27 Words You Will Only Hear in NEW YORK CITY

Поделиться
HTML-код
  • Опубликовано: 19 июн 2024
  • Every city has a unique stash of secret code language reserved only for its people. These are the words that you’re unlikely to hear anywhere else. And New Yorkers aren’t shy when it comes to creating their very own lingo with unique slang words for the English language.
    On this video, I will take you across the multitude of cultures that exist throughout this loud, boisterous, and diverse city so you can get a healthy dose of the different types of slang you will encounter when you hit the streets. With a little preparation and a little bit of practice, you will become a pro at New York lingo in no time!
    So without further delay, here are 27 words you will only hear in New York City.
    *********
    IMAGE ATTRIBUTIONS
    BODEGA
    1. Untitled by Bryan Pocius - CC BY 2.0 - Flickr
    2. “Bodega Window” by S Smith - CC BY 2.0 - Flickr
    3. “bodega style bacon egg and cheese” by Will - CC BY-SA 2.0 - Flickr
    4. “store clerk” by Brian Fountain - CC BY 2.0 - Flickr
    5. “Brooklyn Street Scenes - Bodega on Smith Street and Union Street” by Steven Pisano- CC BY 2.0 - Flickr
    6. “BODEGA CAT” by Seth Werkheiser - CC BY-SA 2.0 - Flickr
    7. “bodega” by Billie Grace Ward - CC BY 2.0 and 4.0 - Flickr flickr.com/photos/15802578@N0...
    SCHMEAR
    1. “Kossar's bagel” by stu_spivack - CC BY-SA 2.0 - Flickr
    2. “Bagel ala Arnold” by Cliff Hutson - CC BY 2.0 - Flickr
    3. “Vegan Cashew Cream Cheese” by Mattie Hagedorn - CC BY-SA 2.0 - Flickr
    4. “Poppyseed bagel, scallion cream cheese and...” by Stephanie - CC BY 2.0 - Flickr
    5. “mmm... bagels...” by Kim Mc. - CC BY-ND 2.0 - Flick
    FUHGEDDABOUDIT
    1. “Magnolia Bakery New York Cup cakes” by Gary Bembridge - CC BY 2.0 - Flickr
    2. “Magnolia Bakery banana pudding” by Marit & Toomas Hinnosaar - CC BY 2.0 - Flickr
    3. “Trader Joe's” by kennejima - CC BY 2.0 - Flickr
    UPTOWN/DOWNTOWN
    1. “15.Chelsea.NYC.24June2012” by Elvert Barnes - CC BY-SA 2.0 - Flickr
    2. “NYCT_3180” by Metropolitan Transportation Authority of the State of New York - CC BY 2.0 - Flickr
    HOUSTON
    1. “Houston St IRT td (2018-04-03) 09” by Tdorante10 - CC BY-SA 4.0 - Wikimedia Commons
    THE VILLAGE
    1. “The Village” by Paul Sableman - CC BY 2.0 - Flickr
    2. “Cafe Wha? - Greenwich Village” by Jeff Rosen - CC BY 2.0 - Flickr
    3. “Washington Square Park” by Shinya Suzuki - CC BY-ND 2.0 - Flickr
    4. “NYC - Greenwich Village - Gay Street” by Jean-Christophe BENOIST - CC BY 3.0 - Wikimedia Commons
    5. “west-village-corner” by Dan DeLuca - CC BY 2.0 - Flickr
    SCHLEP
    1. “MTA NYC Subway A train arriving at Broad Channel” by Mtattrain - CC BY-SA 4.0 - Wikimedia Commons
    A SLICE
    1. “Scott's Pizza Tours” by Dale Cruise - CC BY 2.0 - Flickr - changed
    2. “pie 021” by Beth punches - CC BY-ND 2.0 - Flickr
    3. “The Biggest Pizza” by Dru Bloomfield - CC BY 2.0 - Flickr
    4. “IMG_1759.jpg” by Michael - CC BY 2.0 - Flickr
    5. “Joe's Pizza” by Mike Licht - CC BY 2.0 - Flickr
    YUUUGE
    1. “Bernie Sanders” by Gage Skidmore - CC BY-SA 2.0 - Flickr
    2. “President Trump Speaks with the Bahamian Prime Minister” by The White House - no copyright - Flickr
    STOOP
    1. “Brownstones and Stoops” by Jay Woodworth - CC BY 2.0 - Flickr
    2. “On Perry Street, Greenwich Village, New York” by Spencer Means - CC BY-SA 2.0 - Flickr
    3. “f (at the filming of the Hulk)” by Lee - CC BY-SA 2.0 - Flick
    MAD
    1. “Michael Bloomberg” by Gage Skidmore - CC BY-SA 2.0 - Flickr
    DUMB
    1. “Holiday in New York” by Harry Wood - CC BY-SA 2.0 - Flickr
    UPSTATE
    1. “Ithaca, NY” by James Willamor - CC BY-SA 2.0 - Flickr
    2. “Ithaca NY 2337” by bobistraveling - CC BY 2.0 - Flickr
    3. “New York State Route 17” by Doug Kerr - CC BY-SA 2.0 - Flickr
    THE GARDEN
    1. “Box Life - Madison Square Garden” by Marco - CC BY-ND 2.0 - Flickr
    2. “Madison Square Garden (MSG) - Empire State Building” by Ajay Suresh - CC BY 2.0 - Flickr
    DEAD ASS
    1. “Timberland 6 inch boots” by Dough4872 - public domain - Wikimedia Commons
    LINKS TO CREATIVE COMMONS LICENSES
    CC BY 1.0 - creativecommons.org/licenses/...
    CC0 1.0 (UPDD)- creativecommons.org/publicdom...
    CC BY 2.0 - creativecommons.org/licenses/...
    CC BY-ND 2.0 - creativecommons.org/licenses/...
    CC BY-SA 2.0 - creativecommons.org/licenses/...
    CC BY-SA 2.5 - creativecommons.org/licenses/...
    CC BY 3.0 - creativecommons.org/licenses/...
    CC BY-SA 3.0 - creativecommons.org/licenses/...
    CC BY 4.0 - creativecommons.org/licenses/...
    CC BY-SA 4.0 - creativecommons.org/licenses/...

Комментарии • 2,5 тыс.

  • @newlife8573
    @newlife8573 4 года назад +1650

    You good = are you okay?
    You good = you are okay.
    You good = how have you been?
    You good = did you get enough?
    You good = you're welcome
    You good = stop talking to me
    You good = no need to say sorry (apologize)
    You good = you need some money?

    • @rolandrhoward9361
      @rolandrhoward9361 4 года назад +22

      Nice, Rony.

    • @annied3273
      @annied3273 4 года назад +19

      😂😂😂 Yes!! Thank you for that!

    • @blueclover9918
      @blueclover9918 4 года назад +42

      You good = you all set?

    • @newlife8573
      @newlife8573 4 года назад +8

      @@blueclover9918 that's like are you okay?

    • @mmb628jr2
      @mmb628jr2 4 года назад +9

      @Rory context is everything

  • @r_b7833
    @r_b7833 4 года назад +1227

    Absolutely Nobody: New Yorkers: YURRRRRRR

    • @namelia4439
      @namelia4439 4 года назад +29

      Yeah, what the hell was that one about???

    • @claudiat1037
      @claudiat1037 4 года назад +47

      I've live in New York for 20 years and I never heard that word lol

    • @r_b7833
      @r_b7833 4 года назад +5

      Idk guys I didn’t make the video

    • @queennessy1738
      @queennessy1738 4 года назад +22

      Yerrrrrrrrrr

    • @alfredc.knight2737
      @alfredc.knight2737 4 года назад +24

      It's a Bx thing!!!!

  • @NoFeeRE
    @NoFeeRE 2 года назад +100

    Born and raised in " the city", and turning "fitty" years old soon, I never realized how unique these words are to New York. I couldn't stop laughing!

    • @bridgestar_
      @bridgestar_ 2 года назад +1

      Quite interesting you know

    • @TheCerebralDude
      @TheCerebralDude 11 дней назад

      May you live to the age of a “hunnit” and me a hunnit minus a day so I won’t hear you passed away

  • @MartyGlenn72
    @MartyGlenn72 4 года назад +177

    "Schlep" doesn't just mean lugging something. It also means traveling to an inconvenient area and/or a relatively long distance. For example: "You schlepped all the way to Staten Island just to have lunch with Joe?"

