her talk.

    • @dmacarthur5356
      @dmacarthur5356 Год назад +14

      I've heard it said that Australia is British Texas.

    • @squeakynips
      @squeakynips Год назад +2

      @@dmacarthur5356 I love that ❤️

  • @DarthDave
    @DarthDave Год назад +150

    Yo. Y’all talked about banana pudding and I was like “damn they’re right. I could go for some banana pudding right now. Hold up. Don’t I got some in the fridge?” Update: I am now eating banana pudding and can confirm I am happier 😋.

    • @janesharp4341
      @janesharp4341 Год назад +13

      Banana pudding is a holy sacrament in the South. I feel closer to Jesus after having a big ole bowl.

    • @kimberlycoltrainrsrccr2626
      @kimberlycoltrainrsrccr2626 6 месяцев назад +2

      ​​@@janesharp4341
      Oh! I thought the triple size spoon was so I didn't need a bowl🤣
      And I thought the silver one w holes was to help add air so I could breathe without taking it from my mouth 😂

    • @donjackson5522
      @donjackson5522 4 месяца назад +3

      That’s actually pronounced “ nana pud’n”.

    • @DarthTwilight
      @DarthTwilight 3 месяца назад +1

      @donjackson5522 Or bananer pud'n if you done be so-phisticated

  • @mistylee717
    @mistylee717 Год назад +40

    My dad is from Vermont. Dinners were quiet and very dignified. No elbows on the table. The first time he ate with my moms family, he didn’t get to eat because there were so many conversations going on he just kept saying ‘excuse me’ and no one heard him. 😂😂😂

    • @nancykilbourn836
      @nancykilbourn836 6 месяцев назад +4

      My husband is a Southern California native. When we were dating, and then married he like to eat dinner with my family. We talked a lot, laughed a lot. His family did not, ate in almost silence. How sad it was to eat with them.

    • @momkatmax
      @momkatmax 17 дней назад

      @@nancykilbourn836 My family is Swiss German and the dinner table is the big gathering place. You eat, talk, then rest for more. None of this "have dessert in the living room". My Mom's family was quiet at the table, which drove her nuts to eat with the inlaws. Note, that we are Northerners.

  • @moxdonalds925
    @moxdonalds925 Год назад +162

    I was born in Tuscaloosa and live in a small town in Texas now. My favorite idiosyncrasy in the south once someone pointed it out is our habit of contracting words excessively. The best example is “Y’all’d’ve” a contraction of “You all would have.” Used in a sentence, “Y’all’d’ve gotten hurt if you got drunk and started jumping into the creek.”

    • @kitty19cat751
      @kitty19cat751 Год назад +11

      Omg I felt this comment on another level. I've never realized this is something I say until I read your words and said that sentence out loud 😅

    • @terryk711
      @terryk711 Год назад +12

      Y'allda. If Y'allda listened to me we wouldn't have gotten lost.

    • @matildamiller3233
      @matildamiller3233 Год назад +11

      I love how we do that, and understand it.
      I had to explain what "me'er" meant to my child's teacher (we moved to a north/Midwest location for a time). My child had used it in class, and she had overheard, but wasn't sure of what it was. I explained it was "come here", chatted with her a few minutes, then without thinking about it, hollered at my lil one to "me'er". She was able to see it in action at least, lol.

    • @kitty19cat751
      @kitty19cat751 Год назад +4

      @@terryk711 this is why the original comment stumped me for a sec. Because this is how it actually comes out of my mouth 😅😅

    • @janesharp4341
      @janesharp4341 Год назад +7

      "Jeet yet? Puya sefuppa cheer and have a bite!" -quoting a Tennessean at suppertime when a friend shows up unexpectedly.

  • @wshreels
    @wshreels Год назад +39

    Matt: "People say the guys down here dress like tablecloths..."
    Cameraman: *aggressively zooms in to Matt and Ryan's collar shirts*

    • @ThinWhiteAxe
      @ThinWhiteAxe Год назад +2

      So much plaid 🤣

    • @queenbunnyfoofoo6112
      @queenbunnyfoofoo6112 Год назад +2

      Must be whoever asked the question has never been to New England....plaid is everywhere.

    • @ThinWhiteAxe
      @ThinWhiteAxe Год назад +1

      @@queenbunnyfoofoo6112 the Midwest is pretty plaidy too, as far as I know

    • @queenbunnyfoofoo6112
      @queenbunnyfoofoo6112 Год назад +1

      @@ThinWhiteAxe True 😄.

  • @cyberwood2004
    @cyberwood2004 Год назад +26

    In colonial days, most of the people who settled in the south already spoke English, whereas most of those who settled in the North had to learn English. A Southern accent is closer to a British accent than most folks realize. (Look at some SNL videos of Dan Ayckroyd imitating Jimmy Carter, and how he slips into British a lot.)

  • @cwillimas9980
    @cwillimas9980 Год назад +59

    Y’all did a great job answering the questions. Pronouncing “oil” is definitely affected by the area where you grew up 😂

    • @kathycarter2406
      @kathycarter2406 Год назад +3

      Once in a college art history class we went to a museum of southern artists. The woman at the museum said "Now these are our "oil" paintings." But what this yankee heard was "Now these are our all paintings." I was taking notes and I asked the person next to me what was the name of the artists because I didn't get the name.... lol It took me a bit but as she continued the lecture I figured out she had said "oil" not all.

    • @braylenr
      @braylenr Год назад

      For Oklahoma it's said without the "oy" sound. You say it from the back of your mouth.

    • @Archangel_158
      @Archangel_158 11 месяцев назад +1

      Can confirm. It’s “ull” where I’m from.

    • @PolyBiBadger
      @PolyBiBadger 11 месяцев назад +1

      I say it like “oy-ull” but sometimes there’s a little twang in there 😂

    • @dancingrl7350
      @dancingrl7350 5 месяцев назад

      True. We were always led to believe that in Texas, they said "awl" as in, "my fam'lih is in the awl bidniss". And that may or may not be true.

  • @EsausFables
    @EsausFables Год назад +89

    Since you asked so politely, my momma is feeling much better after her injection appointment for the arthritis in her hands! She’ll be right as rain tomorrow for when she plays the piano at the Wednesday night church service 🥰

  • @vikkibishop7862
    @vikkibishop7862 Год назад +44

    Came for the jokes, stayed for the spaceballs t-shirt 🤣

  • @Soulfulcottage
    @Soulfulcottage Год назад +46

    Ha! I struck up a chatty conversation with the librarian at my daughter’s school and halfway in, I realized she must be from the North - she’s looking at me like, “why are you talking to me about the book your daughter took out last week, and how do I get out of this?” 😂😂😂 What can I say? We aim to be friendly, sorry if it’s too much for you!

  • @shelbylynne9212
    @shelbylynne9212 Год назад +7

    As an Arkansan, I find these questions hilarious! 😂😂

  • @WyoLifer37
    @WyoLifer37 Год назад +9

    As a lifelong Wyoming resident I used to get questions about riding horses to school, if we had indoor plumbing, if we were located in Canada, and how we got along with Native Americans. I suppose those are all googled now.

  • @LeadTrumpet1
    @LeadTrumpet1 Год назад +160

    Driving in snow in the north is a mandatory skill. They don’t shut things down around here unless they absolutely have to.

    • @MintersFreshers
      @MintersFreshers Год назад +6

      Don’t forget about the potholes

    • @veulmet
      @veulmet Год назад +5

      @@MintersFreshers or as some of us call them chuck holes.

