Pibroch wrote:People have told me that the unneccessary "at" at the end of sentences is an Ohio thing.
To wit: "Where will you be at?"
"Where are you at?"
I'll vouch for this.
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Pibroch wrote:People have told me that the unneccessary "at" at the end of sentences is an Ohio thing.
To wit: "Where will you be at?"
"Where are you at?"
Marsupialized wrote:A male playing an acoustic guitar.
Come on.
fancyjamtime wrote:The car needs washed.
The laundry needs done.
Drove me up the fucking wall when I moved to Ohio. Of course, I lost all the bullshit Chicago stuff, so it's an even trade-off.
tocharian wrote:Cheese fries vs nonexistence. Duh.
lemur68 wrote:fancyjamtime wrote:The car needs washed.
The laundry needs done.
Drove me up the fucking wall when I moved to Ohio. Of course, I lost all the bullshit Chicago stuff, so it's an even trade-off.
I wasn't aware this was an Ohioan grammatical construct until it was pointed out to me by a Baton Rouge native. Yeah, okay, no one from Louisiana has room to talk about the speech idiosyncrasies of other regions.
Growing up on the extreme eastern edge of Ohio, I was privy to Pittsburgh's Yinzer dialect as well.
I personally use pop and soda interchangeably, tending to use the latter more often if I'm ordering in a restaurant.
Ekkssvvppllott wrote:MayorofRockNRoll is apparently the poor man's thinking man.
jimmy spako wrote:that's what i was talking about. city chicken, n'at...brings gramma & grampa back
jimmy spako wrote:Tom wrote:Not mine, but I noticed in central PA, you hear "you's guys" a lot.
I like that one.
haha. my grandparents on my mom's side were from latrobe. they said "youns". they also said "hicky" for thing. i'm sure i'll remember a bunch of others.
givemenoughrope wrote:jimmy spako wrote:Tom wrote:Not mine, but I noticed in central PA, you hear "you's guys" a lot.
I like that one.
haha. my grandparents on my mom's side were from latrobe. they said "youns". they also said "hicky" for thing. i'm sure i'll remember a bunch of others.
"Yous guys" healthily extends to "The Northeast" section of Philadelphia where my cousins live. "Geet jet?" and "Yo" and all that. More an accent thing really.
Back to central PA...not sure if I'm getting the spelling...When a baby or small child is unsettled or acting up, he is called 'ruchie'. 'That babe is ruchin' around.' It's Pennsylvania Dutch I think.
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