    • @sherrysc3848
      @sherrysc3848 3 года назад +3

      Yes , you are correct

    • @JJR93
      @JJR93 2 года назад +1

      There's an implied but usually unspoken (yourself) in that usage.

    • @kevc21
      @kevc21 2 года назад +1

      You mean lugging your body all the way d⁶...and possibly some gear? Yikes 😬

    • @JimmyOgilvie52
      @JimmyOgilvie52 2 года назад

      Exactly! Thank you!

    • @yankeebarber
      @yankeebarber Год назад +1

      We're not from NY but we would use 'schlep' like bumming, going someplace dressed down, not fancy. Does anyone else use it that way?

  • @jaecee899
    @jaecee899 4 года назад +1311

    Brick didn't make the list??

    • @allnyc3412
      @allnyc3412  4 года назад +47

      I stopped at 27. Didn’t want the list to go on and on.

    • @MrzGodivaCouture
      @MrzGodivaCouture 4 года назад +23

      Word

    • @jaecee899
      @jaecee899 4 года назад +51

      @@allnyc3412 brick should have been top 5!! Lol. Good list though

    • @jilliannyc2124
      @jilliannyc2124 4 года назад +6

      yea...where is brick?

    • @tiffanynottage7241
      @tiffanynottage7241 4 года назад +2

      That’s what said it was the first thing I thought of!

  • @magoska3316
    @magoska3316 4 года назад +593

    She forgot ..."YOU GOOD??" ❤

    • @newlife8573
      @newlife8573 4 года назад +3

      Look at my post because you good has different meanings and I put the definition to the you good phrase

    • @CandieP
      @CandieP 4 года назад +4

      She forgot Buns too. As in someone who is afraid of someone or something. Lol

    • @angel.1202
      @angel.1202 4 года назад +4

      Ain't that a everywhere thing? We say that in texas to.

    • @BEAutifulkiss21100
      @BEAutifulkiss21100 4 года назад +2

      Gosia K they use that in other places. Not specific to New York City

    • @bxbeautynyc
      @bxbeautynyc 4 года назад +10

      You gotta put Fam at the end.
      You Good...Fam? 😂

  • @rcelestefelix9299
    @rcelestefelix9299 4 года назад +59

    I am a native Manhattanite, and proud of it, too. I was born and raised in the city. I love the diversity of New York people, and the cultural richness as a consequence. You know what else I think is great about growing up in NYC? The great accent it gave me. When I moved to California in 1975, so many people got a kick out of it. I thought nothing of it until then, because everyone I knew all my life spoke the same way I did, and it came so naturally, too! (LOL) So keep "tawking," New Yorkers, because you have a very special accent and way of expressing yourself.

    • @greenmachine5600
      @greenmachine5600 2 года назад +4

      Agreed. Fucking agreed.

    • @skontheroad
      @skontheroad 2 года назад +1

      Have you forgotten that you are "A native New Yawkah"??!!
      Manhattanite???? HUH??

    • @MelGibsonFan
      @MelGibsonFan Год назад

      Accent is slowly disappearing. Being replaced by generic yuppie shit. Because we’re all watching and listening to the same stuff. And the city is in a constant influx of transplants.

    • @zeldapeax8311
      @zeldapeax8311 Год назад +2

      I grew up in Brooklyn. Haven't lived there for 30 years. Wherever I go in the world, people know I'm from New York. And I think that's pretty fuckin cool.

    • @sodapop83
      @sodapop83 Год назад +2

      "Manhattanite" never heard this one before

  • @gildaolsen2888
    @gildaolsen2888 4 года назад +73

    Everybody calls The Metropolitan Museum: The Met.

    • @davidwesley2525
      @davidwesley2525 2 года назад +4

      Or the Metropolitan Opera.🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣😍🤣❤❤❤

    • @gypsy698
      @gypsy698 2 года назад +1

      Of course!

  • @tiffanynottage7241
    @tiffanynottage7241 4 года назад +1314

    Don’t forget the “THE” in The Bronx! It’s like leaving out the S in Queens

    • @Ma_Ba
      @Ma_Ba 4 года назад +75

      Da Bronx, duh, right.

    • @TheLoveweaver
      @TheLoveweaver 4 года назад +1

      @afr malatesta No.

    • @suzettelawes2104
      @suzettelawes2104 4 года назад +20

      Tiffany cottage when I mention the "THE " for the Bronx ppl be looking at me like what...they don't know about the boogie down and I'm from Brooklyn...

    • @kenyereid5137
      @kenyereid5137 4 года назад +13

      Da Bronx

    • @captmoroni
      @captmoroni 4 года назад +17

      The Bronx, as in visiting the Bronck’s farm.

  • @biggahblack5030
    @biggahblack5030 4 года назад +911

    "Upstate" also means jail or prison

    • @anitracottman7506
      @anitracottman7506 4 года назад +22

      biggah black or up north

    • @lailabellamy3097
      @lailabellamy3097 4 года назад +17

      Or going “up”

    • @williemal3058
      @williemal3058 4 года назад +21

      He's in college

    • @drac464
      @drac464 4 года назад +16

      biggah black “vacation” also means prison or he “went away” .. “daddy went away for a little bit.”

    • @tiffanynottage7241
      @tiffanynottage7241 4 года назад +4

      😂😂FACT

  • @Angie-lp2hk
    @Angie-lp2hk 3 года назад +24

    My favorite thing about bodegas are the random house cats just hanging and chillin on the aisle lol

    • @starfusher
      @starfusher Год назад +1

      it's bc there are so many mice eating the chips!

    • @rumrstv
      @rumrstv Год назад

      Every bodega I've ever been in always had a cat hanging around. They are the best mouse traps!

    • @helpmestevie
      @helpmestevie 11 месяцев назад

      I say I’m going to the bx if I’m going to the Bronx, or bk for Brooklyn

    • @alannineverson6369
      @alannineverson6369 4 месяца назад

      That’s the manager!

    • @user-ob3kv8hj1z
      @user-ob3kv8hj1z Месяц назад

      I'm from Long Island, I refuse to say Bodega. It is a Market or Food Shop. This isn't Mexico or any other Spanish speaking Country. 🤨

  • @HeronCoyote1234
    @HeronCoyote1234 4 года назад +56

    When I lived in Portland, OR, there was a guy (NYC transplant) who owned an Italian sub store. He made the best subs! He would boss the customers around, yelling “Come on, come on, make up your mind already!” and the like. Everyone in line was mortified; I was just grinning like an idiot! Ahh, true New Yawkah!

    • @jandcfoodtrackers
      @jandcfoodtrackers Год назад +2

      Sounds like the soup shop owner from Seinfield XD

    • @HeronCoyote1234
      @HeronCoyote1234 Год назад +2

      @@jandcfoodtrackers nope, just a typical New Yorker. Hey, you gotta be tough to survive in the city or boroughs.

    • @jandcfoodtrackers
      @jandcfoodtrackers Год назад +1

      @@HeronCoyote1234 🤣🤣🤣

    • @Grimmfullish
      @Grimmfullish Год назад +5

      either new Yorker or he's just Italian maybe both

    • @definitelyjin-gitaxias4071
      @definitelyjin-gitaxias4071 Год назад +1

      Could it be geraldis

  • @promisejimenez6350
    @promisejimenez6350 4 года назад +494

    Half of these words are mad outdated and others feel so normal to me like “uptown” and “train” I didn’t think they were New York slang.

    • @GaryTisdaleFungkSta1
      @GaryTisdaleFungkSta1 4 года назад +20

      Most of the terminology is new millennial slang, very few is Classic, stuff from 85' or 86' on back... Never heard anybody from the Bronx, refer to Manhattan as the City, in the 60's, 70's or early 80's since we considered all 5 boroughs the city, so calling it that would've been whack to us, it was hangin in the "Hat" or Downtown back then

    • @theMarkusDonnatella
      @theMarkusDonnatella 4 года назад +9

      Promise Jimenez DEADASS, some of these are mad outdated

    • @promisejimenez6350
      @promisejimenez6350 4 года назад +16

      theMarkusDonnatella lmaooo the only people I know that say “shmuck” are 60 year old Jews

    • @positivelysimful1283
      @positivelysimful1283 4 года назад +20

      @@GaryTisdaleFungkSta1 Interesting, I grew up in Brooklyn in the 70s/80s, no one used to call it Manhattan, we always called it the City. I love the way all the boroughs had their own little quirks.

