Appalachian Vocabulary Test - See if You Know the Words!

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  • Опубликовано: 26 сен 2024
  • In this video I'm giving the girls a test on Appalachian language! I feature a vocabulary test every month on my blog Blind Pig and The Acorn. I thought it would be fun to test the girls' knowledge of Appalachian language in a video. Hope you enjoy!
    Find Dictionary of Southern Appalachian English here: amzn.to/3FnKokC
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    #Appalachia #AppalachianLanguage #MountainTalk

Комментарии • 8 тыс.

  • @CelebratingAppalachia
    @CelebratingAppalachia  3 года назад +300

    Visit the girls channel here: ruclips.net/user/thepressleygirls

    • @brandonphillips5169
      @brandonphillips5169 3 года назад +17

      Where are tall from love to here fellow dialect like honey to the ears... I born and raised near Boone nc

    • @theresaclancy6091
      @theresaclancy6091 3 года назад +18

      We say all these words on the East Coast. Maybe, because the Irish Scotch immigrants first came to Ma. then migrated to your parts.

    • @stanervin6108
      @stanervin6108 3 года назад +12

      @@theresaclancy6091
      Me too. Outer Banks NC. I garged on sallet fo days straight and had a bait. We got brogue dialect oot har.

    • @bushmeatbandit4261
      @bushmeatbandit4261 3 года назад +4

      awesome video i was about 50/50 till the last few minutes and im not from Appalachia im from mid eastern ga over by the carolina line

    • @tennesseepatriot1950
      @tennesseepatriot1950 3 года назад +10

      Lovely family and beautiful place that you live. I'm from Kentucky and married a Tn boy across the state line, lol.. I new what most of these meant. I'm homesick for the wood's and my grandma's home's. The food you cook is what I was raised on and cooked for my family.. Your daughter's are amazing girl's as is your hubby and granny. Mine are all gone now, sad. Enjoy it all, I believe that you are.. Best wish's from Cookeville, Tennessee. BTW, where are you located, I just started watching..

  • @thaproducer1988
    @thaproducer1988 2 года назад +1774

    As a young man from a small WV town I never took pride in my heritage because I didn’t think there was anything prideful about it. But as I’ve gotten older, I see the strength and resourcefulness and wit of the mountain people who now I am proud to call my fellow men and women. Keep this channel going!!! Absolutely love it!! ❤️

    • @CelebratingAppalachia
      @CelebratingAppalachia  2 года назад +32

      Thank you Matthew 😀

    • @heli-crewhgs5285
      @heli-crewhgs5285 Год назад +14

      You’re from the the town where Volkswagens are made?! Wow!! 🚗🚐🚙🚌

    • @taralepine4977
      @taralepine4977 Год назад +39

      I'm a Kentucky Girl!!! I agree with you....we may not have had a lot growing up, but we know how to survive.

    • @pDaleC
      @pDaleC Год назад +18

      @@heli-crewhgs5285 No, it's where they make Wagenvolks.

    • @mitchellwheeler4901
      @mitchellwheeler4901 Год назад +40

      Im from Roanoke, Virginia and the areas around abouts. Now living in South Florida since about 15 years old. When I was younger I was embarrassed about where I was from. Now that I'm in my 30's im very prideful about it. We are good people in appalachia and I love throwing random slang words into conversation just to get a laugh out of people in Florida. In my line of business I can make a lot of money during Christmas time in tip. I learned real quick to turn the accent up a notch around customers. They love it haha.

  • @msshoeka5573
    @msshoeka5573 Год назад +1172

    I am a 70 year old black female leaving in the south. I did a DNA test and have lots of white DNA. I listened to spoken words by the Appalachian people and some of those words I grew up with. I think it came from slaves from Africa being taught English and it was Scottish and Irish together language they were taught. I have both countries DNA. When I first listened to your area I said oh they sound a lot like my family lol. I'm glad I came across your channel. Thank you be bless.

    • @CelebratingAppalachia
      @CelebratingAppalachia  Год назад +73

      So glad you enjoy our videos and that we remind you of family 😀 Thank you for watching!!

    • @kayamaggie11
      @kayamaggie11 Год назад +30

      Appreciate you sharing your story, thank you!

    • @gabithatabitha
      @gabithatabitha Год назад +39

      Scottish Irish German Italian here - family from WV and OH once they came here. Hearing lots of familiarity here ❤ if you’ve never seen the movie Songcatcher, it talks about the music from Appalachia

    • @DerSchleier
      @DerSchleier Год назад +1

      For those unknowing Roman Catholic Irish were enslaved by an evil English king who wanted them off their Irish land so as to procure land for his bankers.
      The English king separated the Roman Catholic Irish women from their men/husband even. This English king sent the Roman Catholic Irish women to its Carribean island holdings forcing them to mate with sub-Saharan African slaves.
      There is far more egregious English slavery industry facts... but this is not the platform for "specifics".
      Know your Volke's history. Everyone.

    • @Tachy320
      @Tachy320 Год назад +10

      My Moms side is from W North Carolina and I know a lot of the words but some I haven’t heard for many years since my Grandmother passed. Boy those girls have some deep accents. Glad to hear it. I sure miss hearing my Grandparents talking. My Grandma would always call someone no account. Lol. My Mom still can slip into her accent. Love it.

  • @lenny2137
    @lenny2137 2 года назад +932

    I’m from Avoca in Ireland 🇮🇪 and so many of these words are part of our vocabulary. Update 23/07/23 Speaking to my nanny(grandmother 94) some of granddads side of the family emigrated to Kentucky to work in the coal mines due to there experience of mining in the Avoca copper mines here in Wicklow Ireland. So any Moores from Kentucky we are probably related 😂

    • @ebogar42
      @ebogar42 Год назад +130

      It's because most people from the Appalachians have ancestry from there and Scotland. My DNA has a lot of Irish and Scottish.

    • @brucelee5576
      @brucelee5576 Год назад +89

      Yup a lot of Scottish and Irish immigrant workers , busted their asses and we’re not given what they were promised , so they took to the mountains and woods and made a life for themselves there.

    • @teresasmith8946
      @teresasmith8946 Год назад +66

      Yes!!!! Many Irish settled in the mountains my Grandmother's maiden name was Doyle she would harse instead of how we say horse. If you look also at mountain dancing..clogging it looks similar to Irish folk dancing much love from USA

    • @teresasmith8946
      @teresasmith8946 Год назад +28

      @@brucelee5576 the terrain was what they were use too while others didn't care to till the rocky soil to plant the Irish and Scottish had been doing it for centuries in there land. The area appealed to them that's why they chose to go there. My family is from the Shenandoah valley Irish Scottish English and German decendants. I choose not to live there but have a ingrained respect and love of it.

    • @rozdoyle8872
      @rozdoyle8872 Год назад +14

      @@teresasmith8946 Your Grandmother sure had a lovely surname , the meaning of which is Dark Stranger .

  • @karlurban5401
    @karlurban5401 3 года назад +659

    These girls are a riot. “Some people eat gizzards. There’s lotsa meat on a chicken and that’s what you choose to eat?” 😂🤣😂

    • @Grimmarox
      @Grimmarox 3 года назад +14

      My mom and grandmother got into a disagreement over the gizzards on a Thanksgiving.

    • @johnnabuzby6103
      @johnnabuzby6103 2 года назад +25

      My late mama used to love gizzards and my daddy does to this day. He loves chicken livers too. Blechhh!

    • @Grimmarox
      @Grimmarox 2 года назад +14

      KfC in Conway SC had fried gizzards on the menu...

    • @Angelica_Rodriguez39
      @Angelica_Rodriguez39 2 года назад +37

      Okay but when gizzards are done right they're amazing ok 😂🥰

    • @mmar161
      @mmar161 2 года назад +27

      I love gizzards and giblet gravy 😊

  • @gower23
    @gower23 Год назад +186

    So many of these expressions feel like they've been taken straight out of Northern Ireland, and used in exactly the same context. It's wonderful.

    • @ANIMLLUVER
      @ANIMLLUVER 9 месяцев назад +5

      AS A KID DIDN'T NOTICE THAT THE LANGUAGE WAS DIFFERENT TO I WENT AND VISITED MY COUSINS IN MICHIGAN. AT THE END OF A SENTENCE MOST THE TIME THEY SAY EH? I DIDN'T KNOW WHAT IT MEANT. COME TO FIND OUT THEY DIDN'T EITHER. JUST SOMETHING THEY SAID BECAUSE THEY WERE CLOSE TO CANADA, EH.?🤨🤔🙄🥴

    • @catwhisperer9489
      @catwhisperer9489 7 месяцев назад +6

      Yeah, I remember when I got stationed in Britain, how interesting it was to hear that alot of the words they used, my grandparents used!! We use to call the way my grandparents talked, "old English"---I never knew how literal that was!!!

    • @AB..__..
      @AB..__.. 6 месяцев назад +6

      Irish music morphed into country music in the south.

    • @catwhisperer9489
      @catwhisperer9489 6 месяцев назад +5

      @@AB..__.. : As did Irish dancing. Ever watched "Riverdance", and then country folk, clogging? It's basically the same thing!!!

    • @cloudstrifeification
      @cloudstrifeification 5 месяцев назад +3

      Yes y'all hit it on the head as a lot of people in Appalachia are of Scotch- Irish descent! The Appalachian dialect is closest to a old Scottish dialect from back in the day.

