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Y'allbonics


lynn jones

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NOT TO BE OUT DONE BY EBONICS IN CALIFORNIA, THE SOUTHERN ASSOCIATION OF

COLLEGES AND SCHOOLS IS REQUESTING BILLIONS OF FEDERAL DOLLARS TO TEACH

Y'ALLBONICS IN ALL CLASSROOMS SOUTH OF THE MASON-DIXON LINE.

INCLUDED HERE ARE SOME SAMPLES OF Y'ALLBONICS. IF YOU DO NOT UNDERSTAND ANY

OF THEM, CONTACT YOUR SOUTHERN BUBBA FOR AN EXPLANATION.....

HEIDI - (noun) -Greeting. Sumtimes used as 'HEIDI DO'.

AX - (verb) "Don't ax me, I donno"

HIRE YEW - Complete sentence. Remainder of greeting. Usage "Heidi, Hire

yew?"

GOODN - (Contraction) Denotes level of approval "HOO BOY!! At's a

goodn."

BARD - (verb) - Past tense of the infinitive "to borrow." Usage "My

brother bard my pickup truck."

JAWJUH - (noun) - The state north of Florida. Capitol is Lanner.

Usage "My brother from Jawjuh bard my pickup truck."

BAMMER - (noun) - The state west of Jawjuh. Capitol is Berminhayum.

Usage "A tornader jes went through Bammer an' left $20,000,000 in

improvements."

MUNTS - (noun) - A calendar division. Usage "My brother from Jawjuh bard

my pickup truck, and I ain't herd from him in munts."

THANK - (verb) - Cognitive process. Usage "Ah thank ah'll have a coke."

IGNERT - (adjective) - Not smart. See "Arkansas native." Usage "Them

Bammer boys sure are ignert!"

RANCH - (noun) - A tool used for tight'nin' bolts. Usage "I thank I leff

my ranch in the back of that pickup truck my brother from Jawjuh bard a

few munts ago."

ALL - (noun) - A petroleum-based lubricant. Usage "I sure hope my

brother from Jawjuh puts all in my pickup truck."

FAR - (noun) - A conflagration. Usage "If my brother from Jawjuh don't

change the all in my pickup truck, that thing's gonna catch far."

TAR - (noun) - A rubber wheel. Usage "I hope that brother of mine from

Jawjuh don't git a flat tar in my pickup truck."

TIRE - (noun) - A tall monument. Usage "Lord willin' and the creek don't

rise, sure hope to see that Eiffel Tire in Pars sometime."

RETARD -(verb)- To stop working. Usage "My grampaw retard at age 65."

FAT - (noun), (verb) - a battle or combat; to engage in battle or

combat.

Usage "You younguns keep fat'n, n' ah'm gonna whup y'uh beehins."

RATS - (noun) - Entitled power or privilege. Usage "We Southerners are

willin' to fat for are rats."

Different from the singular RAT - (adverb) "Gerald, you get yo ass home

rat now"

CHEER - (adverb) In this place. Usage "Just set that bare rat cheer."

FARN - (adjective) - Not domestic. Usage "I cuddint unnerstand a wurd he

sed... must be from some farn country."

DID - (adjective) - Not alive. Usage "He's did, Jim."

ARE - (noun) - A colorless, odorless gas; Oxygen. Usage "He cain't

beathe...give 'im some ARE!"

BOB WAR - (noun) - A sharp, twisted cable. Usage "Boy, stay away from

that bob war fence."

JEW HERE - (noun) and (verb) contraction. Usage "Jew here that my

brother from Jawjuh got a job with that bob war fence cump'ny?"

HAZE - a contraction. Usage "Is Bubba smart?" "Nah...haze ignert.

He ain't thanked but a minnit n'is laf."

SEED - (verb) - past tense of "to see".

VIEW - contraction (verb) and pronoun. Usage "I ain't never seed New

York City... view?"

DJEET? - Contraction for "Did you eat?" Answer: "Naw, Jew?" - "No, did you?"

GNOME SANE. "It jez dat way, gnome sane?" I postulate this to be a

contraction of "Do you know what I'm saying?" to which I often think of

replying, "No; as a matter of fact, I rather doubt it."

IDINIT - inquisitive contraction. Example: "Nice day, idinit?"