    • @promisejimenez6350
      @promisejimenez6350 4 года назад +7

      Gary Tisdale I’m a millennial lol so everyone around me calls Manhattan the city. But even my older relatives/ older friends so idk man

  • @singlah
    @singlah 4 года назад +266

    In New York, to get on-line is to get IN-line. It has nothing to do with the internet.

    • @heya4405
      @heya4405 4 года назад +1

      I’m from north jersey and I say that

    • @michellekalski8823
      @michellekalski8823 4 года назад +5

      Yes! When I moved here and was getting food from a food truck, someone asked me if I was online. I was confused. I thought she was talking about the internet.

    • @rcelestefelix9299
      @rcelestefelix9299 4 года назад +8

      @@michellekalski8823 Basically, "on line" is an abbreviation for "standing on line".

    • @neilgibbons2532
      @neilgibbons2532 4 года назад +2

      In NYC the line is always around the F,n corner

    • @AA-pp9rf
      @AA-pp9rf 2 года назад

      @@longshorts7148 same

  • @junemercado7017
    @junemercado7017 2 года назад +32

    Bodega is a Spanish word used for small shops and is used in many countries around the world.

    • @dragonvliss2426
      @dragonvliss2426 Год назад +2

      Yep -- it is a word found in Los Angeles too.

    • @bobwillis9190
      @bobwillis9190 Год назад +2

      We say it in north Jersey also

    • @barbarahallowell2613
      @barbarahallowell2613 10 месяцев назад +2

      We say it in Maryland and The District

    • @funnyusername8635
      @funnyusername8635 9 месяцев назад

      I first learned this word in San Francisco.

    • @user-ob3kv8hj1z
      @user-ob3kv8hj1z Месяц назад

      Why use a Spanish word when you migrated to USA? I won't use it

  • @ladyhamilton188
    @ladyhamilton188 4 года назад +333

    I ain’t never heard... someone say... fuhgettaboutit.... 🤦🏾‍♀️

  • @bksfinest79
    @bksfinest79 4 года назад +435

    Baconeggandcheese is one word at the corner store. Word up, means it's true. And a chop cheese is ground meat with cheese sandwich.

    • @cme1027
      @cme1027 4 года назад +11

      Moved to NC a year ago and I'm jonesing for a baconeggncheese. Or an umberto pie..😔😔😔

    • @ramelhagins6698
      @ramelhagins6698 4 года назад +1

      Facts

    • @yankeerivas
      @yankeerivas 4 года назад +1

      Made me hungry reason this..

    • @Tabby.cat2
      @Tabby.cat2 3 года назад +1

      Corner store?!?!!!! Don’t you mean “Bodeeeeega”?!?!!!!!

    • @bksfinest79
      @bksfinest79 3 года назад +1

      @@Tabby.cat2 true, always said that, but its not spanish owned so i stopped calling it that.

  • @daniellecruz5715
    @daniellecruz5715 4 года назад +714

    They forgot Odee words... like “Odee” “Wildin” “baconeggncheese” “brick” “broski” “word to” “say less” and “Oh naah” 😂😂😂 who tf made this list? It’s either “you buggin” or “you buggin out” not “you be buggin” 😂😂😂 who says “yooz” we all say “ya”. Ya who made this list really buggin tf out- DEADASS 😂

    • @ixuaiintmexi
      @ixuaiintmexi 4 года назад +16

      Danielle Cruz LMAO. Mad facts! ^^^

    • @Mew2Win
      @Mew2Win 4 года назад +23

      It’s the less ghetto version

    • @sanasana_5625
      @sanasana_5625 4 года назад +3

      THAT'S A FACT

    • @ciarapena7060
      @ciarapena7060 4 года назад

      Danielle Cruz LMAOOOOOO

    • @ronymino7969
      @ronymino7969 4 года назад +9

      Worrrd😭 nah you had to spazz though😂

  • @moperson1
    @moperson1 4 года назад +29

    You missed my favorite:
    "What am I, chopped liver?"

    • @CinqueTerre558
      @CinqueTerre558 4 года назад

      Mo Person Like to say that when I get upset😁

    • @HeronCoyote1234
      @HeronCoyote1234 4 года назад

      Or “Vhat am I, gehakte lebber?”

    • @moperson1
      @moperson1 4 года назад

      @@HeronCoyote1234 lol, I need a translation please. Thank you.

    • @moperson1
      @moperson1 4 года назад +2

      @@CinqueTerre558 Marlene. I know it's Perfect. And you really need to say it: "chopped livah"?

    • @morehn
      @morehn 3 года назад

      I taught my nieces and nephews to say that by the time they were 7

  • @nerdbot37
    @nerdbot37 2 года назад +18

    Houston Street and Houston, Texas are pronounced differently because they're name for different people. The city in Texas is named for Sam Houston (pronounced hue-stun), while the street in THE city is named for William Houstoun (house-ton).

  • @mtv0520
    @mtv0520 4 года назад +523

    "It's Brick outside"

    • @GaryTisdaleFungkSta1
      @GaryTisdaleFungkSta1 4 года назад +6

      That term must've started in mid 80's or 90's
      I mean I've heard "It's as cold as a brick" but plain Brick, nah that's new I thought it was in reference to weight in drugs

    • @Rx2D
      @Rx2D 4 года назад +17

      Gary Tisdale - I’ve literally never heard “it’s cold as brick.” It’s always been “it’s brick.”

    • @GaryTisdaleFungkSta1
      @GaryTisdaleFungkSta1 4 года назад +9

      @@Rx2D That's new millennial slang, if you said that back in the mid 80's or in the early to mid 90's, they would call Bellevue to come get ya!!!

    • @dennisjohnson1809
      @dennisjohnson1809 4 года назад +3

      Word! Which it me really! Or I agree.We use this word when we here something that amazing or outrageous

    • @drac464
      @drac464 4 года назад +3

      Gary Tisdale bricks been around for “a minute”... another term we use.. “a minute” meaning a while or years

  • @ovh992
    @ovh992 4 года назад +639

    A schmear is not "a generous portion of cream cheese". It actually means a lot less than the regular portion. (A smear of cream cheese, not the regular inch thick portion.)

    • @steves1749
      @steves1749 4 года назад +40

      O V H your absolutely correct. A schemer is a less amount.

    • @redeerum
      @redeerum 4 года назад +39

      She dead ass wrong for that.

    • @user-th2xz7gy3y
      @user-th2xz7gy3y 4 года назад +22

      Had to stop at smear. She doesn't that bodega is Spanish

    • @redeerum
      @redeerum 4 года назад +5

      @@user-th2xz7gy3y she sounds like she speaks Spanish so... E for effort 🤷🏾‍♂️

    • @asianstud7
      @asianstud7 4 года назад +1

      REDEERUM SEASON lol

  • @debrawhite751
    @debrawhite751 4 года назад +10

    I was only in NY once two years ago. Spent three days. What I noticed is how much cursing you heard just walking around Manhattan. I’m not saying I never hear it but in NY, it’s a different level. I don’t think they even realize they’re doing it.

  • @orlandosanchez8123
    @orlandosanchez8123 4 года назад +18

    1:15 and why does every bodega has a cat?! Lol

  • @genebigs1749
    @genebigs1749 4 года назад +136

    Upstate: Anything north of the Bronx.

    • @arany_alexander7130
      @arany_alexander7130 3 года назад +5

      I am upstate, I am 2 feet away from the Bronx border

    • @jday5677
      @jday5677 3 года назад +4

      @@arany_alexander7130 you mean South Canada

    • @arany_alexander7130
      @arany_alexander7130 3 года назад +1

      @@jday5677 U SAID THAT UPSTATE IS ANYTHING NORTH OF THE BRONX. sorry caps lock, i was making a joke, cuz im stanidng 2 feet away from the Bronx so that means im upstate now?

    • @jday5677
      @jday5677 3 года назад

      @@arany_alexander7130 yes, I was also making a joke

    • @genebigs1749
      @genebigs1749 2 года назад +1

      @@arany_alexander7130 Yes.

  • @Orli-g
    @Orli-g 4 года назад +274

    Not bad, however as born and raised NY’er and a Jew, your pronunciation of “putz” is wrong. It is not “put” (as in “put” that down) .... rhyme it with “nuts” or “nutz” for “putz”.