  • @Quin_79
    @Quin_79 2 года назад +816

    A lot of these words have roots in Gaelic and the Scottish settlers that settled all along that area and there verbage from their native tongue over to English and has this morphed into the unique and beautiful language that is Appalachian 🤗🙏🏻🥰😇

    • @lewiemcneely9143
      @lewiemcneely9143 2 года назад +41

      Some of the older ones still had the Scottish brogue. I remember them well!

    • @Quin_79
      @Quin_79 2 года назад +1

      @@lewiemcneely9143 💜😇

    • @lewiemcneely9143
      @lewiemcneely9143 2 года назад +4

      @@Quin_79 There you go!!

    • @saraw8503
      @saraw8503 2 года назад +14

      You should hear the brogue of the people from Downeast Carteret Co., NC.

    • @lewiemcneely9143
      @lewiemcneely9143 2 года назад +12

      @@saraw8503 I have but it's not a lot different than here in the hills. Every region has their own differences but South is South, Thank God!

  • @dearyayres8583
    @dearyayres8583 Год назад +69

    I’m from the Bluegrass area of Kentucky. Despite a heavy influence of the Midwest on my culture , our language is straight out of the hills. I’m proud to say I am familiar with 99 percent of the words and phrases in this test. My mamas peoples is out of West Virginia so that might be a heap of help for sure! Some words I didn’t hear was “ fixing” as in “ I’m fixing to leave y’all!”, and my favorite phrase that ever was, I remember Granny saying it like it was yesterday,God bless her, she’s been gone now, going on 20 years. She would say , “ Honey , fore yewings go, git the poke from the boot!” She had to walk across a creek to get to the house ,from where they parked it was a pretty good ways, so she was always needing help in fetching the groceries and what-knot! Thanks for the kind reminder!

    • @herkleslie4561
      @herkleslie4561 Год назад +1

      lol try this one,,, it was 1 of my moms favorites, I'm fixin to beat ya like a barried mule lol I loved that 1

    • @gregrubyflanagan2386
      @gregrubyflanagan2386 8 месяцев назад +1

      My grandma would say, a fur piece and a right smart. When someone was bragging, she would say, "Don't they think their high in the papers."

    • @cumbuckaroo9966
      @cumbuckaroo9966 6 месяцев назад +2

      The Bluegrass of Kentucky is Upland South, a relative of the Appalachian South in Eastern Kentucky. It isn't Midwestern.

    • @seanvogel8067
      @seanvogel8067 4 месяца назад

      @@cumbuckaroo9966, well ain’t you high up in the papers!

    • @barbaravyse660
      @barbaravyse660 2 месяца назад

      Sounds like me when I parked my car in Boston. Most of the time I couldn’t find a spot in front of my apartment, so I had to drive to the next neighborhood to find a spot. And then hope I could remember where I parked since I didn’t use the car during the week while I was a grad school.

  • @MrTalkingzero
    @MrTalkingzero Год назад +197

    As an amateur linguist, I say that your work should be considered national treasure. Thank you!

    • @CelebratingAppalachia
      @CelebratingAppalachia  Год назад +9

      Wow, thank you!

    • @danielbriggs991
      @danielbriggs991 9 месяцев назад +1

      Here in the northeast, we do use fisticuffs, hunker down, ruination, and gall, although fisticuffs has a bit of a newsies'-era tinge to it, and the meaning of gall is slightly different.
      We might say "mired," but only rarely, and probably not "mired up."
      "Let on" seems to have drifted ever so slightly semantically from "let someone know the truth of a condition" to "pretend some other condition." We might use it in the latter way too here, I guess, but in a smaller ratio.
      It's interesting to see them have opposite takes on which way yon way is. Just kidding!

    • @MrTalkingzero
      @MrTalkingzero 9 месяцев назад +5

      @@danielbriggs991 I have met a few people from Pennsylvania who used the word 'yet' instead of 'still' which I found extremely interesting and somewhat confusing. For example, are you at work yet? Of course I am, it's 11 am and I work 6am to 4 pm. Did you mean are you STILL at work? Or is it snowing yet? Of course it is, it has been snowing for hours and you have commented on the snow already. Did you mean is it snowing STILL? Anyway, would you like to comment on this phenomenon?

  • @rtatumc
    @rtatumc 2 года назад +148

    I'm 67 years old and this brought up so many precious memories of my parents and grandparents. Thank you so much!!!

  • @yaboijoel517
    @yaboijoel517 2 года назад +476

    I’m glad to see some Appalachians on RUclips. Our people need more positive representation, out there.

    • @chade7669
      @chade7669 2 года назад +3

      Americans are represented

    • @johnspinelli9396
      @johnspinelli9396 2 года назад +2

      I'll be moving to Eastern Kentucky yo volunteer next month, I can't wait to meet the people there

    • @outdoorloser4340
      @outdoorloser4340 2 года назад

      The Wild and Wonderful Whites is on netflix

    • @buckbenelli8
      @buckbenelli8 2 года назад +2

      Why? I’m never going to celebrate ignorance in any shape or form. If African Americans speak gibberish or Caucasian Appalachians speak gibberish, it’s still gibberish.

    • @ChicCanyon
      @ChicCanyon 2 года назад

      That comma placement cany be right. Right???

  • @jayleigh4642
    @jayleigh4642 3 года назад +768

    As a British lady almost 60 years old I recognised pretty much all the words which I was really happy about. And of course, the accent for me made it a little harder, I figured I got about half. 😆😆😆 very cool video.

    • @nancyj5490
      @nancyj5490 3 года назад +81

      Interesting that you say that. Because it’s my understanding that the southern dialect and accent has its roots in and is very similar to British. That it was a sophisticated accent as well.

    • @TheYammerHammer
      @TheYammerHammer 3 года назад +50

      A lot of West Virginians are from Ireland 🇮🇪

    • @ahole5407
      @ahole5407 3 года назад +21

      God shave the Queen. 😂 😂 😂

    • @foxopossum
      @foxopossum 3 года назад +10

      That is so neat!

    • @Grimmarox
      @Grimmarox 3 года назад +29

      @@nancyj5490 I'm from Boston and I notice that our accents are very similar to the english/british dialict.
      Appalachian just have their own slang words which confuse a lot. That's my thoughts.

  • @katziebob
    @katziebob Год назад +55

    My family was in Appalachia before the American Revolution and then emigrated to Oregon Territory in 1852. The language, customs, superstitions, and recipes have survived and come down to us 7 or more generations later. Amazingly, I knew quite a few of these words. Thank you for posting this!

    • @mimibee626
      @mimibee626 Год назад +1

      Sounds like most of us, from all over, heard these words these words growing up. These are not Appalacian words.

  • @ShadowVisionsParanormal
    @ShadowVisionsParanormal 2 года назад +288

    As an Australian, I recognise a lot of these terms as old English words learnt from my Great Grandmother and Grandmother. I still use them today haha.

    • @THX-vb8yz
      @THX-vb8yz 2 года назад +10

      I was told (by people of the south) that some of the mountain people have a British accent.

    • @ShadowVisionsParanormal
      @ShadowVisionsParanormal 2 года назад +3

      @@THX-vb8yz oh wow thats interesting

    • @alisathomas7144
      @alisathomas7144 2 года назад +23

      Appalachia is difficult terrain so the settlers there remained a great deal more cut off from other places. As a result the culture from the 'old world' was reatined more than elsewhere in USA

    • @fullofgracehomestead
      @fullofgracehomestead 2 года назад +3

      History of people has been hidden. All being revealed!

    • @BooF308
      @BooF308 2 года назад +8

      Fascinating hey! Lots of descendants of Scots / Irish in both places, stands to reason some of the old words survive.

  • @albinorhino8732
    @albinorhino8732 2 года назад +226

    My great-grandparents moved from Ireland to Tennessee. I'm proud to say I knew most of these. I'm glad there are people keeping Appalachian history/language alive!

    • @taralepine4977
      @taralepine4977 Год назад +1

      Mine came from County Claire IR to Flemingsburg Kentucky. PROUD of my Mountain roots.

    • @joem5903
      @joem5903 Год назад

      Before of after 1840? I have Scotch-Irish family from Ulster than arrived in the early 1700's and Irish family that came after 1840. Also a scattering of Highland Scots and English from the south. Has to be a Welshman in the woodpile somewhere too. LOL Also late arriving Germans 1880's.

  • @royalirishranger1931
    @royalirishranger1931 2 года назад +135

    I’m a Ulster Scot from Northern Ireland, I have no problems with any of it, occasionally their accent is a little difficult but part apart from that , its all very familiar.

    • @kenth234
      @kenth234 2 года назад +8

      That's what i was saying. I'm from County Down.

    • @bystanemusic990
      @bystanemusic990 2 года назад

      Do you speak the Scots language/Dae ye spick the Scots leid?

    • @dukadarodear2176
      @dukadarodear2176 2 года назад +25

      I'm from southern Ireland and I noticed that Katie used in her normal conversation there the phrase "More Ya". We use it here in English but it's from the Irish "Mar Ea" (Mar ya) meaning "As if" eg "you cleaned the car Mar Ya"/ "you act as if you cleaned the car".
      The first big migration from Ireland to America was by the Scots-Irish from Ulster who were mostly Protestants. Many settled in the Appalacians. We can thank them for the great American "Country" music tradition.
      The next big migration was later and was mostly by Catholics from all over Ireland who settled in some of the big cities such as NY and Boston.
      The Scots-Irish and the Irish have had a big influence on American culture.
      This was a Hell-of-a Show.
      Thank ya, Ladies.