    • @LeadTrumpet1
      @LeadTrumpet1 Год назад +11

      @@MintersFreshers The pothole down the road from me only got fixed because NYDOT hit it with their line painting trucks and realized it was on the corner of two state roads and they couldn’t bum it off on the town.
      The potholes are terrible. It would be easier if they had an online form you could submit with pictures and location details about said potholes.

    • @MintersFreshers
      @MintersFreshers Год назад +4

      @@LeadTrumpet1 it really would
      But potholes combined with Boston traffic and you one hell of day

    • @freedomcat
      @freedomcat Год назад +6

      Got a 2015 Beetle through a winter storm warning to work and then found out I was supposed to stay home.

  • @steggiec
    @steggiec 4 месяца назад +2

    My NC coworker always gets super excited when she talks about food, either a meal she made recently or lunch or dinner she’ll make soon or food in general. So #1 is super accurate for her.

  • @WadeWeigle
    @WadeWeigle 8 месяцев назад +8

    My Mom is doing very well thank you. She’s got a whole mess of chickens that are just coming into their eggs now and she thinks the tiny eggs are super cute.
    How is y’all’s Mommas doing?

  • @akah7187
    @akah7187 Год назад +241

    As a native Texan (yeah I know Texas is confused about where it fits) sir and ma'am are a must. Being friendly is who we are. I now live up North and wow are the people not so friendly. I get homesick and watching your videos lifts my spirits. Keep up the good work!

    • @keeperofthegarden2306
      @keeperofthegarden2306 Год назад +12

      I just moved back to Tx! We lived in OH for 17yrs and I agree most of them weren't that friendly! I'm glad to be back home!

    • @sigsin1
      @sigsin1 Год назад +2

      I was born and raised in Michigan. I lived in Alabama, then LA, then Eugene. Then Michigan again and OUCH. RUDE.

    • @JackieBaisa
      @JackieBaisa Год назад +13

      Northerner here. I'm so sorry we're a colder bunch. It's definitely true. I'm so enamored with Southerners when I visit my boyfriend who lives in Nashville. The North is friendly but in a different way. (I felt the same way about Germany when I lived there; to most Americans, they are cold and unfriendly, but if you get to know them, they have a very defined friendly and humorous side. No question about it.)

    • @burnthecandleatbothendz
      @burnthecandleatbothendz Год назад +2

      I live in Fargo and most people are friendly here

    • @jamesgoogle1744
      @jamesgoogle1744 Год назад +13

      as a man from Alabama we accept Texas as southern

  • @jacilynbrainard7481
    @jacilynbrainard7481 Год назад +23

    The joke about asking for a *breathy* oil change and Express Lube not even looking at the air filter… Man, that one got me! 😂🤣

  • @TheCarterJP
    @TheCarterJP 11 месяцев назад +2

    Northerner from Pennsylvania who married a southern girl from South Carolina. We currently live in Virginia, but not south enough for us. Planning to retire to South Carolina and be closer to family in SC, NC, and GA. Love the South!

  • @banshee46
    @banshee46 Год назад +7

    I'm from South Eastern Texas, actually grew up in San Felip, and have lived in the north for about 20 years. It's *amazing* how quickly I drop back into my native accent when I start watching these videos. It's making me smile :P

  • @saundrajohnson1571
    @saundrajohnson1571 Год назад +260

    I love the Miss first name. The way I was brought up, that is to be used for any unrelated woman that you’re on a friendly, or somewhat familiar basis: friends of parents, ballet instructors, Girl Scout leaders, etc.
    Since leaving the South, and most recently Texas, I can only recall being called Miss Saundra once. I think it is such a friendly and respectful term. I wish it were used more often, in more places. I still use it all the time.
    You can take the girl out of the South, but you can’t take the South out of the girl. 😉

    • @cdenese108
      @cdenese108 Год назад +16

      I'm called Miss at my office, at first tried to make it stop but gave up five or six years ago. It's a term of respect with a little endearment mixed in. :)

    • @saundrajohnson1571
      @saundrajohnson1571 Год назад +10

      @@cdenese108 Excellent definition!

    • @sdearing6375
      @sdearing6375 Год назад

      I always hated that in the south - I am not a miss and it just seems so patriarchal

    • @the_real_littlepinkhousefly
      @the_real_littlepinkhousefly Год назад +7

      Interestingly, at the church I went to when I was living in Arizona, we had the kiddos call their Sunday school and other teachers "Miss" Whoever. Of course, several of us there were Southern ex-pats, so maybe that's why. I don't think it was an Arizona thing. In my "mama's group" we had two Texans, a Mississippian and an Okie, so there was a lot of Southern influence.

    • @pistolannie6500
      @pistolannie6500 Год назад +25

      Its called... MANNERS, folks!! Use em once in a while.

  • @MrsAlmaTrumble
    @MrsAlmaTrumble Год назад +7

    Southern- snow, better go stock up on bread, eggs, and milk.
    Northern- snow, oh well.

  • @angelacollier4140
    @angelacollier4140 3 месяца назад +1

    I'm a cross between Northern and Southern. I was born and raised in Indiana. My parents were from Virginia (mom) and George (dad). I grew up with a crazy mix of north and south. As an adult, I have lived in Louisiana and Alabama. I LOVE the South. I fit in so well, my accent from my heritage emerged and no one even knew I was a Yankee! I'm back in Indiana but I understand "It's a Southern Thing" and the references y'all just keep doin' what you're doin' y'all are wonderful!!

  • @jaelguest348
    @jaelguest348 Год назад +29

    Im a student from Nashville studying abroad in Europe rn. This little taste of home made my day. I was crying laughing y'all are hilarious:) Thanks guys!

  • @Nurichiri
    @Nurichiri Год назад +194

    I use this channel as a whole as an educational tool. I'm a northern Midwesterner by culture and blood (5 generations) but I have been adopted by a southern mama. She used to be my MIL but we get along better than she does with my ex that is her blood kid. Also, I have custody of her only grandchild, so there's that. I use this to understand where she's from (born and bred Alabamian).

    • @Dante1920
      @Dante1920 Год назад +4

      Roll Tide!

    • @YadkinValleyResale
      @YadkinValleyResale Год назад +6

      Sweet home!

    • @3TXSisters
      @3TXSisters Год назад +3

      Lucky you!

    • @urmasslow
      @urmasslow Год назад +3

      She's from the best state.

    • @aeli999
      @aeli999 Год назад +2

      My mom's neighbor was like that with her daughter in law. She was furious at her son for divorcing her favorite daughter-in-law. They remained close for a long time. Alabama! Best state ever (don't listen to Mississippi lol)

  • @MM-kd3cb
    @MM-kd3cb Год назад +216

    The term Yankee originated as a derogatory term referring to the people who created and formed the United States of America, the British redcoats used it as a slur suggesting the American people were simpletons they would beat into submission, and they would sing Yankee Doodle Dandy to mock the patriots. The patriots however after they started defeating the British troops adopted the song to mock the British redcoats. The origin of the word Yankee isn’t known for sure, though some believe it came from the Dutch who hated the English settlers and referred to them as janekke, which was purportedly an insult. The Dutch colonized what was first called New Amsterdam, they were bankers, and tried imposing slavery of the Indian tribes, who they were very antagonistic to. They were utter failures in their attempt to be successful and New Amsterdam was taken over by English settlers and eventually became New York.

    • @mikeorr3333
      @mikeorr3333 Год назад +13

      The word originated from Dutch, meaning John Cheese. It was a slight, implying that cheese production was the only thing the Dutch were good at.