    • @nelsonzavala70
      @nelsonzavala70 4 года назад +12

      Sounded mad weird

    • @cme1027
      @cme1027 4 года назад +6

      Thank you.

    • @talonskye5577
      @talonskye5577 4 года назад +29

      I'm glad someone pointed that out, because it was bothering me.

    • @rgarlinyc
      @rgarlinyc 3 года назад +4

      Exactly! I was going to call her out on this, but thought I'd check the comments first.👍🏻Oh, וויי איז מיר🤣

    • @ellenlehrman9299
      @ellenlehrman9299 3 года назад

      And so obscene I was taken aback!

  • @guthetanuki256
    @guthetanuki256 4 года назад +17

    "Can I get a begganeggancheese?"
    You also forgot "pressed".
    "Why you pressin' my man's like that?"

  • @jancy13pineda85
    @jancy13pineda85 4 года назад +249

    I'm a simple person I see "New York" and I click

  • @HARLEMSSON
    @HARLEMSSON 4 года назад +1286

    Shouldve known this was gonna be a gentrified version

    • @ramelhagins6698
      @ramelhagins6698 4 года назад +12

      Lol

    • @deidrataylor1360
      @deidrataylor1360 4 года назад +158

      YOOOOO. I said the same thing. This is a bullshit step by step for outsiders. She didn’t even know how to say YEERRRR. I was WEAK 😂😂

    • @supraise
      @supraise 4 года назад +22

      Funny. pUtz she’s been watching too many Tekashi videos.

    • @daviddyer6767
      @daviddyer6767 4 года назад +8

      XmarXdaSpot 1 yoooooo to bloodclaaaaaatttt 😂😂😂😂😂😂

    • @tomunderwood238
      @tomunderwood238 4 года назад +41

      Feel free to give me the ungentrified version.

  • @Thaeffintruth
    @Thaeffintruth 3 года назад +7

    I love how the bodega picture had a cat in it lmaoo ..that's accurate af lol

  • @thebeyer8321
    @thebeyer8321 2 года назад +10

    “The Island” - Long Island
    “I was standing ON line” -instead of IN line

    • @skontheroad
      @skontheroad 2 года назад +1

      "ON line"!!!! THAT'S a good one!!!! Made me laugh!

    • @NO_PJM
      @NO_PJM 7 дней назад

      Lol oh crap, I do say this lol

  • @KendraAshanti
    @KendraAshanti 4 года назад +298

    You would say “that pizza is dumb good” rather than that was “dumb good pizza.”

    • @TheBeverly7
      @TheBeverly7 4 года назад +4

      Tell it!!!!!!

    • @yalanti
      @yalanti 4 года назад +7

      Same thing I thought!!! I have never said the dumb good pizza.

    • @NextMoveNYC
      @NextMoveNYC 4 года назад +4

      She messed that one up

    • @kenyereid5137
      @kenyereid5137 4 года назад +7

      I thought the samething.... like “Nah she not saying it right”

    • @jaimefernandez443
      @jaimefernandez443 4 года назад

      Das a fact

  • @bxbeautynyc
    @bxbeautynyc 4 года назад +148

    I gotta go "play my numbers" 😂 meaning i want to play the lottery.

    • @ramelhagins6698
      @ramelhagins6698 4 года назад +1

      Lol yep

    • @stormfield9431
      @stormfield9431 4 года назад +1

      jai sarp hope ya "hit"

    • @ShemCerti
      @ShemCerti 3 года назад +3

      Nigga anyone and everyone says that that’s not even New York yo

    • @carolynhowell9768
      @carolynhowell9768 2 года назад +3

      @Jai Sarp: Back in the 60s and 70s before lottery we would go put our numbers in. It was call a number hole. You could put a little money on a number and win big 😁

    • @gypsy698
      @gypsy698 2 года назад +1

      Duh. 😂

  • @jrfrondelli2023
    @jrfrondelli2023 3 года назад +9

    Gotta tell ya, I'm born and raised in Queens, and have worked in the city most of my life, and in my 61 years, there are three of these I haven't heard ANYONE use! :P

  • @briantbethea
    @briantbethea 4 года назад +15

    Add 2 phrases
    1) "Cross street(s)" to this list. I moved outta NY back '07. Every state I've gone to & was looking for some place, no one knew what in the world I was talking about.
    2) Uptowns - NY name for the Nike Air-Force Ones

    • @neilgibbons2532
      @neilgibbons2532 4 года назад

      🤣😆😁

    • @IDontSuckAtLifeakaJanis3975
      @IDontSuckAtLifeakaJanis3975 2 года назад +1

      I would've known and ask that when trying to find places. There are only a couple of these that are unique to NYC and only one that's really annoying... The (mis)pronunciation of Houston lol

    • @skontheroad
      @skontheroad 2 года назад +2

      OMG! SO TRUE!!! I still ask for cross streets and in LA, they tell me the major avenues. They could be 10 miles apart!!??
      It is so obvious, too, LOL!

  • @lotsoflove4animals
    @lotsoflove4animals 4 года назад +214

    The Belt (belt parkway) everyone in NYC knows what that means 😂 trust you dont wanna drive on it during rush hour

    • @allnyc3412
      @allnyc3412  4 года назад +1

      Good one!

    • @alanhorowitz3796
      @alanhorowitz3796 4 года назад +18

      Good one! Another is how one pronounces the (nightmare of a road) "van wyck." The actual Dutch pronunciation is "wike," but NYers will use "wick."

    • @njnikusha
      @njnikusha 4 года назад +2

      Donna johnson Yeees that and van wyck expway

    • @ChristmasDiamond
      @ChristmasDiamond 4 года назад +12

      No one drives on the belt during the rush, you sit there

    • @cbell8945
      @cbell8945 4 года назад +1

      @@ChristmasDiamond so true

  • @MyNatasha73
    @MyNatasha73 4 года назад +50

    "BRICK" Referring to how extremely cold the weather is. "How cold is it tonight?" Replies "It's mad brick outside!"
    SON, MY GUY OR DUDE referring to a person. Gender neutral!

    • @ZeonGenesis
      @ZeonGenesis 3 года назад

      Funny how male words often become "gender neutral", but female words never do. Male = human/person, female = other/sub.

    • @elmalanmalan2175
      @elmalanmalan2175 2 года назад

      My guy must be new when I used to live in America back in 2007 never heard that word. People use my man a lot.

  • @abvodvarka
    @abvodvarka 4 года назад +11

    "Stoop" is a Dutch word that survives from 17th century New Amsterdam.

  • @sue2cue
    @sue2cue 4 года назад +14

    In NYC, for the pronunciation of the word library, we say "liberry"; the North Bronx is called "the boogy down Bronx".

    • @carolynhowell9768
      @carolynhowell9768 2 года назад +1

      @Sue 2Cue: Money Making Manhattan. Money Earning Mt. Vernon. Bed Sty do or Die

    • @sue2cue
      @sue2cue 2 года назад

      @@carolynhowell9768 yeap! It's our lingual!

  • @mariaalexander427
    @mariaalexander427 4 года назад +148

    How'bout Aaaay-Yo! That's how we try to get someone's attention Uptown. You also forgot to mention "son".

    • @allnyc3412
      @allnyc3412  4 года назад +3

      Good ones!

    • @afriendlyneighbor9624
      @afriendlyneighbor9624 4 года назад +6

      MARIA ALEXANDER she forgot a lot of words but mention forgetaboutit. I never used that one,only heard my father in law use it. And he is Italian😜

    • @mariaalexander427
      @mariaalexander427 4 года назад +2

      @@afriendlyneighbor9624 🤣🤣🤣

    • @sboines42
      @sboines42 4 года назад +2

      They don't know about that. They thing does a degrading way to speak

    • @shawnperry4455
      @shawnperry4455 4 года назад +2

      What about MO...

  • @ruzzelladrian907
    @ruzzelladrian907 4 года назад +267

    I hope that Bodegas will survive the next wave of high taxes.

    • @shawnperry4455
      @shawnperry4455 4 года назад +13

      Don't worry...the cat sleeping on the bread got the taxes...

    • @kris12lein85
      @kris12lein85 4 года назад +3

      you mean coronavirus!