    • @lewiemcneely9143
      @lewiemcneely9143 2 года назад +5

      The Irish and Scotts are our ancestors!

    • @pigasus1663
      @pigasus1663 2 года назад +4

      That's because Appalachia was originally settled by Ulster Scotts sent over hear to wrestle the wilderness away from the Indians. King George was a bad person, but he knew who to send for fighting....The
      The Scots-Irish. America still depends upon our region for the lions share of military leaders.

  • @mikeviall811
    @mikeviall811 Месяц назад +11

    These girls are freaking HILARIOUS!

  • @maryeliason1504
    @maryeliason1504 3 года назад +318

    'There's lots of good things on a chicken to eat & you choose that?!" She is 😆 hilarious. Love your girls.

    • @randeebecker2455
      @randeebecker2455 3 года назад +12

      My Daddy loved gizzards too - who ever thought of eating them first????

    • @stoveboltlvr3798
      @stoveboltlvr3798 3 года назад +5

      I agree with her, yuk I hate gizzards and liver too.

    • @rhythmfield
      @rhythmfield 3 года назад +2

      @@randeebecker2455 what about the claws? I just can’t understand eating that…

    • @tennesseepatriot1950
      @tennesseepatriot1950 3 года назад +3

      I have to agree with her! Lol

    • @TheTwisted68
      @TheTwisted68 3 года назад +5

      As Hank Hill says, "Now there just trying to sell us parts of the cow you throw away."

  • @gymntonic
    @gymntonic 3 года назад +275

    My grandmother used a lot of those words.
    Always thought it was interesting how many Appalachian words and phrases have remained unchanged from old Scots-Irish

    • @capnkirk933
      @capnkirk933 3 года назад +28

      Most Appalachian people are from Scot/Irish decent

    • @sand3882
      @sand3882 3 года назад +19

      I believe that's why Ralph said that.

    • @dereklea1183
      @dereklea1183 3 года назад +19

      @@capnkirk933 - That we are. I can trace part of my roots to Scotland, when my ancestors arrived in the 1800's, as well as the Cherokee Nation. I have an ancestor that was lost on The Trail of Tears. No record of her after a certain date.

    • @Tenskwatawa4U
      @Tenskwatawa4U 3 года назад +7

      I'm familiar with a number of 'em. I grew up in the Virginia Piedmont, less than 20 miles from the Blue Ridge.

    • @Bubbles_Hill
      @Bubbles_Hill 3 года назад +7

      I have scots-Irish Heritage too... that must be why I knew so many words. My great-grandparents and grandparents said most these words. I wasn’t understanding why I knew so many..and use so many. I’m just a small town, bare foot Missourian. I thought everyone said ov’r younder. Lol. I can go back many generations to just right here. Thank you for this comment. It was nice to learn this is where these words stem from.

  • @lillislindsley9231
    @lillislindsley9231 2 года назад +86

    It is amazing to hear these words from the Appalachia natives. I live in the Scottish Borders and a lot of this terminology, slightly different but still has the same meaning. Like the word - baite - still means to eat here in the borders. Each town in the borders has its own accent and dialect. Yet there are words they use to explain the same thing.
    Thank you for the lesson in Appalachia dialect. It’s interesting to see how languages have evolved and the roots of where they have come from.

    • @teresasmith8946
      @teresasmith8946 Год назад +1

      Isn't it fascinating? My family on both sides are from the Blueridge mountains Shenandoah Valley of Virginia it is a beautiful area. My ancestors were Scottish Irish mostly, English and German. If you look at mountain dancing they call it clogging to me it looks similar like Irish folk dancing or Highland Dance. We are all connected my friend. Be safe in these times

    • @christophersmith8316
      @christophersmith8316 Год назад +1

      The Scots Irish did migrate into the hills of Appalachia for some time and formed a subculture there before the Revolution.

    • @jenniferlawrence1372
      @jenniferlawrence1372 Год назад

      I would love it if you would make a list of all the words she mentions that you have in Scottish. (I realize scots speak english, but you know what I mean.)

  • @dtmartin3brony
    @dtmartin3brony Год назад +62

    It really hits me, just how much my Appalachian ancestors carried this vocabulary through the generations! I knew most of them!

  • @csutton161
    @csutton161 Год назад +86

    I'm in upstate SC, Irish, Scottish and English heritage and grew up hearing most of these words. Sounds so good to hear it again! I love your channel.

    • @robertwilson2007
      @robertwilson2007 Год назад +2

      I remember seeing an article one time saying that South Carolina and Kentucky had the most similar vocabularies.

    • @csutton161
      @csutton161 Год назад +4

      @@robertwilson2007 Yes, I find that to be true. I have travelled most of the USA, and whenever I visited KY, we spoke the same, same cadence, and used many of the same words not used in others parts of USA. Got to be the Scottish, Irish, Cherokee roots!

    • @camjam6015
      @camjam6015 Год назад +2

      Come across the river into far northeast ga and western Nc. All locals still talk this way. The move ins are slowly but too quickly ruining it.

    • @BeeWilliamsBuzz
      @BeeWilliamsBuzz Год назад

      Me too. Thx.

    • @P_RO_
      @P_RO_ Год назад

      @@camjam6015 "Mountain Talk" is very similar to Appalachian but the emphasis is different. All came from Irish and Scottish but the further north you go the more German and Moravian has influence.

  • @firerescue708
    @firerescue708 3 года назад +179

    I'm from the Missouri Ozarks and it's fascinating how much of our culture and regional dialect is descended from the Appalachians. I would say that I knew about 80% of these terms.

    • @Rumpleskin
      @Rumpleskin 2 года назад +6

      Me too...people think my accent is from texas

    • @alishapelance2833
      @alishapelance2833 2 года назад +1

      Yes. I lived in the Ozarks for several years in the '80's and heard a lot of these words and phrases used, especially by the older generation. One word I remember that I have not heard of before or since was "donnick" used to mean a large rock.

    • @graysingleton6456
      @graysingleton6456 2 года назад +2

      I watched an interesting video once about American accents and a lot of the westward expansion from the south came out of North Carolina for some reason I can’t remember. But you could directly see how the Appalachian dialect spread west from there.

    • @marytyra1030
      @marytyra1030 2 года назад +2

      I'm wasn't raised in the Ozarks , although people were from all parts of MO. I recognized many words!

    • @beverleymoore8536
      @beverleymoore8536 2 года назад +1

      I was raised in Kansas and the Bronx but my grandmother and grest aunt were from north Missouri and this is the vocabulary i
      carried with me wherever I went. My sons favorite saying is "crazier than a hoot owl "

  • @ladymaiden2308
    @ladymaiden2308 2 года назад +59

    "stogging means the ground has provided you with resistance"
    I love eloquence with a southern accent. 🥰

  • @-thirteen
    @-thirteen Год назад +11

    My grandparents were from Green Cove VA and this is how they spoke. How my dad spoke. When we had a massive family reunion in the 1970s, people came from all the hollers all around the area. There were hundreds, and they all spoke like this. I've never seen anything like it since

  • @voivodeofwallachia7386
    @voivodeofwallachia7386 2 года назад +103

    I live in Spartanburg county, South Carolina and I have heard and used a good bit of these words and sayings, pretty much, on a regular basis. I think it's just peachy that you're keeping the language alive and educating those who have never heard it, or didn't understand it if they had heard it. Thank you, and Blessings to you and your family !!!

    • @ashleynichole91
      @ashleynichole91 2 года назад +3

      I was just about to comment this exact same thing! I’ve heard & used so many of these words/phrases throughout my life. I’m in Spartanburg county as well, Greer to be exact. Small world!

    • @winstonledford3127
      @winstonledford3127 2 года назад +2

      all words are the same just twested around from different teaches
      the way they want us to say they all mean the same if a person can under stand go to our own city coladge over yander in gastonia nc

    • @Blessed-2-b-a-Hembree
      @Blessed-2-b-a-Hembree 2 года назад

      I also live in Spartanburg, SC. Grew up in Simpsonville. On Hwy 14 a couple of miles off Woodruff Rd. ( I remember it when it was all country). I’ve heard and used all these words except the one for tantrum.
      As an adult I learned some of the words we used as children were Geechee/Gullah too.

    • @adrianogomes7111
      @adrianogomes7111 2 года назад +2

      This is crazy it really is a small world I grew up in TR SC and now live in Lyman South Carolina. I wish we could bring back the good old days when the upstate wasn’t infected with the subdivision disease.
      It’s so cool to see how many of these words I actually use and know. 😀

    • @Blessed-2-b-a-Hembree
      @Blessed-2-b-a-Hembree 2 года назад +3

      @@adrianogomes7111 YES !! I Agree about the subdivision illness. I grew up in the corner of Hwy 14 and Maxwell Drive. We had fields and woods for miles to play in. Now if you Google search you’ll see it’s all houses right on top of each other. It’s a higher crime area too. It’s the same where I live now. Use to be all country. Now it’s grocery stores and fast food restaurants. Multiple schools. I hate it.

  • @pambb5743
    @pambb5743 3 года назад +29

    I’m Southern from Louisiana and this is the vocabulary I grew up on.
    The two young ladies are absolutely beautiful. I got such a kick out of their answers.