    • @ugaladh
      @ugaladh Год назад +38

      This explains where "Yankee" came from, refering to the colonists. Southerners calling Northerners "Yankees" is left over from the Civil War.

    • @sabinal17
      @sabinal17 Год назад +3

      And none of the New Yorkers gave a poop over being “British “because they didn’t like Stuyvesant Plus the Brits didn’t mess with the businesses so no one was mad. (NYC Documentary)

    • @janejones7638
      @janejones7638 Год назад +12

      I used to think Macaroni was the name of the feather. About 20 years ago, I learned the history of the song. Maybe we call Northerners Yankees because more of them were Patriots. Many Southern states had more Loyalist than Patriots. My mom's family from both sides lived in North Carolina at the time. One side was Loyalist and the other Patriot (they lived in different areas, they didn't know each other). I could be in the DAR but that's not something that interests me. I could be in the DAC but I'm not interested in that either. My mama's mama's family lived in TN at the time of the Civil War, they fought for the Confederacy (They were the Loyalist family). My mama's papa's family still lived in NC. They didn't fight as many in that area of NC didn't. They were tobacco farmers. Slavery wasn't common in that area.

    • @deniserichards4280
      @deniserichards4280 Год назад +3

      Like the North tried to do to the South? 😊

  • @RBKeown
    @RBKeown 2 месяца назад +1

    Watching stuff like this makes me love love love being from Alabama ❤

  • @chargerrival4188
    @chargerrival4188 11 месяцев назад +1

    South Carolina is 49th in the nation for education. I moved down here in 2020 from Michigan which is 13th in the nation and it was a huge change.

  • @the_real_littlepinkhousefly
    @the_real_littlepinkhousefly Год назад +81

    My mama's doing all right, considering she just turned 90 and has a crap ton of health problems. Thank you for asking. If I tried to go into "all 'em" it would take too long and fill up my word quota. My mama is from East Texas, so that's the part of Texas that is most "Southern", and she pronounces oil as "ah-wul." Seriously. We used to razz her about it like crazy (I grew up in West Texas and we just said "oy-ul" like everbody else.) Mama also double-joints a lot of words, so she says "way-ull" for "well". My son is a linguist and he could answer why all this is, but he's an adult now and on his way home from church so I'm not gonna call him while he's driving. (I watched church online, got my own health issues.)
    No basements in some parts of the South because the bedrock is too hard and too close to the surface to dig out without dynamiting. And maybe that flooding thing is a deal in some places, too.
    Southerners talk a lot because we have a lot to say and we're generally very social. Also, maybe a lot of us have ADHD. (Look up "ADHD infodumping.")
    Many of the top universities in the country are in the South, and I guarantee they're not mostly populated by Northerners. So a dang awful lot of us are WELL-educated, thankyouverymuch.
    Y'all Northerners stop worrying about us and take care of your own business. You're always welcome to come visit or move here, but please behave. Don't make us sic our Southern mamas on you.

    • @vrcarlos6955
      @vrcarlos6955 Год назад +10

      This was funny! Nailed it!

    • @LynyrdSkynyrd.4Ever
      @LynyrdSkynyrd.4Ever Год назад

      Welcome to visit maybe, but moving here a lot of them want to change our culture and everything else about their new home - so maybe just visit and then go back to your big city rat race

    • @tejaswoman
      @tejaswoman Год назад +6

      As a southerner with ADHD whose mama is from East Texas and is only 5 years younger than yours, I almost did a double take to make sure I didn't write this myself. And my mom is fine, considering she just found out she's now on TikTok!

    • @the_real_littlepinkhousefly
      @the_real_littlepinkhousefly Год назад +1

      @@tejaswoman Holy cow, TikTok? My mom can't even navigate a smartphone. (She's never been very techie)

    • @jimmysmith773
      @jimmysmith773 Год назад +2

      Sorry but to visit is one thing but to move down here and try to us is another if you want to change us just stay up there

  • @bethwhitaker8794
    @bethwhitaker8794 Год назад +33

    Matt’s statement of “get to work or die” is so true!!! I’ve been here 22 years and I still don’t know how to drive on the snow

    • @corvidsRcool
      @corvidsRcool Год назад +5

      The best advice I was ever given was from a friend of my mother's who'd lived up north when I first learned to drive: "forget you have brakes". When I was driving back to college and snow flurries at home turned into a serious storm halfway there that left quite slick roads that popped into my head and I had no trouble at all. Obviously, I had to stop t times, but her point was to just go slow and steady. It's been working for 30+ years, although l'm white-knuckling the steering wheel all the way. LOL

  • @KatrinaRasbold
    @KatrinaRasbold 7 месяцев назад +1

    "We can read, write, and whoop your ass." Dear gods, I love you people. Please let me be your mama.

  • @matthewcox7985
    @matthewcox7985 Год назад +1

    The way he said "Dwog" reminds me of my grandmother... who was from New York!

  • @kungfuhustling4832
    @kungfuhustling4832 Год назад +36

    "Why do Southerners look different" Feels like somebody returned home, after vacationing in the South, and told their friends "It was weird. Everywhere we went people kept showing us their teeth". (Smiling)

    • @Dakotako
      @Dakotako Год назад +3

      Or they went to Louisiana

    • @alphagt62
      @alphagt62 Год назад +3

      As the old saying goes, no one retires and moves up North.

    • @OhBuoyancy
      @OhBuoyancy Год назад +3

      I thought it was because we are all so incredibly good looking.

  • @bphipps312
    @bphipps312 Год назад +52

    As a Kentuckian moving to chicago I’ve gotten all of these but the biggest ones were: “Did you go to the bathroom outside?”, “Did you have electricity?“ , “How old were you when you got your first pair of shoes?”… and they call us uneducated? IM FINNA GO OFF ON A BUNCH OF THEM!. That pretty much shit the conversation down. Love y’all, keep’em coming ❤

    • @parkerbrown-nesbit1747
      @parkerbrown-nesbit1747 Год назад +10

      I'm from Kentucky too, and have had people who were surprised that I was wearing shoes!

    • @bethprather9241
      @bethprather9241 Год назад +3

      The best is too reply like some of these. Im from Ky and educated MA.. We need good answers.. or just add too it like they are.. we put sugar mashed postatoes or steak.

    • @kristiecornell5723
      @kristiecornell5723 Год назад +2

      @@parkerbrown-nesbit1747 What part of Kentucky are you from? I'm Spencer County.

    • @bethprather9241
      @bethprather9241 Год назад +1

      @@kristiecornell5723 Garrard County...
      It is 35 miles south of Lexington..

    • @parkerbrown-nesbit1747
      @parkerbrown-nesbit1747 Год назад

      @@kristiecornell5723 Calloway County, in Western Kentucky, although I was born in Middlesboro, in Bell County.

  • @Rockstarsoulchild
    @Rockstarsoulchild Год назад +7

    The guy with the hat really needs to be a stand up comedian 😂

  • @EmilyBarnes1228
    @EmilyBarnes1228 Год назад +13

    moved up north after i got married and people started asking what kind of pop I wanted. I kid you not, every time they ask me this question it takes my brain about 10 seconds to understand that they’re asking what kind of coke product I want. I will never get over this

  • @lauraburgess1534
    @lauraburgess1534 Год назад +37

    Liz's indignant reaction to almost every question had me rolling 😂

    • @katyaa6556
      @katyaa6556 9 месяцев назад

      WHY DO YOU HAVE AN ACCENT!?!?!?!?! 🤣

  • @lane95
    @lane95 Год назад +82

    Tbh I think the "why do southerners talk so much?" Question was actually asked in the way of like talking to strangers. For example in the south walking by ur neighbor or maybe just passing someone you wave and say hey or oh how's ur day when you're in line somewhere. Or talk to someone in the grocery store for no reason. Whereas northerns don't do that. I see the answer as just southern kindness.