FIXIN - verb, indicates preparation. "I'm fixin' to git me another beer, y'ont one?"

And the list goes on and on and on........

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SARR = sour ex: "OO-whee! Them pickles's SARR!"

GAZINTA = arithmetic division ex: "Two gazinta six three tahms."

AHMOAN = contraction of "I'm going to . . ."

SEBMUP = the carbonated beverage, 7-Up Ex: "Ahmoan drank that sebmup."

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Rhino

Are you coming to any Southern matches soon? I mean Deep South.

Some of 'dem Good 'ol boys, might whup on yor haid. Make you think living North of the Mason Dixon line is Hale. And BTW, the Mason Dixon line is anything North of I-10.

Lynn

The verb, ax, is part of the ebonic vocalization trend, not the Bubba trend.

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skoo (an institution of learning) Wher'd chall go ta' skoo?

Koolfiltakang (a brand of cigarette) Gimme a pakadem Koolfiltakang. (I actually heard someone make this request one night in an Arkansas 7-11, ROTFLAMO)

sco (let us go) cummown, let sco downtada skoo.

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Fellas,

I'z a'readin' this here thread an' tryin' ta figger out whass the durned punch line. See-nz how iss s'posed to be a joke. But I finely realizes iss juss edumacation for ya'll that lives summerz they tawks funny. Prolly nawth o' the M-D line. (Thass the Midland-Dallas line fo' you yankees.)

Cheers from San Angelo, TX

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Are you coming to any Southern matches soon? I mean Deep South.

Some of 'dem Good 'ol boys, might whup on yor haid. Make you think living North of the Mason Dixon line is Hale. And BTW, the Mason Dixon line is anything North of I-10.

Sounds like I'd better stay north of Kentucky if I know what's good for me! :unsure:

I was actually the first kid in my family not born in Kentucky and my mom was born in Kentucky. So I have a genetic predisposition to understaning the y'allbonics dialects. :P

The verb, ax, is part of the ebonic vocalization trend, not the Bubba trend.

I do know some Cajuns and others who live in similar areas in Louisiana that say "ax," but I've never heard it otherwise (except, as you say, in an ebonically enhanced conversation). I wonder how Mr. Miculek says it . . .

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Hey, anyone who runs their car into a tree and, is a confessed drunk, divorces Christi Brinkley, really doesn't have a lot going for him. Three strikes and you're out.

It is hard to enunciate the Queen's English correctly when you got your head all bad.

I don't care if he is the Piano Man...

In this area, the use of AX as a verb is predominately used by people who also conjugate the verb, to be: I be, you be, he she it bes, we be, you be, they be. And Louisiana is next door.

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SL, that was just BJ's early attempt at "crossover". Try " In the Middle of the Night" for a more refined version.

Tightloops crackin' the whip. Maybe we need to start up the FFW's again. Whew.

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<thread drift reply> Well, those that typically start them haven't done so of late.

As for me...I have working too hard and feeling like crap (as in barely getting out of bed and to work on time...let alone early enough to start a FFW) so haven't had the chance to start them in the morning.

But I feel one coming on...maybe this week.

</thread drift reply>

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<thread drift mode>

From the gist of what'all I was reading this PAST week, I'd say some of us were buried in the self-brutalization of high expectations and performance disappointments. Too humiliated to complain about it any more. ...something like that. I have a feeling by the end of THIS week, there may be something entirely different to bi*ch about. (I'd rather bi*ch about something than feel sorry for myself.) But as L said, "...All things are waiverable."

</thread drift mode>

OK, now, where were we... Ah, Billy Joel and y'allbonics. right...

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I do know some Cajuns and others who live in similar areas in Louisiana that say "ax," but I've never heard it otherwise (except, as you say, in an ebonically enhanced conversation).  I wonder how Mr. Miculek says it . . .

Not sure how he says that but he came in the shop one day asking for tubin.

It took some follow up questions for clarification for me to figure out what he needed and you know I had to give him a hard time about it.

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Alrite, you fellers dun forced ma han. Wats I got tiz two fellars speaken. See if yuuns can translate it.

MRPIGS

MRNOTPIGS

OSARCDEDBDIS

LIBMRPIGS.

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