  • @IReviewIt
    @IReviewIt 2 года назад +72

    I'm amazed how much Appalachia language I was raised with in Northern South Carolina. Apparently my Scots-Irish heritage came from western North Carolina and moved into South Carolina. I love this and learning more about our heritage.

    • @dianem4919
      @dianem4919 2 года назад +2

      My families are from Louisiana/ Mississippi by way of S. Carolina in the 1800’s. I was born and raised in Texas. So many of these words I grew up with.

    • @lewiemcneely9143
      @lewiemcneely9143 2 года назад

      @@dianem4919 Texas is South. HAS to be! And some of the SC folks just waller words around a little bit. Like the politician that said SOOTH for South.

    • @THEBIGFISH_55
      @THEBIGFISH_55 2 года назад +2

      Appalachian dialect is the base for most Southern blue collar folks. Usually in the rhotic R that really gets on my nerves with folks who are playing someone from the South they fail to place R's consistently. You go hard R or just go full plantation Belle (which is rare outside of older ladies in my neck of deeeeeep southeast Alabama)

    • @Arginne
      @Arginne 2 месяца назад

      @@THEBIGFISH_55no one drops their r’s under like 70 in the south anymore. Being from Va, the Virginia accent was non rhotic but no one under senior citizen age drops their R anymore idk why

  • @brucepoole8552
    @brucepoole8552 Год назад +11

    I’m a born in California and lived all my life of 67 years in cali, but my folks and ancestors are from appalatchia, and hearing ya’ll speak with such a beautiful accent brings back great memories thank you so much.

  • @angelw.5410
    @angelw.5410 2 года назад +73

    My grandfather spoke an Appalachian dialect, and with a strong accent, and he used a lot of these words (plus a lot of uncommon ones.) It could be hard to understand him at times, though I understood him pretty well since I grew up hearing it from him. He learned it from his dad, who was originally from a little insulated pocket community in the Smokies. He left when he married a woman from the Cherokee reservation and moved south. I did a living history project before my grandparents died. I interviewed them when I was in college, and I’m so glad I have those stories now, as well as a record of Papaw’s dialect. My dad and aunts don’t speak that way, and their accents were much more moderate, so it’s really interesting (and a little sad) how quickly we lose regional dialects and accents. I barely have a southern accent anymore after living abroad for the past 10+ years, and sometimes I miss hearing it.

    • @lewiemcneely9143
      @lewiemcneely9143 2 года назад +4

      I've got the worst/best drawl of my whole blamed family and we're all natives. I was in the Army with 2 Joyzee guys and got so I could mock them to a tee. I still do it to the Yankee friends around here but always revert back to my hillbilly roots.

    • @donnabruce1058
      @donnabruce1058 2 года назад +2

      You should send a copy to the Museum of Appalachia in Norris TN. They're affiliated with the Smithsonian Institute. I'm sure they would appreciate it and it would be available for researchers! 😀

    • @marybartley5800
      @marybartley5800 2 года назад +1

      Blatherskith is about the only one we don’t use here in Eastern Kentucky!Your daughters are lucky to know most of the words.

    • @marybartley5800
      @marybartley5800 2 года назад +1

      Angel W,I sure would like to share some of your Stories of your grandparents.

    • @blacksheepcustomspa8787
      @blacksheepcustomspa8787 2 года назад +1

      It's great you said that bout your grandparents my great grandparents were from way down in Florida but they had the best accent but my papa didn't have it as hard as them and my mom ain't got one at all or at least it's very modern I moved to Appalachia PA and went to visit my mom and granny and they say I done lost all my accent but up here the PA folk say it's a southern accent lol I said to my Ma I'm a man with out a country but if I move back to North Carolina and maybe my accent will fit right in

  • @kayrslone
    @kayrslone 3 года назад +155

    I'm from South western Virginia and got about 70% of these right. Some I didn't know and others I only hear our old timers use. Thanks for keeping our history and culture alive because I feel like our younger generation have lost a lot of our linguistic heritage.

    • @aliceanjohncampbell1139
      @aliceanjohncampbell1139 2 года назад +2

      I’m from Southwestern Virginia. I’m from Vansant Virginia or the big town of Grundy Virginia. I now live in Nashville Tn

    • @mikematerne4579
      @mikematerne4579 2 года назад +2

      I'm from Roanoke

    • @mr.meatty
      @mr.meatty 2 года назад +5

      I blame us always being told that it was a disadvantage and that we were dumb by talking that way. I'm glad I have grown to be appreciative for my Appalachian heritage and accent. It unfortantly took me leaving home to gain it. Now I'm always missing the mountains.

    • @buddyacesmxbc1055
      @buddyacesmxbc1055 2 года назад +3

      Rap culture has been taken more seriously that they've made a urban dictionary I said the same thing in discovering it " what in tar nations " 🤣

    • @larryviars6199
      @larryviars6199 2 года назад +2

      I’m from Wythe County Va. I’ve been gone from there for 30 years. But the values and attitude of Appalachia never leave me.

  • @michelebradley7813
    @michelebradley7813 2 года назад +56

    😂 I'm an almost 60 y.o. Black woman & I knew almost ALL of this Appalachian vocabulary/definitions. I was raised by my Grandparents, but they were from Louisiana & Mississippi, so I've no explanation. I also grew up eating a lot of the foods associated w/Appalachia, so I've no explanation 🤣😂🤦🏽‍♀️.

    • @lewiemcneely9143
      @lewiemcneely9143 2 года назад +3

      You ju8st can't get above your raisin', Bless Your Heart!

    • @indigoigbo4862
      @indigoigbo4862 2 года назад +3

      Same here. I know many of these words and have eaten and know how to cook most of the delicious dishes!

    • @lewiemcneely9143
      @lewiemcneely9143 2 года назад +9

      @@indigoigbo4862 Nobody's going to starve in the South. Might die of heart attacks but not starve!

    • @indigoigbo4862
      @indigoigbo4862 2 года назад +1

      @@lewiemcneely9143 agreed lol

    • @Winterfell1066
      @Winterfell1066 Год назад +1

      I'm from MS too and I know all these words. I don't know the connection either.

  • @dtschuor459
    @dtschuor459 11 месяцев назад +51

    Your daughters are adorable…they make this twice as much fun.❤

  • @BevPrine
    @BevPrine Год назад +78

    My first Kentucky word I learned was “flarebit.” (flower bed) I’m a native Californian and my Mom transplanted to Waco, Kentucky 28 years ago. Thank you for keeping Appalachian culture alive. Wonderful daughters you have.

    • @palmsofdestin1
      @palmsofdestin1 Год назад

      Yeah I've never heard that word.

    • @rachelgambrell6926
      @rachelgambrell6926 Год назад +18

      They’re not saying flarebit 😂😂 it’s flower bed with the accent. -Kentucky native here lol

    • @my2cents49
      @my2cents49 Год назад +7

      LOL it's flower bed. You're just not used to the local accident.

    • @JustinCombs-jk1kh
      @JustinCombs-jk1kh Год назад +1

      Never heard that lol

    • @mimibee626
      @mimibee626 Год назад +5

      That's just how they pronounced flower bed.

  • @leehoward8636
    @leehoward8636 2 года назад +35

    My dad was from eastern Kentucky. We’d visit every 2 years and our cousins spoke with this accent and language. Great people and incredible stories they told about growing up in the 20s and 30s.

  • @shareenj.2602
    @shareenj.2602 Год назад +58

    I love this. I passed the test. My mom and dad were from KY. I was born in Ohio , but this was the usual talk at our house. Mom and dad are gone and this was such a pleasure to hear. Thank you for sharing. The girls are beautiful and so good natured. It's nice to see these words won't die out.

  • @ThatGuyz82
    @ThatGuyz82 Год назад +17

    I am from WV and I spent a summer around a lot of Irish kids (18-23). 2/3rds of the words here were words that they regularly used.

  • @raynshyn7160
    @raynshyn7160 3 года назад +55

    Thank You for the terminology lesson of my Scott-Irish lineage. It explains how this language of around 10 generations from North Carolina through Tennessee and ending up in Western Oklahoma with my relatives.

  • @rudyallen4
    @rudyallen4 2 года назад +123

    Y’all are salt of the earth people…need lots more like you folks.

    • @ilovebutterstuff
      @ilovebutterstuff Год назад

      Yeah, no. There were some pretty big assholes up in NY, but these folks take the cake. If you're not from here, or looking to buy meth, I'd keep driving.

    • @rudyallen4
      @rudyallen4 Год назад +14

      @@ilovebutterstuff dang man. Won’t you chill? You seem upset. These folks seem as nice of people you’d ever meet. I don’t understand how you could be so ugly to them on their page. They’re not saying anything remotely offensive to anyone. Regardless, I will say a prayer for you and I do hope God supernaturally blesses you my friend. Everything’s gonna be alright.

    • @chillydavis2117
      @chillydavis2117 Год назад

      I'd argue we've got wayyyyyy more than we need.

    • @thedawg2023
      @thedawg2023 Год назад +1

      @@rudyallen4 alas he is saying the truth. Not about ALL of the people, but sadly a lot of them nowadays. Can't argue with truth. I will say a prayer that you open your mind and learn to listen instead of turn to ignorance when you don't like what you're hearing.