    • @tamaj152
      @tamaj152 Год назад +7

      I think you're right. I moved to the South from the northern Midwest, and the thing I kept telling my friends back "home" was "People make EYE CONTACT when you pass them on the street! They say hi!" I've lived in New England, too, and if you talk to people you don't know in the grocery store they think you're some sort of creepy person. It is really too bad. Glad to be here!

    • @dragex6582
      @dragex6582 Год назад +4

      Indeed, indeed. You can have full blown conversations with strangers while waiting in line. Go to the theater, and you can make a new friend(s) with the fella(s) beside you during the commercials! Pass some people on the street or in the store, and you get a smile, a nod, and a "How're ya doing?" We're a friendly sorta folk down here, with exceptions of course. I drive across the country for a living, and it was a shock to go up north and NOT be able to chat with folks randomly, or even get a returned nod!

    • @l.r.8573
      @l.r.8573 Год назад +5

      We were taught it's the polite thing to do, which caught me off guard after I moved to the west coast and found that people back away from you as if you just asked them to lick the anthrax in your hand if you simply say hello.

    • @firebladetenn6633
      @firebladetenn6633 Год назад +6

      My husband told me that me holding doors open for people, randomly talking to others, and just smiling at strangers would creep out or make a northerner suspicious of me. It breaks my heart that people up north would think me suspicious just for striking up a conversation. 😢

    • @dragex6582
      @dragex6582 Год назад +2

      @@firebladetenn6633 It's a sad reality with those Yanks, unfortunately.

  • @shofarsogood7504
    @shofarsogood7504 Год назад

    I don’t think my boss likes being called sir. His smile always drops but I can’t help it, it’s just polite.

  • @SmokeEater509
    @SmokeEater509 Год назад +1

    Mississippian here. I felt well represented by the responses.

  • @jadeblues357
    @jadeblues357 Год назад +43

    Born and raised in upstate New York and at the age of 25 I chose the The South and I’ve never had any regrets and just to test that theory I went back to my hometown lived there for a couple years hated it and I was welcome back home as a hurricane was coming into Florida and all I could think was I’m home😎🥰

  • @pschroeter1
    @pschroeter1 Год назад +37

    "Why can't southerners drive in snow?"
    That's silly because here in the north every year when we get the first real snow fall there are accidents everywhere as we find out drivers have completely forgotten how to drive in the snow since last winter. Maybe not Alaska.

    • @STho205
      @STho205 Год назад +4

      Yep. The first snow is the same everywhere. Thats were the cars with bald summer tires and the people that think it isn't so bad...only 6 inches....except it is 6" atop an ice sheet that formed on a road that was 60F at sunset yesterday.
      Typically below Ky we only get a first snow...so there is chaos.
      We just stay home, since i have a steep gravel road.

    • @AlphaWolf096
      @AlphaWolf096 Год назад +4

      People at higher elevations in the Appalachians seem to handle snow pretty well, even when it’s the first snow of the season. Then again, you’re constantly getting practice with rough terrain and/or rain too. Not to mention that we have equipment up here to handle it.

    • @STho205
      @STho205 Год назад +2

      @@AlphaWolf096 i live in the Apps in a national forest. I don't drive until the melt begins if it is the classic snow...70 degree then rain then 25F then 40 then 6" of snow then 15F...that's walk in the woods days and work from home.
      If it's a clean snow...30F dry roads, snow of 8", stays below 32....pffft that's nothing. I do have tire chains for the forestry road. They make me remove them when i hit the county pavement.
      You're right, we do get lots of cold rain, black ice, fog practice on switchbacks over 1200ft cliffs... that warms us up for the snow.
      About 5 days of snow every 2nd or 3rd year. They don't usually plow up here in NC, but they sand and gravel the major roads so you can lose a windshield. More serious snow in KY and the western Virginias.
      City and suburb folks down in the lowlands are terrible. They're used to straight, lit and well drained roads. They go nuts in even a hard rain.

    • @AlphaWolf096
      @AlphaWolf096 Год назад +1

      @@STho205 Definitely seems like it depends what part of the mountains you’re in, then. I at least know Boone tends not to struggle too much with snow.

    • @rhast57
      @rhast57 Год назад +1

      It's true, northerners forget how to drive in the snow every year. That first big snow, most people spin out or crash or slide. Then they remember 'oh yeah, snow.'

  • @juliehilton1701
    @juliehilton1701 Год назад +3

    Love your work 🤣🤣 I’m from England, I’m not really sure of the dynamics of the northern/southern thing in the USA but I still enjoy watching thanks

  • @chrissiler2382
    @chrissiler2382 Год назад +1

    My mom, who has past, was from TN. I grew up mostly in WI and can remember everyone loved her accent. I always wondered "what accent?" I wish I had found this show before she passed. She would have loved it. Thanks.

  • @fewridge6479
    @fewridge6479 Год назад +57

    Be proud of your southern accent. The great Lewis Grizzard said “God talks like we do”.

  • @migueldelmazo5244
    @migueldelmazo5244 Год назад +29

    Driving in the snow is a skill. Driving in melted snow that re-froze into ice isn't safe no matter who does it.
    That's what we get in Georgia. Of course, most people near Atlanta aren't actually Southerners.

    • @Ephesians5-14
      @Ephesians5-14 Год назад +3

      You know what my favorite thing is? Seeing northerners whizz past my house in the snow and then the next day seeing 20 abandoned vehicles on the side of the road. It's not really possible to traverse snowy and icy roads without salt no matter who ya are 😄

    • @STho205
      @STho205 Год назад

      Most people in North Atl metro are immigrants from tropical asian countries. They've never seen it till their first to third year here.

    • @kazeryu17
      @kazeryu17 Год назад

      When I lived in pensacola Florida, we had ice storms. It would rain on a very cold day, and the rain would freeze as soon as it hit the ground, and then the temperature would drop even further, causing everything to be coated in ice. It looked cool, but was sketchy, because the stairs for my high school were outside of the building.

  • @TurtleMom23
    @TurtleMom23 7 месяцев назад +1

    I grew up in California as a young child, graduated high school in VA, and moved to GA 23 years ago. My friends call me a hippy yankee😅 I don't think I have an accent until I talk to my CA family. They make fun 😂
    I love living in the south. There's a whole vibe down here. I like small talk. I also like learning about strangers while waiting in line somewhere. The connection down here is pretty cool.
    I realize that people connection is everywhere ❤ The broad brush strokes to describe different regions is just that - broad.
    Fun video 🎉

  • @estherwolf110
    @estherwolf110 Год назад

    British hubby knows that if my southern twang comes out...he better RUN!
    Have you noticed it gets worse when you're angry?? 😁🤪

  • @kathrynjackson6137
    @kathrynjackson6137 Год назад +43

    I’m a southerner born and bred and I guess I didn’t realize “whenever” was a problem for northerners to understand like they can’t understand “fixin”. Uh, glad I follow y’all so I can become better educated. Love your channel!