    • @danielrbsutton
      @danielrbsutton 3 года назад +1

      @@shawnperry4455 That is true! And when she described bodegas as convenience stores or corner stores, she forgot to mention that they usually have a cat in the store, tho they did show a cat in the photo of the bodega :)

    • @greenmachine5600
      @greenmachine5600 2 года назад +1

      @@danielrbsutton the car thing isn't even that accurate. A lot just don't have cats.

  • @glmike523
    @glmike523 4 года назад +11

    The Island...i.e.: He/She lives on the Island. (Long Island) Since Brooklyn and Queens are also on Long Island they don't count as "The Island." The Island is Nassau and Suffolk Counties.

    • @user-ob3kv8hj1z
      @user-ob3kv8hj1z Месяц назад

      True. Long Island is Nassau and Suffolk County. Because Brooklyn and Queens are NYC

  • @Guppieboi3
    @Guppieboi3 4 года назад +16

    How about "Super" meaning the apartment building manager, and/ or the person to report maintenance problems?

  • @champagne7530
    @champagne7530 4 года назад +48

    What about " not for nothing" used to stress a point

  • @bxbeautynyc
    @bxbeautynyc 4 года назад +135

    Grill has like 4 different meanings.
    She all up in my Grill meaning staring.
    She all up in my Grill... meaning she's close to my face.
    She need to fix her Grill... meaning Front Teeth.
    Why you gotta Grill me like that?? Ask alot if questions

    • @DDios-ih9de
      @DDios-ih9de 4 года назад

      That's not Brooklyn that's ghetto

    • @swatl
      @swatl 3 года назад

      I live in Atlanta, so it’s totally front teeth.

    • @bxbeautynyc
      @bxbeautynyc 3 года назад

      @@DDios-ih9de never said it was Brooklyn and it's NYC which is one big ghetto!

    • @christophed8429
      @christophed8429 3 года назад +1

      Or if your tauting someone to fight you say "step to my grill"

    • @carolynhowell9768
      @carolynhowell9768 2 года назад

      @@DDios-ih9de some parts of Brooklyn have ghetto streets.

  • @carlo_cali
    @carlo_cali 3 года назад +10

    I can't believe how normal most of this slang seems to a New Yorker. Most of these terms you hear all the time.

    • @Brando-wc8fz
      @Brando-wc8fz Год назад

      Its made from some retawd who never been to NY

  • @damarise8995
    @damarise8995 4 года назад +35

    Born and Raised in NYC(43 years) and I’ve never used the word schmear! 😂 I think it depends what borough you’re from.🤷🏻‍♀️

    • @SaintsPurgatory
      @SaintsPurgatory 3 года назад +4

      it depends on the neighborhood and where the fuck you get your bagels

    • @greenmachine5600
      @greenmachine5600 2 года назад

      Use it all the time

    • @bridgestar_
      @bridgestar_ 2 года назад +1

      Lol for real 🤣

    • @hannahockey6890
      @hannahockey6890 2 года назад +1

      I'm from queens and use it all the time but it's the opposite of what she said, it means a small amount

    • @eddihaskell
      @eddihaskell Год назад

      I don't use it. I'm not an immigrant. My grandparents were, and they didn't like using it because they didn't want to sound like immigrants lol.

  • @MrMannybo81
    @MrMannybo81 4 года назад +114

    Cab=taxi
    Son= your boy
    Word= correct
    Baconeggncheese = breakfast sándwich
    Guap= money
    Frontin’ = false
    Whip= car
    Tight= upset or cool
    Gully= genuine
    I can’t think of anymore lol

    • @katiedeppisch
      @katiedeppisch 4 года назад +7

      Brolic= muscular person
      Brick= cold
      Tight= angry/sounds good
      Vexed= really angry
      Good looks= thank you
      Clicky= tv remote
      Adventure land= small amusement park in Farmingdale (long island)
      Splish splash= small water park out east (long island)

    • @c.leondyson3416
      @c.leondyson3416 4 года назад +2

      Tight could refer to ones financial situation; or how about - oh, so you are mad mad? Or perhaps: that new new, or just repeat any adjective or adverb, like fast fast...

    • @rolandrhoward9361
      @rolandrhoward9361 4 года назад

      SON= Anyone you are schooling.
      FRESH= Anything New.

    • @bxbeautynyc
      @bxbeautynyc 4 года назад

      @@katiedeppisch i agree with everyone except Splish Splash. That's actually the correct name.
      But Out East is Slang.

    • @katiedeppisch
      @katiedeppisch 4 года назад

      @@bxbeautynyc you right, it's not slang but no one else in the world would know what I was talking about unless they were from the long island area.

  • @sandywill74
    @sandywill74 4 года назад +177

    I'm surprised you didn't include son...I hear that a lot when I'm in New York

  • @toniannbrooks9756
    @toniannbrooks9756 3 года назад +9

    Hahaha the food shopping one made me lol I didn’t kno that was a NY thing I thought everybody said it 😂😂😂(I’m from Long Island tho)

  • @UncleMikeNJ
    @UncleMikeNJ 2 года назад +8

    24 out of the 27, I got no problem with. The 3 I do have a problem with, it's more of a minor adjustment:
    #14: Saying "Jersey" is okay, but nobody says "Joisey" anymore. That was what white people from Brooklyn called it. Now, the Brooklyn variation on the N'Yawk accent is all but gone, and nobody, from hipsters in Williamsburg to Caribbeans in Crown Heights to Russkies in Brighton Beach, uses "Joisey."
    #19: A putz is someone who should know better, but doesn't. A schmuck is a guy who enjoys being a jerk, but is usually not the main problem. He's often doing it for somebody else. He's a henchman, a lackey, a flunky to the main problem, the asshole. If he were a good guy, we'd call him a sidekick.
    #21: It's not spelled "yooz," it's "youse." And it's not so much pronounced "yooz" as "yuz."

    • @Cathy-xi8cb
      @Cathy-xi8cb 6 месяцев назад

      Oh, thank you. From Queens. It is, of course, pronounced "yuz". As in " T' #$%& wit awl a yuz!"

  • @dominickcavelli891
    @dominickcavelli891 4 года назад +78

    71 year lifelong NYer. Some of these seem very recent. I've never heard them. A couple others change from neighborhood to neighborhood. Even others are somewhat ethnic.

    • @namelia4439
      @namelia4439 4 года назад +4

      Some are new or really new, true, but as a 49yo lifelong Brooklynite, most of them were spot on.

    • @user-gt1kd9rv1w
      @user-gt1kd9rv1w 4 года назад +2

      Dominick Cavelli very true

    • @GaryTisdaleFungkSta1
      @GaryTisdaleFungkSta1 4 года назад +4

      @@namelia4439 I see some are from mid 80's Hip Hop terminology like "Son" but also see alot of new millennial terms based in southern rap and Ebonics craze of the mid to late 90's time period

    • @greenmachine5600
      @greenmachine5600 2 года назад

      @@GaryTisdaleFungkSta1 true, not a fan of "y'all." Should be 'you's' or "ya's" in New York

    • @GaryTisdaleFungkSta1
      @GaryTisdaleFungkSta1 2 года назад +3

      @@greenmachine5600 Y'all & Yous, or you'se has been used in New York and all over the East Coast before I was even born
      Ya's never heard of, so have to link that to your generation of New Yorker's cause it's not Old School NYC terminology🎯

  • @goodridgejames
    @goodridgejames 4 года назад +183

    Most people from the BRONX say their going Downtown not to the CITY.

    • @Nusaiba89
      @Nusaiba89 4 года назад +7

      goodridgejames correct!!!

    • @crystalbruno3124
      @crystalbruno3124 4 года назад +9

      goodridgejames I still say the city lol

    • @stephenaponte1040
      @stephenaponte1040 4 года назад

      Exactly

    • @joeweatlu5169
      @joeweatlu5169 4 года назад +15

      People from outside NYC call Manhattan The City. Born and raised in The Bronx, never called it The City, always called it Downtown.

    • @gavinrogers5246
      @gavinrogers5246 4 года назад +6

      That's pretty much a Bronx thing

  • @johngulino2651
    @johngulino2651 2 года назад +8

    Growing up in Queens, “going into New York” meant going to Manhattan. Or going to the City. In the Bay Area, “the City” is San Francisco.

  • @buckleysdead
    @buckleysdead 4 года назад +10

    I was waiting to see if the video would note the meaning of "downtown" in relation to Brooklyn and they did! So, as a New Yorker, I wholly endorse this video!! Lol!
    Haha! And "food shopping"! Yes!