    • @rudyallen4
      @rudyallen4 Год назад

      @@thedawg2023 thank you for the prayers my friend

  • @benqohelet
    @benqohelet Год назад +10

    My great grandmother ,born in 1909 on farm on a mountain in north east Alabama was my baby sister.i am 51 now and live in a different part of applachia now but hearing you say these words and phrases brings back all those memories.and yes I still use some of them and so does my kids and grandkids..thank you for trying to preserve our heritage...

  • @pattih7
    @pattih7 Год назад +71

    I’m a Northeast Tennessean, and my Daddy spoke these Appalachian words! My Mama spoke proper English, and all but a couple of their eight children spoke more like Mama. We had a bit of trouble understanding Daddy, a lot! Humorously giggles a lot, though! 🙏❤️

    • @pamela5250
      @pamela5250 Год назад +6

      Southern Illinois here - like 30 minutes from Kentucky - my maternal grandma used a bunch of these words. My uncle still does, as do the rest of that side. My family came thru Appalachia (on both sides) and ended up here in the coal mines and farming. My Mom always used proper English though. It’s fun to hear this.

    • @bobbiechinn9578
      @bobbiechinn9578 4 месяца назад

      Lafollette here!

  • @DeimosPC
    @DeimosPC Год назад +158

    As a guy from England that lives in the Midwest, it's crazy to me how many words I've heard used before in the UK. Also, you guys have thee best accent in the entire world.

    • @CelebratingAppalachia
      @CelebratingAppalachia  Год назад +9

      Thank you 😀

    • @rosiebarker6285
      @rosiebarker6285 Год назад +5

      My husband came over from England...and we live in Iowa too!

    • @avaggdu1
      @avaggdu1 Год назад +5

      I'm from East Midlands and I'm the same - so many words are the kind of thing we'd say, particularly in th North, West Country and East Anglia where the culture hasn't been taken over by the South counties. I'd be curious to know if Appalachians use words like jitty (alleyway), croggie (give a lift on a bicycle), rammel (trash), larrup (slap or add thickly), snided (busy, congested), mardy (sulky)?

    • @CelebratingAppalachia
      @CelebratingAppalachia  Год назад +5

      @@avaggdu1 The only one I'm familiar with is larrup, but we would say larrupin to mean something is really good to eat 😀 Thank you so much for sharing the words. Hopefully if someone else is familiar with their usage here they'll chime in 😀

    • @avaggdu1
      @avaggdu1 Год назад +8

      @@CelebratingAppalachia Aye, 'appen. I asked me mam what's fer dinnah an she said "shit wi' sugar on!" so I asked me nan to larrup some jam onna cob but nana 'ad a cob on an she gave me a larrupin' instead!
      Ta-ra, mi duck!
      (Yes, quite. I enquired of Mother Dearest what repast she had prepared for our evening meal but she declined, so I asked Grandmother for thick jam on some bread but she was in a bad mood and gave me a heavy-handed slap for my trouble!
      Farewell, my friend!) 😄
      I can see how larrupin' something like jam, whipped cream or honey on anything would be good to eat so that makes sense.

  • @gregdoran5850
    @gregdoran5850 3 года назад +98

    I could watch these two forever! More quizzes please! They may not want to, but they are very entertaining:))

    • @CelebratingAppalachia
      @CelebratingAppalachia  3 года назад +4

      Thank you Greg! Be sure to check out their channel here: ruclips.net/user/thepressleygirls

  • @lizthedisjointedzebra692
    @lizthedisjointedzebra692 11 месяцев назад +9

    I'm from southeast Ohio, and I say SO MUCH of this! I never realized that a lot of my accent and vocabulary is Appalachian. This was so fascinating.

    • @joeritchie2
      @joeritchie2 9 месяцев назад +3

      Of course: southeast Ohio is almost West Virginia.

  • @doomsdaymachine619
    @doomsdaymachine619 3 года назад +166

    Appalachian girls are amazing. Truly a breathe of fresh air. Identity is something America has lost. Many adopted the California accent but I find their accents genuine and classic.

    • @georgeboyer8158
      @georgeboyer8158 3 года назад +9

      @T
      I found that Californians do not have an accent as such. There are so many people from so many different places, that they all loose their individuality after a short time.

    • @JessJoanne
      @JessJoanne 3 года назад +10

      @Faggot Rotten I agree! I want out of this state. California isn't what is used to be. I long for a state with rich history and good people.

    • @mkhedart0mt0avari
      @mkhedart0mt0avari 3 года назад +8

      ​@@JessJoanne Spoken like someone who has never traveled anywhere in California. No rich history or good people? You sound like someone who's grown up in a big city like San Francisco or LA and romanticizes the rural life without realizing there's plenty of it right in California. Hell, go out to parts of the Central Valley and you'll find plenty of folks who don't sound too different from this.

    • @JessJoanne
      @JessJoanne 3 года назад +8

      @@mkhedart0mt0avari thank goodness I don't live in a big city. I have watched my town change quite a bit though. And it is sad. I want to travel and explore the rich history. That is all.

    • @mkhedart0mt0avari
      @mkhedart0mt0avari 3 года назад +5

      @@JessJoanne Sorry to hear that. And I apologize if I came across aggressive. Just see too many people acting like California is a monolith when there's so many different places, cultures, and ways of life here.

  • @JimmyFoxhound
    @JimmyFoxhound 2 года назад +116

    Your daughters are so lovely & their smiles are infectious! You must be so proud of them! Thank you so much for sharing these bits of Appalachia vocabulary with us!

    • @frankmeyers7304
      @frankmeyers7304 Год назад +2

      I really must agree with Jimmy. Your daughters are are wonderful.

  • @billieshelton2533
    @billieshelton2533 3 года назад +33

    I love the Appalachian people, they have beautiful hearts!

    • @carolcox302
      @carolcox302 3 месяца назад

      Not in Deliverance😱😁

  • @katetreickphotography4155
    @katetreickphotography4155 Год назад +13

    It’s really interesting to me as a middle-aged woman who grew up in California how many of these phrases are part of my regular vocabulary.

    • @khristophertaylor3718
      @khristophertaylor3718 9 месяцев назад +1

      Exactly I was starting to think we're hillbillies too

    • @cherisenunez2530
      @cherisenunez2530 2 месяца назад

      I was looking through the comments and found myself just now!!! 😁

  • @caseyhstuver
    @caseyhstuver 2 года назад +85

    I love how cute these girls talk. I’m from West Virginia but I have lived on the west coast for longer. I love the accent and happy when mine returns occasionally.
    “Some of this just ain’t true”. So cute

    • @hardtogetnamehere
      @hardtogetnamehere 2 года назад +1

      I was born and raised in California, my grandparents were from East Tennessee and west NC, my Popo kept his accent till he passed. I have the normal California non accent. I moved to the south for a while, people couldn’t understand me. So different the vernacular is from region to region.
      From being razed with my grandparents, I knew a lot of these words.

    • @tommyk6719
      @tommyk6719 2 года назад +3

      They're adorable!

    • @theopinionchannelbycarlo9433
      @theopinionchannelbycarlo9433 2 года назад +5

      They are very cute

    • @fredcollins8919
      @fredcollins8919 2 года назад +3

      I agree. Love the way they talk, interact & obviously the way they look.

  • @slayer8actual
    @slayer8actual Год назад +100

    Katie is hilarious. I could listen to these girls talk all day. Love their accents.

    • @mfawls9624
      @mfawls9624 Год назад +6

      Not bad on the eyes either.

  • @raeperonneau4941
    @raeperonneau4941 Год назад +31

    It’s lovely how many of these words have become the vernacular in America. Both of my parents are from Philadelphia and New York and they used many of these regularly. Now I know where they came from. Thank you!

  • @timherfurth2669
    @timherfurth2669 Месяц назад +1

    Born and raised in North Alabama 65 years and got almost all of these. The girls are simply adorable. Y'all sound like home to me.
    Appalachia has such an influence across the country. German, English, Irish here. Thanks for the great work.

  • @aiken314
    @aiken314 2 года назад +29

    The words are delightful. I grew up with so many of these words or sayings. My parents lived in Unaka, which was "down below" Murphy, N.C. Right after WWII my father married my mother and they moved to middle Georgia, but they always went "up home" every Decoration Day, which was not celebrated where they now lived. Whenever I spent time up home and came back, my husband told me I talked funny, not only because of the vocabulary but also the pronunciation.
    Anyway, thank you for your posts on Appalachia.

  • @jamallama3066
    @jamallama3066 3 года назад +117

    This is fascinating. My Scot-Irish ancestors (and my spouse's too) came from Appalachia generations ago yet these words are still in our vocabulary. As we age our Appalachia accent gains strength. Wash-> Warsh

    • @coltoncain2726
      @coltoncain2726 2 года назад

      My mamaw was like that, fire=far
      Long on the r lol

    • @brucecollins4729
      @brucecollins4729 2 года назад

      many of your words would have come from scotland with the early scots settlers. english and welsh too.