    • @Thumper68
      @Thumper68 Год назад +2

      Whenever is totally normal in the northwest I think almost every single one of these questions are made by those in New York City where they make that awful salsa 😂

    • @fidgetssailing4725
      @fidgetssailing4725 Год назад

      But when Notherners try to use y'all and can never pronounce it right , but feel they've adopted not only a Southern accent - but the Southern language as well - SIGH. No - Just stop. Please, for the love of God stop!

    • @Thumper68
      @Thumper68 Год назад +1

      @@fidgetssailing4725 how can you mispronounce y’all? You see I grew up first 11 years of life in Arkansas then the next 17 or so in Washington state and the next 11 in Texas. Nobody thinks they have a southern accent because they say the word y’all.

    • @fidgetssailing4725
      @fidgetssailing4725 Год назад +1

      @@Thumper68 Hmm well that was your experience - mine was in talking to people from NY, NJ and Chicago - they do mispronounce it as it still sort of sounds like two words they're combining instead of one word

    • @truthunfiltered314
      @truthunfiltered314 Год назад +1

      @@fidgetssailing4725 Yeah, they still say "you all" but just take out the space and squish them together. If you really want to get 'em going, just borrow the word "you'ns" from the Appalachian mountain folk.

  • @katwalker07
    @katwalker07 Год назад +31

    As a southerner, here's an answer to the basement question: it all depends on how high the water table is under the ground. If the water table is higher, there won't be any basements because they'll get flooded. If the water table is lower, basements will be more normal.

    • @creakimoi2958
      @creakimoi2958 Год назад +6

      I was told once in Texas it was because the clay dirt, when it got hot, would just put too much pressure on the concrete used in basements and crack them which wasn't worth the repair...

    • @fafolguy
      @fafolguy Год назад +4

      @@creakimoi2958 I was told clay was a lot harder to excavate for a basement, so a ground level foundation was easier and cheaper.

    • @creakimoi2958
      @creakimoi2958 Год назад +2

      @@fafolguy and probably all the reasons we've been told individually are cumulatively true. I just know outside of Fort Hood in Central Texas...basements weren't all too common in places I lived

    • @kathleenkirchoff9223
      @kathleenkirchoff9223 Год назад +3

      Yep clay like Houston and Dallas swells and shifts with water making foundations crack. Out in West Texas red dirt and rock basements are more common. Often they are separate from the house and called 'fraidy holes for Tornado shelters. That's pronounced "taarnaada"

    • @willp.8120
      @willp.8120 Год назад +3

      @@creakimoi2958 Basements are all over the northern half of Georgia and the soil is clay. The southern half of the state is nearly basementless because the soil is sand and has a high water table.

  • @johnsonjohnson4725
    @johnsonjohnson4725 Год назад

    I lost my mama years back, but thanks for asking after her.💗

  • @DeAnne1233
    @DeAnne1233 Год назад

    ‘We are happier…. because we have banana pudding.’ 😂🤣 And BBQ 😉

  • @ashlady9
    @ashlady9 Год назад +6

    This one got me. As someone who moved to Tennessee from Colorado in 2008, I am now believed to be a local due to my accent/communication style and understanding of the culture. Hell yea.

  • @TBcinema
    @TBcinema Год назад +21

    "Soda" came from the Soda fountain or Soda shop where one could get the fizzy drinks before the times when they were packaged and distributed. Like old Soda water bottles from the cartoons. "Pop" comes from the sound the cans made when opened since folks not in the south only had canned soft drinks when they were first introduced.

    • @jacobnash9755
      @jacobnash9755 Год назад +2

      The part about pop isn't accurate. Soda bottling in the north started in 1839 while soda canning did not come along until the 1930s and was still very rare into the 1960s.
      The north had over 100 years of bottled soda before the can took the markets. So it was not called pop because they didn't have bottled soda at first.

    • @Alcoholic_Nerd
      @Alcoholic_Nerd Год назад

      @@jacobnash9755 It's because bubbles POP......

    • @maylieallen8919
      @maylieallen8919 7 месяцев назад

      I would imagine also the seectuon was limited specifically to just coke giving us our beloved slang

  • @72xafalcon
    @72xafalcon 11 месяцев назад

    I'm from Australia and I just found this channel and you guys from the south and Australian's seem very similar, have a great day

  • @rockyzibrowski865
    @rockyzibrowski865 Год назад +6

    I absolutely love you guys! My mom is from GA and my dad is from MN and we moved between from the north to the south every 2.5 - 3 years (dad was in the Navy) and my wife is from GA/FL and we live in MN. We have had to answer a lot of these questions from family and friends from both regions, thank you for helping educate the people!

  • @JasonMoir
    @JasonMoir Год назад +19

    Idea for a future Bless Your Rank: Matt rates different brands of grits he's snorted.

  • @brad2403
    @brad2403 Год назад +64

    The reason I say Ma’am,Ms,Mr,Mrs is because growing up I was taught it was being polite and showing respect to my elders.Very rarely do you hear that these days sadly.
    I would say I’m happier than a lark in a meadow.
    Great video y’all did a great job funny as always and you ain’t wrong about banana pudding.

    • @andrewyerian214
      @andrewyerian214 Год назад +3

      Thank the many parents who do not teach their kids those words anymore. I almost never see it up here in Ohio either. It’s not a Southern or Northern thing, it’s a human thing and should be taught.

    • @LIFEwithBAVAN
      @LIFEwithBAVAN Год назад +1

      Now we have pronouns

    • @jerrysmith3516
      @jerrysmith3516 Год назад +1

      Gave you a thumbs up just for mentioning banana pudding.

    • @Candice144
      @Candice144 Год назад +1

      Definitely, i got in trouble if i didn’t call an elder Mr. or Mrs. its a sign of respect.

    • @supercheese7033
      @supercheese7033 Год назад +2

      You still hear them everyday, if you live in the South. At least the true South (Atlanta, Houston, Nashville, South Florida have been overtaken, not Southern anymore).

  • @krystajustice1608
    @krystajustice1608 Год назад +1

    I wear flannel plaid shirts in winter cause my dad wore 1 I love them

  • @markhollingshead1351
    @markhollingshead1351 Год назад

    My mama passed away in 2006. And daddy's just up started up some diabetes .
    Thanks for your hospitality.

  • @MLJ7956
    @MLJ7956 Год назад +120

    Loved this vid, y'all. 😎👍
    Y'all should put together an episode with a Southerner, a Northerner, a Midwesterner, a West Coaster, an English person, a European, an Australian, a Japanese, a Chinese, an Indian (from India), a Spanish person, a Native American, etc and all talk about various slangs and phrases that they use. I bet that would be both interesting to compare and might even be humorous at the same time. 😁

    • @freedomcat
      @freedomcat Год назад +7

      Lost in the Pond Lawrence for the Brit, and Old Fashioned AF his wife Tara for Midwestern/hoosier.

    • @corvidsRcool
      @corvidsRcool Год назад +3

      @@freedomcat Lost in the Pond, but yes. Excellent suggestions.

    • @freedomcat
      @freedomcat Год назад +2

      @@corvidsRcool I'm going to fix that. I blame Auto correct.

    • @jrsydvl7218
      @jrsydvl7218 Год назад +9

      If you need a Midwesterner then Charlie Berens is the go-to.

    • @levelselect6800
      @levelselect6800 Год назад +7

      lol not mad at whats said here but I "sigh" because as always Pacific Islanders are left out. lol. no we are not Asian. and no we are not just Hawaiian or Samoan. but cool. We'll definitely bring food around and invite everyone though.