  • @c.d.macaulay66
    @c.d.macaulay66 4 года назад +61

    How can you forget g’ahead. You’re encouraging someone to proceed.

    • @carag2567
      @carag2567 4 года назад +6

      YES! "Guhead" one word, two syllables. Accompanied by an outward waving of the hand to show the person they can guhead.

    • @bigtip8371
      @bigtip8371 4 года назад +2

      And good to go..

    • @annmariewilson751
      @annmariewilson751 4 года назад +2

      My husband is from Iowa. Whenever I say "guhead" he asks me why I call him a "goat head"! 😁

    • @stateofmind4341
      @stateofmind4341 4 года назад

      Good one😂

    • @CinqueTerre558
      @CinqueTerre558 4 года назад

      Ann Marie Wilson LOL, so what do you tell him?

  • @drac464
    @drac464 4 года назад +29

    “All day”... “you a Jets fan?” ... “nah, Giants, all day”

  • @datoboe9228
    @datoboe9228 4 года назад +8

    Practically my whole family was born and raised in New York except for me and my bro, so I’ve used ALL these phrases my whole life and I didn't even know they originated in New York 😂 ESPECIALLY, ”You good?”

  • @rolandrhoward9361
    @rolandrhoward9361 4 года назад +7

    "WORD" short for "Word Up" meaning "Really?" In response or "Seriously" when making a statement.
    "ONE" short for "One Love" meaning
    "Goodbye, God Bless" or Goodbye, Take Care.

  • @derengetz1
    @derengetz1 4 года назад +49

    Agree about the schmeer comment, and "pootz" but the one you left out was coffee "Regular"

  • @Msdilz1
    @Msdilz1 4 года назад +128

    Idk bout y’all but I’m from nyc and when I’m asking for a bagel with cream cheese I’m asking for just that not schmear 🤣🤣

    • @Pezzboy77
      @Pezzboy77 4 года назад +4

      Y'all???? You ain't from New York ... Stop being such a poser.

    • @kitsskit8958
      @kitsskit8958 4 года назад +26

      @@Pezzboy77 lmaooo what?? Many of us actually say that tho

    • @ramelhagins6698
      @ramelhagins6698 4 года назад

      Lol yep

    • @Msdilz1
      @Msdilz1 4 года назад +3

      kits skit exactly lol

    • @aidanknisch1996
      @aidanknisch1996 4 года назад +1

      Pezzboy777 You right. It’s yous

  • @robbiesmile3
    @robbiesmile3 4 года назад +9

    You omitted some NYC staples ... potsie (hopscotch), eggcream (the drink is traditionally made with Fox's U-Bet Syrup, milk, & a couple of long spritzes of seltzer ... they are icecream sodas minus the icecream), skellie (a sidewalk game played with bottle caps), stickball (similar to baseball, but played with mop handles), two sewers (the traditonal street playing field in stickball ... three sewers is generally a homerun), spaldeen (a rubber ball), a two-cents plain (seltzer), and a melaroll (a cylindrical icecream, placed horizontally in a cone ... but I haven't seen any melarolls for many years). There's also the Charlotte Russe (a cardboard cylinder containing cake, jam between the layers, a lot of whipped cream on top, and a cherry placed on the pinnacle. Sometimes brandy is put into the cake). The Charlotte Russe is almost always served with a wooden dixiecup spoon. They serve them elsewhere, especially in France, but I think NYC is the only place where they are sold as a handheld, walkaway desert. In some sections of Brooklyn, beef is a synonym for putz or schmuck, from the anatomical standpoint.

    • @skontheroad
      @skontheroad 2 года назад +1

      Horn and Hardart...
      The automat! Always a great place to stop for a Cinnamon raison/cream cheese sandwich after shopping at B. ALTMAN's or even Alexander's.... those were the days!

    • @vigwig
      @vigwig Год назад +2

      Why did she pronounce putz as POOTZ, I've always heard it as PUHTZ

    • @Razbunyik
      @Razbunyik Год назад

      @@vigwig Correct!

    • @dawnsstar5918
      @dawnsstar5918 Месяц назад

      You forgot Sabrett's and knishes!!
      😏
      Good list, though.
      Man, I'm going to make some eggcreams this summer.

  • @conniecrawford5231
    @conniecrawford5231 2 года назад +5

    I grew up in Pittsburgh in the 1950s and many of these words were commonly used there as we sat on our stoops!

    • @jd3422
      @jd3422 2 года назад +1

      Except, of course, in New York it's "yooz," but in Pittsburgh it's "yinz."

  • @Mica-rv5eg
    @Mica-rv5eg 4 года назад +51

    Growing up in the BX, Manhattan was always downtown. I didn't call it the "city " until I moved to Brooklyn 😍

    • @bxboro4662
      @bxboro4662 4 года назад +5

      Michelle Grant Right!

    • @joeweatlu5169
      @joeweatlu5169 4 года назад +6

      Agree

    • @kwamenyame1277
      @kwamenyame1277 4 года назад +3

      Agreed

    • @pafig333
      @pafig333 4 года назад +6

      Yes, Manhattan was “Downtown”

    • @mariowalker9048
      @mariowalker9048 2 года назад

      Intresting I thought Bronx people refer to Harlem-Inwood and up uptown.

  • @throwonsomemakeup
    @throwonsomemakeup 4 года назад +34

    What about “Spaz” “Tight” “Brick” “whip” “cop”?? “Lit”??? What else I feel like there’s more

  • @mfar3016
    @mfar3016 4 года назад +5

    And the bodegas always have a cat! 😄

  • @staceypalmer7968
    @staceypalmer7968 2 года назад +1

    1.The grill can also means the gold teeth! 2. Also a way to say hi is the head nod! 3. Also every man calls a girl what's up Shorty! 4. Can I get some fries with that Shake! 5. Why you bugging! 6. Can I get those digits!

  • @laurarosenberg8876
    @laurarosenberg8876 4 года назад +99

    putz is pronounced "putts" (not "pootz").. thank you.

    • @allnyc3412
      @allnyc3412  4 года назад +5

      Thanks for the correction. It’s not one of the ones I normally use.

    • @lesa.4903
      @lesa.4903 4 года назад +4

      Laura you are 100% right. I grew up in a home where my parents spoke to my grandparents in Yiddish so kids wouldn't understand. Needless to say, I became fluent enough to read a Yiddish newspaper and even attend one of the last Yiddish plays performed in NYC (about 1960).

    • @irajayrosen4792
      @irajayrosen4792 4 года назад

      @@lesa.4903 you missed Fiddler on the Roof in Yiddish?
      And God of Vengeance a few years ago;?

    • @lesa.4903
      @lesa.4903 4 года назад +3

      @@irajayrosen4792 Yes to both. However, my bride and I danced to "Sunrise Sunset" at our wedding.

    • @18thcenturyJewishMom
      @18thcenturyJewishMom 4 года назад +1

      @@allnyc3412 You also didn't define putz or schmuck correctly. They both mean a pr-ck, a jerk, a jackass. They are both vulgar and impolite, but not quite to the same degree. Schmuck is the one my mother wouldn't say.