    • @theangriestcatintheworld
      @theangriestcatintheworld 2 года назад

      @@brucecollins4729 🏴󠁧󠁢󠁳󠁣󠁴󠁿

    • @sonicdewd
      @sonicdewd 2 года назад

      @@coltoncain2726 Man, in class I got a ribbin for saying war when I meant wire. Pretty funny

  • @nancymontgomery8897
    @nancymontgomery8897 3 года назад +39

    I'm almost 70; the youngest child of older parents. Although Midwestern, I knew several of your Appalachian words. However, our definition of a blatherskite was someone who seldom stopped talking. Several words that were common in my childhood have vanished. Example #1: Dun (or dunning letter) is a bill/invoice that arrives through the mail. Example #2: Dast (or dastn't) is whether it's okay to do something. i.e. "He dastn't come around here asking to borrow money". Example #3: Shitepoke is just a slur you call someone when you want to insult them. I love language and words, but they are always evolving.

    • @DodiTov
      @DodiTov 3 года назад +11

      ??? Dun? We use it all the time in Alabama. "Got 2 duns and a vote flyer". Dast is simply a contraction that is very useful for short cut English. Does not dare..what a boring bit to put into a sentence! Shitepoke is early English. Today's children say it much more basic...a sh** bag. The etymology of these words are fascinating!

    • @nancymontgomery8897
      @nancymontgomery8897 3 года назад +9

      @@DodiTov Thanks, that's fun to hear! So few people I meet know what those words mean. I always suspected dast was a shortened form of darest, and dastn't of darest not.

    • @ambereyes5393
      @ambereyes5393 2 года назад +1

      My Dad used that word "Dastn't" and it had the same meaning. "Deef" was another word common in his speech which meant to be deaf. I too loved to hear what I thought were zingers (mistakes in speech).

  • @fromhgwaii
    @fromhgwaii Год назад +12

    I am Canadian from a city with strong British influence - I definitely recognize some of the individual words. It is fascinating what words have stuck, or only modestly evolved. The phrases are more challenging.

  • @mizzoupatriot8814
    @mizzoupatriot8814 3 года назад +38

    I love how down to earth and blunt southern girls are lol. These two are the cutest. Always been a sucker for a woman with a southern accent anyway. 😍❤✌

    • @Rumpleskin
      @Rumpleskin 2 года назад

      GSM..great state of Missouri..I thought all of us were patriots...f j b

  • @keithfletcher5511
    @keithfletcher5511 Год назад +171

    English is spoken all around the world, but I love the Appalachia accent best. It is so soft and musical. Thank you so much for bringing it to the world.

    • @Rickie_Speed
      @Rickie_Speed Год назад +2

      Personally that Tennessee Williams drawl reigns supreme.

    • @Evl_1
      @Evl_1 Год назад

      I have the West Virginia / Alabama accent. My friends from elsewhere in the US Laugh a lot at me lol.
      You are Dumeren shit
      Wednesdee
      Yella
      Hill, Heel, Heal are pronounced the same
      I have a whole list lol

    • @bargainbassist
      @bargainbassist Год назад +2

      @@Rickie_Speed And Tennessee Williams spoke with a Mississippi Delta accent. Another interesting form of speech.

    • @stokedmtb333
      @stokedmtb333 Год назад +1

      Appalachian accent sounds similar to the Irish

    • @seasonsstarsstudios
      @seasonsstarsstudios Год назад

      No it’s really not. I grew up in Appalachian Virginia and most of the time it’s like nails on a chalkboard since most of us have nasally voices. 90 percent of Appalachian people have nasally tones to their voices. I think the Georgia accent is the prettiest Southern accent. These girls do have a soft, musical tone to their accent though; that is definitely true. I think your statement is true for West Virginia Appalachia. Virginia Appalachia is much more irritating.

  • @lindickison3055
    @lindickison3055 Год назад +27

    My dad was the first in whole family to go to college......he said he struggled and worked so hard to command standard (unaccented) English, so he would fit in. He became aschool administrator. On the other hand, I loved the way my grandparents and cousins talked, and grew up emulating vocabulary and accents😊

  • @Carissa2003
    @Carissa2003 Год назад +14

    My mother's family is from rural Georgia, she's half native (t'saligi) and white. And i grew up hearing almost all of those words from them, i just didn't remember all of the meanings for them. Some of the meanings i do remember though! This video is giving me serious nostalgia. The accent is just like theirs and visiting the south has always been so pleasant,southern foods,hospitality,cultures and wilflife just can't be beat for me. It's good for the soul.

  • @lynnedear8830
    @lynnedear8830 3 года назад +12

    I absolutely LOVE this. I’m an RN in SW Virginia. I heard sayings like this when I was young from my grandparents and family who lived “ in the country.” Today, I thank my Mom who has “ passed on”for enriching my life. I can talk with all types of people, but my heart goes with every patient that uses these phrases. They “light up . “

  • @victorwatson1996
    @victorwatson1996 2 года назад +15

    Growing up in the Pittsburgh area my Mom always told me that if the US failed we would be the Appalachians and I love seeing you bring our often hidden culture to light

    • @lisamarie9046
      @lisamarie9046 Год назад +1

      Heartbreaking 💔 and unbelievable what happened to the indigenous people. Send you a hug from Germany

  • @ahart12311
    @ahart12311 2 года назад +107

    This is great 🤣 Your daughters are so funny and adorable with their accents! Keep up the great videos 👍🏼

    • @marktazz4521
      @marktazz4521 2 года назад +2

      What accents??? I'm from Harlan County....

    • @ahart12311
      @ahart12311 2 года назад +1

      @@marktazz4521 If you really can't hear an accent, you've never left the Blugrass state then man. It's all relative to ones own environment but bro, the accents are thick. I'm from Cincinnati but live in Belgium and I can immediately pick up on mid-west/Appalachia accents being that I grew up for 30-years in it. People here in Belgium even say I have an accent. Mid-west and Appalachian accents have a style on their own (even within America) and if you've never really been out of ol' Harlin Kentucky, I'm sure you can't hear it then...

    • @marktazz4521
      @marktazz4521 2 года назад +2

      @@ahart12311 Whoosh...

    • @marktazz4521
      @marktazz4521 2 года назад

      @@ahart12311 Folks in Harlan County, lord, they knew that we was poor.... They always called my daddy Preacher Dan~~
      ...But dad he weren't no preacher, leastways I don't recollect... Papa made his livin' off the land...

    • @gfredrick123
      @gfredrick123 2 года назад

      @@marktazz4521 my moms family is from Harlan

  • @mosespray4510
    @mosespray4510 Месяц назад +1

    My mother grew up in south Georgia, and her mother was from the mountains of Tennessee, but I was born and raised in Wisconsin. I didn't expect to do well on this test, but found that I knew the meaning and usage of one after another of these words. Thanks for such a great video! The girls are adorable.

  • @ernestshelton8226
    @ernestshelton8226 2 года назад +26

    My mother from strawberry plains, Tennessee said a majority of this vocabulary, I never associated it with being from Appalachia I just thought it was just way people talked. My mom passed away 10 years ago and it’s good to hear these words again.
    Some really good memories thank you! Especially loveed hearing “I’m gonna get me a dope” she said that all the time.

  • @WeezelWayz
    @WeezelWayz 2 года назад +55

    My mom used to call me”nubbin” all the time when I was a little girl. 😊 She was raised in the North GA mountains, and would’ve had her 97th birthday this year. ♥️

    • @Dobviews
      @Dobviews 2 года назад

      I will always be "snooks".

    • @inthecouchproductions8103
      @inthecouchproductions8103 2 года назад +1

      I used to have a dog who was missing one of his back feet and my mom always called him Nubbin.

    • @kentuckyearl8202
      @kentuckyearl8202 2 года назад

      What's a nubbin? My wife has been calling me that and she's a Michigan Yankee. Oh and weenus, she called me weenus. Her grandparents are originally from Kentucky and Tennessee though.

    • @Dobviews
      @Dobviews 2 года назад +1

      @@kentuckyearl8202 nubbin as per the dictionary is something (such as an ear of corn) that is small for its kind, stunted, undeveloped, or imperfect.
      It is well known in the South as a term of endearment for a small child who is still developing.

    • @kentuckyearl8202
      @kentuckyearl8202 2 года назад +1

      @@Dobviews 🤣 nice. I'm a small, imperfect, but developing child. I'll let her know. Thanks 👍

  • @DreamingCatStudio
    @DreamingCatStudio 2 года назад +43

    My mom lived all over the south and I was born in Texas. I knew a lot of these, and she would’ve been tickled by this list. She’s gone now. One word we always said was “tump”, like “The bucket tumped over.” My northern friends never heard of it!

    • @sainttimothy2230
      @sainttimothy2230 2 года назад +1

      Omg I haven't heard that word since I was a small child.

    • @carolecampbell8813
      @carolecampbell8813 2 года назад +2

      Haven't heard that, only, "the bucket turnted over."

    • @missingremote4388
      @missingremote4388 2 года назад

      What's a Drump ?

    • @Mellomads
      @Mellomads 2 года назад

      Tickled pink I’d hope!

    • @lewiemcneely9143
      @lewiemcneely9143 2 года назад +2

      Past tense of turned/dumped. Simple as it can be. And hillbillies always concentrated and ran everything together. I ought to know!

  • @whprwill
    @whprwill Месяц назад +1

    I love this. My mother is from east Tennessee. "Goozle" was the one that took me back years. I loved that word when I was a little boy, but had nearly forgot it. Thank you for this.

  • @garygoodwin5961
    @garygoodwin5961 2 года назад +26

    I was born and raised in East Tennessee but haven’t been home in over twenty years, listening to this really brought back wonderful memories, thank you so much for sharing.