  • @daniel0atk
    @daniel0atk Год назад +48

    Whenever someone asks me why I call all soda Coke I say, "Because Coke is from here?" Since I'm from Georgia, and well Coke is from Atlanta. The Oil one had me laughing though, I say words with oi as OL so soil becomes sol, etc. Great video y'all, keep up the hilarious work. :)

    • @aprilsatterfield3868
      @aprilsatterfield3868 Год назад +5

      Coke was invented in Columbus GA then first sold in Atlanta.

    • @daniel0atk
      @daniel0atk Год назад +3

      Yeah, sorry about that. I always forget where *exactly* it's from. But, thanks for reminding me!

    • @peterounsaville2630
      @peterounsaville2630 Год назад +4

      Dr.Pemberton Columbus Ga.

    • @freethebirds3578
      @freethebirds3578 Год назад +6

      I was raised in Maryland by Hoosier parents, and I always said Coke. Go to a restaurant and you order a Coke and the person taking your order would say, "What kind?"
      I quit that when I moved and got Coca Cola every time.

    • @peterounsaville2630
      @peterounsaville2630 Год назад

      I live in Columbus and my childhood was on base Ft.Benning so then the Infantry Museum was my playground and now hey come on down and live the experience of it brings

  • @lornacy
    @lornacy 7 месяцев назад

    My momma an' dem are doing well. Thank you for asking 😊 Guess that thing they say about Southern courtesy is completely true! Have a great day (From Seattle, WA) Take care ❤

  • @ginaduncan9607
    @ginaduncan9607 Год назад +1

    I've never checked Google for anything about northerners. Bless their hearts.😅

  • @uofa82
    @uofa82 Год назад +12

    I’ve seen articles by speech experts who said that Southern speech is more close to the British speech than any other speech in America.

    • @crystalaguilar7003
      @crystalaguilar7003 Год назад +1

      I was looking for this comment and wondered if anyone else knew this

  • @wherami
    @wherami Год назад +5

    Lol the snorting grits got me

  • @nancykilbourn836
    @nancykilbourn836 6 месяцев назад +1

    Where there were a lot of Scots-Irish (Scotch-ARish) settlers an r sound gets thrown in or emphasized. Also some consonants are split.
    Examples: arl = oil, tar = tire, El-lm = Elm
    I'm old (80) and grew up mostly in the South (Daddy was an Air Force officer) and family was from Louisville. I love dialects and language.

  • @CTHou13
    @CTHou13 8 месяцев назад

    I love how southerners ask about your mama. Going to a small town store where I know no one - I am gonna ask the clerk how their mama is doing today. It is just polite and it is what we southerners do. It shows we like you

  • @jacobrichardson611
    @jacobrichardson611 Год назад +70

    Fun fact almost every state has its own accent even some large states have different ones per area even if it's small

    • @MintersFreshers
      @MintersFreshers Год назад +1

      Then there’s the Midwestern states which have no accent 😂😂

    • @jacobrichardson611
      @jacobrichardson611 Год назад +6

      @@MintersFreshers actually they do!

    • @MintersFreshers
      @MintersFreshers Год назад

      @@jacobrichardson611 it was a joke mate .-. Even my parents are from the Midwest and they say they have no accent .-.
      Its called a joke 🤦‍♂️

    • @Godlim17
      @Godlim17 Год назад +3

      This! I come from PA we have a Philadelphia accent, central PA accent, PA dutch accent, and a western PA accent. All within the same state. We also are split on pop and soda.

    • @jacobrichardson611
      @jacobrichardson611 Год назад

      @@MintersFreshers oh I'm sorry! I didn't catch it lol...wooooosh

  • @urmasslow
    @urmasslow Год назад +32

    ANYONE who calls coke "pop" I question their intelligence. I've actually caught a 3 day Facebook ban for commenting on a meme that portrays coke as unintelligent and pop as intelligent and commented that op was unable to spell coke or pop because he clearly is the one mentally deficient for confusing which is which. I'm willing to die on this hill.

    • @ronaldchapman7379
      @ronaldchapman7379 Год назад

      @itsasouthernthing

    • @burnthecandleatbothendz
      @burnthecandleatbothendz Год назад

      Its where you live in the country .in the midwest and where i live in the northern plains we say "pop" .ive used the term "soda" a couple times ,it just felt wrong and it confused people

  • @dhwave1
    @dhwave1 2 месяца назад

    and now you'll get a Christmas card from us every year, yep. See talking to each other makes the world a happier place :)

  • @salmonjanet
    @salmonjanet Год назад +81

    Yall always make my day! I laughed so hard at the food bit because it's true. Found out yesterday that my MIL is making dinner for us today, for our weekly family visit, and I have been thinking about it since then. And I'll be thinking about it afterwards, until I step outside in the humidity and reach a level 10! 😂😂😂

    • @freedomcat
      @freedomcat Год назад +2

      Eat more vitamin c rich foods.

    • @elenwinl9786
      @elenwinl9786 Год назад +3

      Enjoy your lovely meal and time with family!

  • @stevemoore595
    @stevemoore595 Год назад +56

    As a 69 year old "hillbilly" from the great state of Arkansas, Little Rock, (Home of Johnny Cash and Glenn Campbell) I love these videos from our friends from Alabama - a truely great Southern state if there ever was one! Most of us get along beautifully - Black, White, Hispanic. The use of Ma'am, Sir, or Miss is just ingrained in us at an early stage of our lives. Yes Sir and Yes Ma'am is also taught early - All of this is taught to respect our Elders. I have been chatised for calling a person "yes ma'am" out West after she asked me if I needed syrup for my pancakes at breakfast one morning - Seriously! I will hold a door open for a man or woman, it's just the polite thing to do. What is wrong with being polite and helping others?
    I'm not going to change and you will never hear me say "you guys" to a bunch of boys and girls. Proper ediquette would be: "Y'all" because that means: "All of you". The only time you would use the vernacular of "y'all" to a singular person would be in referance to his family. You see a single man/woman on the street and you say": "How y'all doing?" you are referencing his whole family. You would not just walk up to some dude on the street and say "How y'all doing?" That would be similar to walking up to a single person and say "What are you guys up to?
    And yes, even in a small state like Arkansas, we have regional accents too. Northern Arkansas Ozarks (True mountain folks that hid from the "Revenors of illegal moonshine stills making corn whiskey are a tough breed to assimliate with, especially with the influx of "Yanks" coming to many Retirement Centers up there. Their accent is more precise and direct to the point.
    Now you go down some what and follow the White River as it returns to a normal flow as it once was before it was damned up to make hydro-electric power and it turned the upper White River into a great trout fishery. Now down near DeValls Bluff the water returns to it's normal temperature and catfishing and other warm water species return to their natural habitat. Shouvel-nosed catfish (not relly catfish thrive). Brim, bass, perch, aligator gar, you name it thrive here.
    But, The folks that live along the White River have their own dialect too.
    Go down to Southern Akansas farmland and you will meet some of the friendliest people around. They have hardscrabbled the land, a lot from government allotments and homesteading - both for Black and White folks. Good people that work the land diligently and trest and respect each other. Their speach patters a a bit slower because the are ot in the hot sun battling it every day.
    We got German settles that arrived in the Eastern farm land so ther verbal influence added to the overall complexity of the Arkansas language. We also had the Swiss move to the Middle Ozark/Ouachita Mountains to establish wineries and a more of them moved to Eureka Springs for the early treatment of body ails by natural springs - it is a cool town! Also, there is a great amount of history since a lot of the Indian Tribes were forced to trek through Northern Arkansas along the Trail of Tears - forced march by the "damn Yankees" to move all indians out of the "civilazed population"- a sad time in our History because the Indians and Southerners got along.