  • @tiffanynottage7241
    @tiffanynottage7241 4 года назад +79

    This is fun. you forgot: unowatimsaying. Every word that’s spelled with au is pronounced with a aw sound. Example: Sawsege. Some people say dawg for dog, dawl for doll. And you can’t forget “ my moms and da bafroom. 😂😂

    • @GaryTisdaleFungkSta1
      @GaryTisdaleFungkSta1 4 года назад +3

      tiffany nottage
      : Now the pronunciation with the "Aw" sound started in the 90's during the rise of Southern Rap and Ebonics, because prior to that you never heard that type of pronunciation from a Native, unless it was somebody who just moved there from the South.
      Before Ebonics, I used to can tell where a Black Person came from when they talked (New Yawkaz talked fast & proper back then) you would've been clowned for Dawg, Skrimps, Curr or Corr, instead of Car etc ... In the 60's through the early 80's, we would've been on the stoop or the benches out front, running a Snap Fest on your vernacular if you came on our block talking like that

    • @tiffanynottage7241
      @tiffanynottage7241 4 года назад +4

      Gary Tisdale hi! You have a point but my opinion differs and I will tell you why. My family is from the south and moved up here when the migration started in the late industrial years. My family started in the 30, 40’s and 50’s looking for work. My family settled up “north” in The Bronx, Harlem and Brooklyn. My immediate settled in the Bronx. The accent changed by the different sounds we lived around. And I promise the eastern southern sound, does not sound like this! And yes I went down south in the summers and they thought I sounded proper and then worked in the city and looked lat me like I sounded I’ve never been out the hood 😂. Dawl, Dawg and umpire instead of empire were words with those sounds like New Yawrk ( there’s always a slight r) were already here. From the Italian, Irish and Yiddish and other communities around. I’m sure some were made fun of by there deep country sounds like those now a days from other countries and states. Some lost some of the sounds and kept some of the words. And it does matter what borough your from because there are subtle (sp? Don’t judge me haha)differences from one borough to another. But the southern in the lingo has been before the south got there dues in when it came down to hip hop. Shoot... I see people from other countries saying fittna’ and some other southern words. One thing rings true. New York has an accent filled with sounds from all over the world and I enjoy it immensely. I had super who spoke English and my mom didn’t understand his deep accent but I did. . I was interpreting accents. One of the only states I know that this can happen. Oh and one more thing. 😂 I don’t say Plantano’s or Plantains. I say Platins. Plat a old school words for single braids and in’s. Haha. I don’t know why. But no one ever questioned it from the Chinese to the Spanish “restoraunt ” hahaha Eatin on my stoop.

    • @TheLoveweaver
      @TheLoveweaver 4 года назад +1

      @@tiffanynottage7241 👆👍

    • @drac464
      @drac464 4 года назад +3

      tiffany nottage .. that’s so Yonkers lol u know what I’m saying every other word

    • @88KeysIdaho
      @88KeysIdaho 4 года назад +3

      I can hear people pronounce Long Island as Lawn Guy-land.

  • @ruthiebelle1
    @ruthiebelle1 Год назад +1

    The Met - either the Metropolitan Museum of Art or the Metropolitan Opera.
    The Drive: Riverside Drive
    Is there still The Shuttle? The 42nd St. crosstown train.
    A frappe: Pronounced frap, a soft drink concoction with milk & whatever.
    Candy store used to be the place where you got one of the many dozens of newspapers, magazines, comic books, and best of all, penny candy, maybe a frapp. Guess it's a bodega now.
    An egg cream: No egg, no cream, but delicious anyway.
    I was born & brought up in the city and have lived many places, but my NY accent still shines and now I'm 92 and remember it so fondly. So proud to be a New Yorker forever!

  • @yosoylachichi
    @yosoylachichi 4 года назад +5

    Never heard of yerrrr and I’ve lived here all my life.

    • @kmaeyeah
      @kmaeyeah 4 года назад

      really?! in my school if one person says "YURRR" then the whole hallway responds back with "YUURRR" i guess its a new thing

  • @thebunkertv8847
    @thebunkertv8847 4 года назад +58

    I don’t know if y’all are white ppl making this list , but , but I must say that wasn’t as cringe worthy as I thought it would be . Good job 👍 The narrator sounded cute in her verbiage . So I say the biggest miss was the word (🛑SON🛑) All black men call each other SON . AND WE CALL POLICE 👮 ( 🛑THE BOYS🛑).

    • @GaryTisdaleFungkSta1
      @GaryTisdaleFungkSta1 4 года назад +1

      The "Son" thing kind of started in the 80's, never heard that until I went back to NYC for a vacation in 80' when I lived there, it was "Yo Homes" which I guess is for HomeBoieee (used to think they were saying "Holmes" way it sounded) but never heard son in the East Bronx

    • @yalanti
      @yalanti 4 года назад +4

      Or Jakes!... not sure if that's all over NYC though.

    • @dianef.1592
      @dianef.1592 4 года назад +6

      Nah. Its changed. They call police either po/po or 5/o. (Like Oh)

    • @GaryTisdaleFungkSta1
      @GaryTisdaleFungkSta1 4 года назад +3

      @@dianef.1592 Five Ooh & Po Po' been used since the 70's, I've heard "The Boys In Blue" but not "The Boys" so guess that's another millineal addon

    • @kawonmartin9915
      @kawonmartin9915 4 года назад +3

      Facts...but it's actually SUN, not SON. Sun as a sign of respect towards our brethren. Like the Sun, Moon and Stars. We shine like the Sun. It's even in the lyrics to the famous 'Wu Gambinos' song ala Method Man...."Wu roll together as one, I call my brother SUN cause he shine like one..."

  • @anitracottman7506
    @anitracottman7506 4 года назад +87

    Das crazy yo, Nah son, I’m sayin’ tho’, you good?, corner store, hero, the city (Manhattan), the Railroad (LIRR), Let me get ( that bagel, that slice, those Tim’s). I could go on and on.

    • @katjerouac
      @katjerouac 4 года назад +2

      I grew up saying corner store but in spanish it would be bodega or "la wawa"

    • @Mica-rv5eg
      @Mica-rv5eg 4 года назад

      True that ❤️

  • @KwanJangHRD
    @KwanJangHRD 4 года назад +4

    In the Bronx.."Grill" meant your face; as in "Yo, you better guard your grill" (Some folks it also meant teeth! But mostly I heard it as your face. She was all up in my grill!")

  • @user-jh6kl8jq8l
    @user-jh6kl8jq8l 2 года назад +1

    The cat in the Bodega pic is CLASSIC!

  • @denimcowboy501
    @denimcowboy501 4 года назад +48

    What ever happened to "YO."

    • @tonyadams6027
      @tonyadams6027 4 года назад +2

      What about"G"?

    • @andrewstaples8677
      @andrewstaples8677 4 года назад +3

      Or "Good looks " which means thanks

    • @tonyadams6027
      @tonyadams6027 4 года назад +1

      Right Right-True,True...

    • @fleurbloem5462
      @fleurbloem5462 4 года назад

      YO, and G are international by now, talking from Holland.

    • @neilgibbons2532
      @neilgibbons2532 4 года назад

      YO a Jewish friend of mine once told me a "SMOCK " is that discarded skin after a circumcision 😎 no shit

  • @guyguru6169
    @guyguru6169 4 года назад +75

    “Front” like don’t front on me

    • @tonyadams6027
      @tonyadams6027 4 года назад

      Fakin Jack's...

    • @GaryTisdaleFungkSta1
      @GaryTisdaleFungkSta1 4 года назад +4

      @@tonyadams6027 Thats new too "Fakin' Jacks"
      Now "Frontin' " that's genuine old school NYC term

    • @tonyadams6027
      @tonyadams6027 4 года назад

      @@GaryTisdaleFungkSta1 Maybe 90's...Late 80's..

    • @GaryTisdaleFungkSta1
      @GaryTisdaleFungkSta1 4 года назад

      @@tonyadams6027 I know Frontin' is late 70's to early 80's but Fakin' Jacks I never heard, last time I've been home was mid 80's, so that got to be late 80's or 90's

    • @tonyadams6027
      @tonyadams6027 4 года назад

      @@GaryTisdaleFungkSta1 Right...I left South Side in 93..

  • @TravisRitenourautismvlogs
    @TravisRitenourautismvlogs 3 дня назад

    i am currently taking a weekend trip to NYC as a first time visitor with my brother who has visited NYC before when i arrived in the vibrant and lively world of NYC i instantly fell in love with such a incredible city

  • @rumrstv
    @rumrstv Год назад +2

    With regard to The City phrase, people that live in northern Manhattan, which is more residential than mid and southern Manhattan, refer to going to the lower parts of Manhattan as "going in to the city". I've lived in Manhattan most of my life and heard this when I went way uptown to Inwood. I was mildly shocked.

  • @aquariansunrise8981
    @aquariansunrise8981 4 года назад +50

    Grill can also be used as a term for your face, Like i be all up in his/ her grill.

    • @neilgibbons2532
      @neilgibbons2532 4 года назад

      Your grill is your teeth only ie a car grill that lets air into the engine think about it👩‍🎓

    • @DancingDeity
      @DancingDeity 3 года назад

      that's been around since the 90s, like in Missy Elliot's song "why you all in my grill"..

    • @lovestory8205
      @lovestory8205 3 года назад +1

      It can also mean calling you out on something.. like “I’m gonna grill your boy for acting stupid”

    • @aquariansunrise8981
      @aquariansunrise8981 3 года назад

      @@DancingDeity I would know, I was in my 20s and extremely involved in out Culture. Born and raised in NYC.