    • @turtleneckferret
      @turtleneckferret 2 года назад +1

      Maryville here...

    • @galactusholmes
      @galactusholmes Год назад

      Well, they law. Got us some Volunteers here. I'm from White Pine myself. About a half hour or so East of Knoxville. Y'uns be purdy, now

  • @krisptaco
    @krisptaco 2 года назад +10

    Such beautiful young ladies. Their voices and accents have surely stolen the hearts of every young beau for a hundred miles around.

  • @cousinstu
    @cousinstu 3 года назад +58

    "I'm gonna lay off drinking cuz it's wrong" - and I'm rolling. This video is a gem! I'm a Yankee and understand about 10% of this but am 100% entertained! Good stuff! 👍 (in my Yankee defense, Smokey and the Bandit is the greatest movie of all time, so I ain't all bad 😀 )

  • @ervingoertzen7233
    @ervingoertzen7233 Год назад +2

    I find it endearing, listening to these two lovely ladies talk. It’s sweet and simple, an innocence .

  • @lmrharper3586
    @lmrharper3586 3 года назад +25

    I live in Canada born and raised here , but know a lot of those words , doing genealogy led me to find gr grandparents and back in Appalachia .The words must just have been passed down thru generations. My biggest surprise was discovering not many people in my area even knew what a biscuit was, I mentioned making them at the schoolyard oneday and the Mothers didn’t know what I was talking about and a couple said “oh those things you get at Kentucky fried Chicken?” They were a staple in my childhood with most dinners ,or breakfast .

    • @dalesmyth7398
      @dalesmyth7398 3 года назад +1

      I went to Ottawa, Ontario years ago, and me and another fella went to a eating joint, and I found out real quick, they had no clue what sweet tea or chicken fried steak was. They brought me some tea in a can, I refused that, telling them that ain't sweet tea.

    • @mh605
      @mh605 3 года назад +1

      Well, what is a biscuit then?

    • @bethenecampbell6463
      @bethenecampbell6463 3 года назад

      @@mh605 In Britain (Canadians are closely related)biscuits are what Americans call cookies. American biscuits are more like a plain scone that can go either savory (put gravy over for example) or sweet (put jam on or use as shortcake with sweetened berries & cream).

    • @mh605
      @mh605 3 года назад +1

      @@bethenecampbell6463 OK, then, what do they call actual biscuits? :-) If they use that term for cookies, that leaves them wanting for a word to describe those other things.

    • @bethenecampbell6463
      @bethenecampbell6463 3 года назад

      @@mh605 Scones. We always think of scones as sweet, like the ones you get at the fair with raspberry jam. But they can also be savory like the cheesy biscuits from Red Lobster.

  • @billieperdue2984
    @billieperdue2984 2 года назад +10

    I'm from southern West Virginia I knew almost everyone of these..but I've lived in Virginia, North Carolina and Tennessee so my dialect has changed so much over the years I sound more "southern belle" now but I know my roots. I feel it's a dieing language..good for you keeping it alive.

  • @tommcdavid9917
    @tommcdavid9917 3 года назад +23

    "The ground has provided you with resistance" lol … I laughed my butt off at that one

  • @johnowls
    @johnowls Месяц назад +3

    Hahaha we say Old Biddy over here too in Sheffield, England, UK. Made me laugh as I would have never expected an old biddy making an appearance 🤣

  • @timothypruitt9028
    @timothypruitt9028 Год назад +59

    I was born and raised in Illinois and I was keenly aware that the majority of my relatives had resided in the Western Appalachian regions up until the mid 1800s, what I did not realize was how much of our language had been held over from our "hill live'n days" (as my grandmother called them). 6 years ago I moved to the village of Mexico, in far upstate NY and lived there for 3 years. I was always confused if not slightly amused by the number of times that people up there asked me where I was from. The majority of the people thought that I was " from the South" due to many of the words I used. I will be completely honest, I had never noticed how easily I slip into using Appalachian saying (which I suppose I never thought of as being Appalachian), when speaking with old timers. Then again, I never realized that clogging was a "hillbilly thing" while growing up either, I just did it, nor that large outdoor family gatherings with everyone bringing an instrument were particularly uncommon. I will say that there were a few words in your video which I was hazy on the exact meaning of but the majority I knew. I find it extremely interesting that our little mining community (that ended in the 1930s) has inadvertently preserved many of the words and saying you use in Appalachia. My family has been on the same land for 186 years and apparently we have kept this dialect as our own without even considering its origin. How very interesting. I thank you so much for this video and wish you all the best.

    • @CelebratingAppalachia
      @CelebratingAppalachia  Год назад +4

      I find that fascinating too! Thank you for sharing your experiences with language 😀

    • @BartholomewSmutz
      @BartholomewSmutz Год назад +2

      Fellow Illinoisan (Southern) here and I also recognized many of the words in the video although I don't really use them myself.

  • @bethgarrison1879
    @bethgarrison1879 3 года назад +56

    We love these “tests” :) We’re a family of writers and we love learning new words, but Appalachian dialects are so interesting because so many are Elizabethan English. My family is from Appalachia, long gone now since WW2 and the migration to steel jobs, but it remains part of who we are. I still tell the stories to my son. Thanks for sharing this with us. It provides a connection to a place we need never forget as long as someone keeps it alive.

    • @larryfeyler4824
      @larryfeyler4824 3 года назад +5

      What's a "spinster?" surprised me. Thought that word was only used in the U.K.

    • @larryfeyler4824
      @larryfeyler4824 3 года назад +2

      @Simon Archbold Wonder if they say, "I don't give a fiddlers f**k". 😂

    • @garywhitt98
      @garywhitt98 3 года назад +1

      It’s a good place to return to if it gets too ugly out there. Mountain blood never forgets.

    • @bethgarrison1879
      @bethgarrison1879 3 года назад +1

      @@garywhitt98 we will never go back. It’s become too political and we wouldn’t be welcome. Community is important.

    • @heliotrope6217
      @heliotrope6217 3 года назад +3

      I am English (nearer 70 than 65) and am amzed that I knew around 80% of the meanings, though the younger you are here, the more the words aren't used. Could you do superstitions please?

  • @barbarad.517
    @barbarad.517 Год назад +50

    How fun! I’m a North Carolina girl and I never knew a lot of these words were not common to everyone! It’s nice to know I speak a foreign language after all 😂😂😂

  • @HeartlandHunny
    @HeartlandHunny Год назад +30

    I’m from central Kentucky, and I didn’t realize how many of these words and phrases were Appalachian! I thought everybody used them! 😂 A few of them I haven’t heard anybody use since I was a kid and hearing them again really tickled me! Several of them I use everyday and didn’t realize they were regional. I love learning about languages, especially about regional dialects and accents, so thank you for this, I really enjoyed it!

  • @MyFireInside4
    @MyFireInside4 11 месяцев назад +2

    My family has been in southeastern Ohio and West Virginia since the early 1800’s. I’d heard a lot of these words growing up and use some of them myself. I had no idea that most of these were Appalachian. I had always grown up trying to hide the part of myself that I thought was different or “country” but now I know that that part was my Appalachian ancestors and I’m proud to raise my kids to be proud of their Appalachian heritage.

  • @annalisajames6558
    @annalisajames6558 2 года назад +16

    I am from California but I was raised by people from Appalachia…. I got 17 correct, not too shabby considering my family has been gone since the early 90’s. I’m happy that I have managed to hold on to some of this!

  • @yosefmama1136
    @yosefmama1136 3 года назад +11

    Wonderful stuff here! Let me tell you all a little story of me in Taipei, Taiwan in 1967-1969 in the Army. After a fire in the PX was extinguished, damage to the rear door of the warehouse left me on guard duty on the street. Some British ladies passing by asked me directions somewhere. After I finished talking, one of them smiled and asked What part of NC are you from. You could have pushed me over with a feather. She said she had visited SC and could recognize my accent and the way I always addressed them as Ma'am. Think about that. British in CHINA recognised NC accent so accurately.

  • @TorquayTarn
    @TorquayTarn Год назад +10

    My mother used to say “a blind pig finds an acorn now and then.” It means something unusual has happened. It was usually used sarcastically and cynically.

  • @johnmcinally8365
    @johnmcinally8365 Год назад +65

    Thank you, very entertaining. My parents were Highland Scots, and a lot of the words you used are very similar to their speech and consequentially my own . I was born in Australia and similar words can often be heard in Australian slang.
    Thanks again. John.

    • @TMacGamer
      @TMacGamer Год назад +3

      A lot of Scots & Irish settled in Appalachia

    • @algrant5293
      @algrant5293 10 месяцев назад +1

      Im from the Highlands and if I ever see any Australian programmes I hear a lot of words/phrases that were used when I was a child. We have a more homogeneous language now thanks to tv and internet so young people are losing their individuality.

    • @catwhisperer9489
      @catwhisperer9489 7 месяцев назад

      Yeah, I remember when I got stationed in Britain, how interesting it was to hear that alot of the words they used, my grandparents used!! We use to call the way my grandparents talked, "old English"---I never knew how literal that was!!!

  • @zoponex3224
    @zoponex3224 2 года назад +23

    I'm an overeducated Northerner of Scots/Anglo descent, now living in the Southwest. I knew about 80% of the ones I could make out. I love language and it is so beautiful to hear this rich, vibrant dialect at work. I hope it survives the homogenizing force of mass media. It would be tremendously helpful to show each word written out onscreen as it's said for those that are hard for some of us to make out. Keep up the great work, y'all.