    • @elliottpotter7982
      @elliottpotter7982 Год назад +1

      Bro just wrote a novel

    • @Tragedy01xx
      @Tragedy01xx Год назад

      You said it perfectly. I was born and raised about an hour south of little Rock. In south Arkansas.

    • @janedoe7621
      @janedoe7621 Год назад

      The Ozark region, particularly the northwest, was also heavily settled by Italian immigrants as wine country, so that could add a bit of that flavor to the accent here.

    • @leahcrosby6597
      @leahcrosby6597 Год назад

      I’m from Stuttgart Arkansas and you are absolutely right about how the accent and the way we go about things are completely different. I remember being in Hot Springs and running into a couple and just by how I reacted and responded to them ask how my day was they instantly knew I was from south east Arkansas and I know they had to be from northern Arkansas. We both just so happened to be right.

    • @mintz9782
      @mintz9782 Год назад

      Well these people are from the big city, more yankee than southerner. You can tell. Less southern than others.

  • @dixiemerchant1052
    @dixiemerchant1052 Год назад

    whenever (you say we shorten words, no, sometimes we double them) -- so funny!!

  • @winnonadc2665
    @winnonadc2665 Год назад +1

    Love those southerners!!

  • @cheryltattersall5044
    @cheryltattersall5044 Год назад +39

    I love the audacity of people asking such stupid questions. I talk way too much and I would love to sit and talk to ya'll. Thanks for the fun videos

    • @jesuslovesyou4400
      @jesuslovesyou4400 Год назад +1

      But how does one fix ignorance if they can't ask questions?

    • @hellhound1389
      @hellhound1389 Год назад

      I always say there's no such thing as a stupid question just stupid people

  • @EdwardGarrenMFT
    @EdwardGarrenMFT Год назад +94

    So this is what I learned about the term Yankee and probably where it comes from. I had a roommate from Boston who was Irish, and the Irish in Boston identified very strongly as Irish. One day he made a comment about the old moneyed Boston elite, and referred to them as Yankees. I did a double take and asked about this and he explained to me that Yankee is the term the Irish use to describe the English. I’ve also read a lot about the lead up to the Civil War in this country. After the revolutionary war the Scots and the Irish living in New England were offered land grants in what we now think of as the American South as payment for fighting in the revolutionary war. One of my mothers ancestors, surname Brackett, was a silver smith in New England, who fought in the revolutionary war, and received a land grant in what is now Northeast Georgia. So as the Scots and the Irish migrated south out of New England, they took their language with them and Yankee is the term they use to describe the English. If you know much history about what is now the United Kingdom, the English spent centuries committing genocide and other forms of subjugation against the Scots and the Irish.
    That is why we generally are hospitable to Yankees, until they start telling us how to live. Hope that helps explain where the term Yankee came from.
    Also, in my mind and I think in the mind of most of us who are Southern identified, anyone who did not grow up in the South, with at least one southern parent, to experience the culture as a part of our upbringing and formation, is automatically considered a Yankee. It has nothing to do with genetics anymore per se, and everything to do with the culture and an attitude about how we treat the world, as God’s creation, and the people who live on the world, as God’s children. I had a friend who is an anthropologist when I lived in Miami and she explained to me, that in anthropological circles, rural southern culture is considered the most complex culture on earth. Only people who grow up in it ever really understand it or know how to navigate in it. We have layers of nuance and metaphor that do not exist another cultures. After almost 40 years of living in Los Angeles what I have discovered and I’m very thankful for is that most elements of Southern culture exist in other cultures as well as a central theme. For example face-saving is a strong central feature of Asian culture along with humility. Hospitality is very important to middle easterners, and the ability to communicate with metaphors and allegory is central to most non-European cultures. So I intuitively understand people from all over the world in ways that my “Yankee” friends never understand. I grew up in rural Central Florida between Tampa and Orlando. The place has been overrun with and ruined by all the Yankees that are retired there, but in the mid-60s it was very much an extension of Georgia and Alabama.

    • @BROUBoomer
      @BROUBoomer Год назад +10

      Hi Edward Garren,
      Thank you for your comment.
      This makes sense to me.
      Virginia born and raised, moved to Orlando, Florida area age 10 in 1974. It's the subtle nuances when speaking to others. Southerners pick up on the little things that are important to other cultures that aren't important to Yankees, so we do understand them better. I've worked for theme parks for about 30 years. I can understand and somewhat communicate with non-English speakers; at least the cost of items, but not that additional tax to the price... Working with Yankees, they just give up and ask me for help.
      Calling your elders Miss or Mr before their name is just common courtesy. Especially your parents friends. My parents call them by first name, then unless otherwise informed I can too as long as I add Miss, Ms, or Mr first. Just like I can call my parents siblings by first name, so long as Aunt, or Uncle is added first. I never called my grandparents by their first name EVER. It was Grandma last name, Grandpa last name, Nanny last name, and Papa last name. IF I ever were to disrespect them by calling them by their first name, I'd have seen the backside of the woodshed. Learning respect at an early age is very important in the South. People judge your family by your behavior. You represent your ancestors and your family every time you walk outside.
      My favorite Southern thing is when you meet someone new, you explain where you are from, and who you're related to. Yankees don't understand this important ritual. But we want to know if we're talking to a cousin we haven't met yet. Pre mid 20th century, Southern families were large, you might not even get to meet all of your first cousins. My mother has 18 blood aunts and uncles. I have no idea how many cousins she has, I've never met most of them. I remember one story she told me about a girl in school being snotty to her and thinking she was better than. Momma put her in her place when she told her I don't know who you think you are, but next Sunday dinner at grandma's house I'm telling on you, and aunt so and so and your daddy will be eating supper on the porch. Dumb butt, you're my first cousin, and I'm grandma's favorite, you're in big trouble now. So there. Never forget who you're related to, they'll tattle on you faster than a neighbor will.
      Nice chatting with you.
      Take care, stay safe, have a nice day.
      👵🙂✌️🖖 😷 🙉🙈🙊 🌎☮️🕊️

    • @katemolly100
      @katemolly100 Год назад +3

      Wow thanks for the info!

    • @cabranoia
      @cabranoia Год назад +5

      Yankee was also a derisive term used by the British for the American colonists leading up to and during the Revolutionary War; which the colonists of the New England colonies proudly adopted.

    • @STho205
      @STho205 Год назад +5

      The Yankees already had that term at least 130 years before the Revolution and over two centuries before the 1861 War.
      Dutch called the New England and Hampshire settlers that (with their own pronunciations starting with a J). The French softened it to yankee.
      NE descendents just kept using it on themselves. Virginians, Pennsylvanians and Carolians thrown together with them in the Continental Army used the formal proper term:
      Damned Yankee.
      You'll find a passage about that in Joseph Plum Martin's rev war diary
      Always, remember to use the full proper term out of courtesy:
      Damned Yankee.

    • @boomznbladez405
      @boomznbladez405 Год назад +4

      @@STho205 we are going to clean up your history.
      Not that its wrong, but you seem to think the person before you stated the origin on the word when they did not, just one of its many evolutions.
      There is debate on if its actually a Cherokee word meaning coward. But regardless, Janke(late Yankee) was a derogatory term for the dutch settlers there, that eventually began to be applied to New englanders as whole (namely when pre revolution tensions started to rise). To call someone a yankee was like calling them a lazy good for nothing POS.
      Eventually the british started singing a derogatory song called "Yankee Doodle" which we unironically appropriated as a battle hymn.
      So from then on Americans in general were called Yankees, and was no longer seen as derogatory to us in the States, but as a symbol of where we are from.
      Fast forward to 1861, and you had two main groups in the US. Yankees, who are Americans and wanted to be American (i.e. preserve the union) and you had Rebels, those who wanted to rebel and leave the union. So northerners got called Yankees, or Billy Yanks, and the southerners got called Rebels, or Johnny Rebs.