  • @lunabella606
    @lunabella606 4 года назад +30

    Regular coffee (coffee with milk and sugar) Triborough or triboro bridge instead of RFK bridge

    • @johnjohnson6327
      @johnjohnson6327 4 года назад +4

      And NY'ers never changed the name of the Tappan Zee. We don't call it the the Mario Cuomo bridge, we call it the Tappan Zee. And what about the Brooklyn-Battery Tunnell being renamed the Hugh Carey Tunnell? Nobody's ever gonna change that.

    • @joeborromeo8693
      @joeborromeo8693 4 года назад

      I was hoping regular coffee would be on the list.

    • @jamesstark8316
      @jamesstark8316 3 года назад

      I gave up ordering regular cawfee in the bodega because most of the recent immigrants have no idea what I'm ordering. Shame.

    • @natalijanovakovic3948
      @natalijanovakovic3948 2 года назад

      The Jackie Robinson Parkway is still the Interboro Parkway in my head, although I have started calling it the Jackie occasionally

  • @simon_a.j.7255
    @simon_a.j.7255 4 года назад +4

    Brooklyn born and raised and I say some of these things too - except for "yerr" and "bugging"

  • @patrickculhane1269
    @patrickculhane1269 4 года назад

    9:20 haha... that’s what I picture when I think of people chillin on the stoop😂

  • @markschiller4534
    @markschiller4534 4 года назад +73

    Car fare

    • @tiffanynottage7241
      @tiffanynottage7241 4 года назад +6

      !!!! And token booth

    • @Presidente132
      @Presidente132 4 года назад +5

      Good one. Only in the Boros

    • @bford3977
      @bford3977 4 года назад +2

      YESSSSS!!!

    • @drac464
      @drac464 4 года назад +3

      Tokens? lol .. no more

    • @bxbeautynyc
      @bxbeautynyc 4 года назад +1

      @@tiffanynottage7241 😂😂😂 we still say token booth clerk and there's no more tokens!

  • @lightingjack05
    @lightingjack05 4 года назад +25

    "O.D"

  • @TiffanyWestNyc
    @TiffanyWestNyc 4 года назад +10

    My beautiful city I love you New York no one could ever compare! You’re truly a gift and thanks for raising me 🍎🍎🍎

    • @hi5934
      @hi5934 3 года назад

      stop plzzzzz deadass

  • @Moonchilling
    @Moonchilling 4 года назад +7

    So funny. Haven’t lived in NY since 1975 and I still most of these words.

    • @angp361
      @angp361 6 месяцев назад

      Same I can't get rid of some of the accent from bronx I think I moved out 1995ish.

  • @trevordantzler5781
    @trevordantzler5781 4 года назад +51

    people from New Jersey say "The City" also.

    • @alanhorowitz3796
      @alanhorowitz3796 4 года назад +4

      As do people from Westchester, Orange and Fairfield Counties.

    • @zhx2365
      @zhx2365 4 года назад +2

      That's dumb asf 🤦🏾‍♂️. If you don't live in NYC , don't be callin it that .

    • @kargudin
      @kargudin 4 года назад +7

      @@zhx2365 Us in North Jersey that live minutes from "the city" and live in towns like Jersey City, Hoboken, Weehawken, Union City, West New York, Fairview, Cliffside Park, Fort Lee, North Bergen, Guttenberg, and Secacus etc...call it the city biggest it's the closest biggest city to us.

    • @drac464
      @drac464 4 года назад +1

      Zeeqtee Prn it’s also the other way around.. New Yorkers who move to NJ

    • @zhx2365
      @zhx2365 4 года назад

      Katya Argudin but "the city" is in a whole different state .

  • @dominickcavelli891
    @dominickcavelli891 4 года назад +33

    "Stoop" reminded me of the universal game of my childhood "stoop ball" Don't see many street games being played today. Maybe streets have too much traffic.

    • @mariekatherine5238
      @mariekatherine5238 4 года назад +2

      Dominick Cavelli True, but the tradition lives on in the descendants. My grand nephews play stoop ball on the cement steps out back their house in Kentucky. Some of the neighborhood kids come over and now they play, too.

    • @AgathaLOutahere
      @AgathaLOutahere 4 года назад +6

      Kids today are too busy with their phones to play street games.

    • @TheLoveweaver
      @TheLoveweaver 4 года назад

      @@AgathaLOutahere and computers.

    • @TheLoveweaver
      @TheLoveweaver 4 года назад

      @@AgathaLOutahere ...and 590 million TV channels. Lol

    • @stateofmind4341
      @stateofmind4341 4 года назад

      We didn't have a stoop in my bldg so we played off the corner hehe
      ✌🏽🇵🇷🇺🇸

  • @anagarcia7408
    @anagarcia7408 4 года назад +4

    OMG, love this. I hate when I say, I was born in Jamaica and people think I was born in the country, I have to say no Queens, lol.

    • @eddieotero2726
      @eddieotero2726 3 года назад +1

      As I was reading that I thought you meant country as in barns cows & open fields....lmaooooo Queens native here

  • @clevoloki55
    @clevoloki55 4 года назад +5

    Dear visitors,
    Don't say Fuhgeddaboutit. Just don't.

  • @jamesaustin3483
    @jamesaustin3483 4 года назад +93

    Left out "The Island" - Nassau and Suffolk counties.

    • @lotsoflove4animals
      @lotsoflove4animals 4 года назад +11

      Cause that's NYS not NYC

    • @allnyc3412
      @allnyc3412  4 года назад +2

      Good one! I forgot about that one.

    • @elbafeliciano8665
      @elbafeliciano8665 4 года назад +2

      Nope...not the City

    • @Lita0920
      @Lita0920 4 года назад +6

      Haha... when us Bronxites say "The Island", we mean City Island ! 😄

    • @duanerackham9567
      @duanerackham9567 4 года назад +2

      We should just annex Nassau county

  • @New_Wave_Nancy
    @New_Wave_Nancy 4 года назад +18

    There's even a moving service called "Schleppers."

  • @Marty4650
    @Marty4650 4 года назад +2

    NYC is a city full of minorities, with no real majority group. There are a million Jews, a million Puerto Ricans, a million Irish, a million Asians, a million Italians, etc. That means everyone learns to curse in several different languages. One word you missed is "agita" the Italian word for "heartburn" or "grief." Sure, there are Italians in all 50 states who know this word, but NYC is the only place in America where EVERYONE knows what it means. This is also why there are so many Yiddish words on your list.

  • @zenaidagonzalez6343
    @zenaidagonzalez6343 4 года назад +2

    You forgot another NYC saying. When you ask for a hot dog from a vendor, you say, " can I get a frank"

    • @SaintsPurgatory
      @SaintsPurgatory 3 года назад

      all I ever hear someone say is "git me one of those dawgs man and makes it red and yellow"

  • @drac464
    @drac464 4 года назад +37

    “Good lookin” or “good lookin’ out” meaning you did me a favor on something that saved me the hassle or saved me money usually without you having to ask. Example: somebody orders food but they ordered something for you too without you knowing.. “ahh man, “good lookin’”.. sorta like thank you for thinking of me or including me when I wasn’t expecting it. I told this to a grocery store clerk in FL who used a coupon that he had for one of my items, “I said ,, “aww thanks, good lookin”’, he thought I was telling him he was good looking.. please don’t confuse the two :)

    • @buba_Dukz
      @buba_Dukz 4 года назад

      drac464 🤣🤣🤣👍🏿

    • @jswervo8
      @jswervo8 4 года назад +1

      @@buba_Dukz glooks

    • @shimmyeckstein6421
      @shimmyeckstein6421 4 года назад +1

      Its "good looks" not good lookin

  • @steves1749
    @steves1749 4 года назад +38

    Whatyadoin. We like to blend our words hear in the melting pot

    • @bridgestar_
      @bridgestar_ 2 года назад

      And that is something i like 👍🏻

  • @number1662
    @number1662 4 года назад +8

    She forgot about “Facts”

  • @theorderofthebees7308
    @theorderofthebees7308 2 года назад +1

    As a native New Yorker - I do not suggest you ask for a bagel with a schemear at your local bodega . You are going to get a lot of blank faces

  • @YellyGang
    @YellyGang 4 года назад +25

    Lmaoo I’m from Brooklyn and some of these my face was so confused.