    • @CannibalFetusRobbery
      @CannibalFetusRobbery 2 года назад +2

      It's a huge part of my reasoning for trying to rekindle the accent I lost by living up delaware. It's such a beautiful accent/language.

  • @emma472
    @emma472 2 года назад +108

    This was so interesting learning about your language and culture! Thank you for sharing! Just a request, can you please put the word on the screen as you say it, or include a list in the description, so we can see how it's spelt? Especially for people from across the world who might have a harder time understanding your accent but would love to learn more! Thank you!

    • @boathead22000
      @boathead22000 2 года назад +1

      Spelt ?

    • @guarddog318
      @guarddog318 2 года назад +5

      A lot of the words used here aren't A word, but rather a compound word.
      'You'uns" for instance, is "You Ones". It's something you'll hear fairly often in the eastern end of where I live.
      Other words, like "The Epizooties" is a bastardization of an actual scientific word or term. In this case, an epizoological outbreak... an epidemic among animals.
      And words like "bate"... I have no idea. Just another form and spelling for "bait", maybe?
      "Hollar" of course, probably comes from a land feature you have to yell across to be heard.
      The point I'm trying to make is the spelling itself may take quite a bit of explaining to make sense. lol
      I've lost count of how many words or terms I used to hear and understand every day, but no longer do because the people they made sense to are now long gone.
      ...and also due to the people now moving into the area having no history with them at all.
      It's a sad thing, I guess, but language really does change and evolve... even within the few years I've been alive. ( 60 and counting, so far. )

    • @christophersmith8316
      @christophersmith8316 Год назад +4

      @@guarddog318 I think Hollar is just a phonetic spelling for "Hollow" which is a small valley "hollowed out" of the hills.

    • @kimberlyevans7853
      @kimberlyevans7853 Год назад +2

      Love your intrest, some words may be spelled slightly different from 1 localized area to another.

    • @guarddog318
      @guarddog318 Год назад +3

      @@christophersmith8316 - A hollow also tends to be dead ended, usually having only one way in or out.
      That doesn't change the fact that people on one side of it have to "holler" at people on the other.
      Also, do you know what a "field holler" is?
      It's a kind of song or chant that laborers used to do as they worked the fields, to help pass the time.
      Sailors on ship used to do something similar when pulling lines, to help stay in sync with each other as they hauled.
      Railway workers did the same as they laid the train tracks.
      One way or the other, "Holler" and "yell", are synonymous here in the south.
      Here, let these ladies try to explain it to ya:
      ruclips.net/video/94h2L9oBOHM/видео.html

  • @Bekind94
    @Bekind94 3 года назад +10

    Every time I watch you I am reminded of my family. I had forgotten how deeply my family was rooted in those mountains and trees. Hearing these words and realizing they are from Appalachia is a nostalgic comfort and an educational experience. I feel like I’m visiting with my grandparents and hearing their words. 💜

  • @dlb3512
    @dlb3512 11 месяцев назад +1

    I was born in CA and left there in '48 at the age of 10. We relocated in AR at the bottom of the Ozarks. Needless to say, I had to learn a new language. I remember my neighbors speaking a little strange. At the time I was unaware of the Appalachia language. Later in life I discovered the language of the Ozarks was just a branch of the Appalachian language. I had to learn the language just to know what was being said around me. Now in my mid-eighties your posting is music to my ears, Thank you and your beautiful daughters.

  • @donnielaws7020
    @donnielaws7020 3 года назад +16

    Love the old word sayings and their meanings.

  • @JoeSnuffie
    @JoeSnuffie 2 года назад +60

    My dad's father was a hillbilly from Avery County NC and I was amazed by how many of these terms I know. For nearly 20 years we had family reunions, usually staying in Boone but visiting family all over the area. I guess now I know why my dad's side of the family talks like this. This was really fun to watch.

    • @masterwoods6586
      @masterwoods6586 2 года назад +1

      When I was real little, like 8 years old or so, in the late 80's, I moved to North Carolina from florida. I was soooo confused for a few years!!! Everytime somebody would say something to me, i always responded with a "huh?" People either thought ibwas dead or dumb!!

    • @gloriaanderson7424
      @gloriaanderson7424 2 года назад +1

      Watch the outsiders series on wgn a series about the hillbillies, when the government was removing them forcibly in order to mine coal and oil.

    • @howlinwulf
      @howlinwulf Год назад

      @@masterwoods6586 yeah that's funny,I went from Ky to Ala and I couldn't understand half of it.
      Seems like it came out so fast and the words may have been pronounced similar but meant the same.
      Fixing to go,which is kinda weird to me but Ala say fittin to go.
      I noticed quite a few like that but I've forgotten.
      I helped set all the robots,presses conveyors and all it takes to make a car.
      I was a union milwright for years and have helped to set up car manufacturers all over the place.
      I miss that job.
      Too old these days.
      God bless.

    • @woudgy
      @woudgy Год назад

      @@gloriaanderson7424 it's really a terrible history. The history of mining in general is a brutal one. My great grandmother was from WV and I'm so glad the holler she was from was not destroyed by strip mining. I still have some lovely poems she wrote about where she grew up and the natural beauty of the mountains. She only had a 4th grade education but a talent with words.

    • @jennifer9047
      @jennifer9047 Год назад

      Oh, I've been to Boone- it's BEAUTIFUL! 😍

  • @bradleyharris8790
    @bradleyharris8790 3 года назад +7

    Why am I now in love with your girls? Natural beauty in both of them, their smiles and their personalities are golden. Not to mention their cute accents.

  • @usagi2988
    @usagi2988 20 дней назад

    I'm 3 minutes in, the test hasn't even started yet (y'know... like, the actual/advertised content of the video), and I'm still ALL IN. This is *exactly* my family from Missouri... much love to y'all!

  • @auntiesash
    @auntiesash 3 года назад +20

    A lot of phrases that I couldn't have come up with but knew right away. My mom might have left Hazard Kentucky, but Hazard never left her. I love listening to you voice. I hear echoes of my aunties & grandmothers.

    • @bigpapi2658
      @bigpapi2658 2 года назад +1

      I was born in Hazard. Only hospital in the area back then.

  • @AlienJae
    @AlienJae Год назад +24

    I was raised by my grandmother & she was from Ohio County, Kentucky. She used so many of these words. It was great hearing them used again 💜

  • @grlismith
    @grlismith 3 года назад +31

    Aww 🥰. I am from East Tennessee but have lived in South Florida for 25 years . It was so fun to come across you girls , you all are adorable 🥰!!!
    My grandmother lived to be 104 , born in 1896 and passed away in 2000 needless to say we heard most if not all those words lol . Thank you for reminding me of some of them.
    Much Love , Lisa

  • @markdickerson6757
    @markdickerson6757 Год назад +2

    I was raised in southern Appalachia. I learned a few words today and heard many that I used growing up and still use today. Ive moved away now and have a better understanding why people don’t understand what I was saying. Thank you, for the video I enjoyed learning about my way of speaking.

  • @mjhill72
    @mjhill72 2 года назад +37

    I love this! You're preserving our history. This is great info for writers, too,

  • @teckelmn
    @teckelmn 3 года назад +15

    When i young and was full of meaness, Mom would say "wait til your dad gits home and heel get the strap out" or worse when i had to cut the switch myself. But it absolutely worked and i remembered not to mess around. Also when it was over no more was said about it and you went on with your chores. Fly the straight and narrow was another saying used. Great parents from the olden days from Ozarks area in Missouri & big thicket area in southern Texas with prior connection to Kentucky and Tennessee.
    Thank You for the great video's and God Bless America.

  • @abinermal8744
    @abinermal8744 2 года назад +51

    Fascinating!!!! I was born in Jamaica and a lot of the words sounded very similar to some of our words. Of course accents (yours and ours)makes them sound a bit different but the meaning were the same and these are word that were/are used mostly by the older folks. Amazing! The more I learn about other cultures the more I realize this is a small world in many ways. A lot of your food also reminds me of food from our country/rural area. Wow!! Thank you for sharing.

    • @emilinebelle7811
      @emilinebelle7811 2 года назад +1

      Ain’t nothing like a Jamaica language. Thank you very much. 👎🏼

    • @yo-yo9663
      @yo-yo9663 Год назад +5

      @@emilinebelle7811 yes it is. Jamaican language is patois, a broken English and Appalachian language is broken English. You have more similarities then you could imagine.

    • @jem5750
      @jem5750 Год назад +5

      @@emilinebelle7811 Irish taught slaves English in Jamaica. Irish have commented that some words here are familiar, so it makes sense that the Jamaican DIALECT of Patois would be reminiscent of Appalachian English.

    • @kevintaylor9912
      @kevintaylor9912 Год назад

      @@emilinebelle7811 thank God we don't need more in-bred language

    • @GrassPossum
      @GrassPossum Год назад +1

      Jamaicans didn't come direct from Africa, but arrived after first coming to the USA. I imagine the vocabulary will have travelled with them when they settled in Jamaica. The words are largely inherited from older Celtic peoples who settled there too. Much the same way that Aussie slang is mostly just inherited from and evolved from cockney English. The language spoken by the common people, the working class and criminal class. It is seen as Aussie slang today but is easily traced back to Victorian England.