  • @dollsins5247
    @dollsins5247 Год назад +1

    My mom came up to Colorado from Arkansas to visit my fiancé and I while we were living in the mountains. Her and my stepdad freakin rocked the driving in the snow part of the trip, they also relished in the legal pot in Colorado 😅

  • @gapeachnw4786
    @gapeachnw4786 Год назад

    Southerners talk so much because we are story tellers.
    And Boy do we have the stories to tell! 🥴🕺🏻😁🍗🥰💃🏻

  • @lucycliburn2344
    @lucycliburn2344 Год назад +8

    I taught missions education to Elementary school girls. They called me Miss Lucy. Fast forward 20 years, and I was helping one of my former students when her boss came in. She introduced me as Miss Lucy. And I loved it!

  • @patriciagodfrey6345
    @patriciagodfrey6345 Год назад +46

    My Ma passed some decades ago (I am ancient), but before she went to her reward she made certain to do her best in teaching her little girls to be proper Southern ladies even though we were in the North. It stuck. I only feel at ease around people from the South, or folks raised by people from the South. It really is a different mindset and way of life. And, by the way, at that comment about snorting grits... I almost snorted my grits. ;-)

    • @nancykilbourn836
      @nancykilbourn836 6 месяцев назад +2

      I know that feeling you have. I have lived my 55 years of married life in Southern California. Lived all over the South and family from Louisville. I still get so very homesick. Then I cook. that helps a little.

    • @patriciagodfrey6345
      @patriciagodfrey6345 6 месяцев назад

      @@nancykilbourn836 And today (Thanksgiving 2023) is a Southern feast my Ma would be so proud of! :-D

  • @mrsbritt1987
    @mrsbritt1987 10 месяцев назад

    As someone from Texas I don’t think any of y’all even sound southern lol. Love your channel though it’s funny and very true! What’s crazy is every state in the south is so different!

  • @ellemim2239
    @ellemim2239 Год назад +1

    Cracking up!! My family is split between the N&S and we have same conversations. We're also split up between North and South Jersey. There are just as many differences!

  • @ShaunaLiTheStarcaller
    @ShaunaLiTheStarcaller Год назад +25

    Basements: Texas does not have them because the ground is so hard to dig into (I can barely dig holes to plant bushes in my backyard lol) that it is not very cost effective to do so. You can find some houses that have them but its rare. :) You are likely to spend $30,000 to $100,000 to build a 1,000 square foot basement in Texas... and I can think of many things I'd rather spend that kind of $$ on. :P

    • @Dakotako
      @Dakotako Год назад +2

      I’m in west Texas, when we have a pet die, I get to play rock roulette finding a spot to bury it. I usually need a pick axe at about a foot down.

    • @jrsydvl7218
      @jrsydvl7218 Год назад

      They say the same thing in AZ and NV. But it doesn't seem too hard to dig pools. Basements are usually 10-20 degrees cooler than upper floors. I figured they'd be more common in the southwest.

    • @emberandfriendsanimations2454
      @emberandfriendsanimations2454 Год назад +4

      And over here on the gulf coast near Houston, they would flood quite often and be expensive for the average person to maintain
      They had to completely redo the tunnels under Houston after Harvey (I don’t even know why or how they built tunnels under Houston, considering it’s partly built on a swamp)

    • @LynyrdSkynyrd.4Ever
      @LynyrdSkynyrd.4Ever Год назад +1

      The expansive clay soil in Central Texas is bad for basement building as it is in constant motion and holds water. If you have a basement, it's gonna crack and leak water at some point.

    • @KyrenaH
      @KyrenaH Год назад

      @@Dakotako Where I live you have to dig 4 feet down to bury a pet. I did that earlier this year. It was terrible I could barely get through the clay. Then it rained and filled in half the hole so I had to start over again.

  • @Lady_de_Lis
    @Lady_de_Lis Год назад +9

    I'm in the part of the South without basements: Louisiana. Yes, as a whole. The whole state. No basements.
    Why no basements? Answer: it's just too wet out here for basements.
    Thanks for coming to my Ted Talk.

    • @rosemorris7912
      @rosemorris7912 Год назад

      Yep, alluvial soil and shallow water tables make for a big ol' mess.

  • @kelly3560
    @kelly3560 Год назад

    Whenever is passive aggressive, Bless your heart.😂

  • @stephaniebarfield2718
    @stephaniebarfield2718 Год назад +1

    My husband is from North Carolina and I love the way he says oil. He doesn’t have an accent but some times I just ask him to say oil ❤️

    •  11 месяцев назад

      "he doesn't have an accent"… yeah, right.

  • @KenFromchicago
    @KenFromchicago Год назад +10

    Southern food is the bomb. Of course y'all are happier. Especially the larger portions.
    Same reasons Northerners can't handle heat. Less exposure.
    We associate slow talking with lack of smarts but in a culture in built in massive heat, you learn to pace yourself. And you're not always rushing, so more time to talk.
    Southern etiquette includes "Miss" and "Mister".
    Southerners have accents because accents are cool! Accents are like spice to language.
    In rural areas, there are few people, more spread out, so no need to build upward, just build outward. Also, yes, in Louisiana, Florida, Alabama, swamp area or low sea levels, you don't want flooding. You build vertically where people are crammed in together. That's why ranchstyle homes are so popular. More room to build sideways instead of building basements or second floors.
    Liz nailed it. Coke was well known soda that coke got genericized like Kleenex or Aspirin or Xerox machines were for facial tissue, headache medicine and copy machines.
    Southerners can look different than Northerners due to greater exposure to the Sun, to heat, and lack of superficial fears about skin treatment, greater acceptance of larger body mass as a sign of good cooking and good eating. I learned that last one personally. My mom was from Louisiana and a fantastic cook, to which my ample belt size can testify.👍😁

  • @retirednavy8720
    @retirednavy8720 Год назад +7

    I was raised in the Rocky Mountains and spent 25 years in the military. I was stationed on the West Coast, the East Coast, the mid-west, Hawaii, overseas and FL. When I retired I stayed in the South. 'Nuff said!

  • @imthebossofme63
    @imthebossofme63 Год назад

    Southern moms are scary! 🤣 I have a cleaning company, Miss Jenny's Cleaning. When I mop at my commercial accounts, I can see in the customer's face how they are trying to figure out how to walk on the wet floor. They will tip toe, walk across the treadmills; anything to keep from walking on the floor before it dries. The southern Meemaw in me wants to tell them it's ok ... This time. 🤣

  • @Jayslace
    @Jayslace 8 месяцев назад

    My husband and I moved here from Indianapolis 6 yrs ago. My dad grew up in Alabama and we loved the south there. My husband job brought us here. But we found that unless you go are a member of church, follow sports and/or play Bunco you don't stand a chance. I love your videos , though. I have a lot southern folk still in Alabama and I just went to our yrly reunion in Ohio this yr.

  • @ramonafricke5118
    @ramonafricke5118 Год назад +5

    I grew up in North Carolina, joined the Navy at 19, and I've lived in several places since then. I will always be a southern girl, no matter where I roam, 'cause in my heart North Carolina will always be my home!