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The Language of the South

Growing up in Georgia in the 1950s and 1960s, I became saturated and steeped in Southern speak.  So, when Southern Living Magazine recently published an updated list of “50 Southern Phrases You Won’t Hear Anywhere Else,” (shown below) I read them as if taking a trip down memory lane.  None of these expressions needed defining for this Southern soul. I found myself strangely comforted reading through this list. It was as if I was having another conversation with my momma.  Raised on a rural northeast Georgia farm during the Depression, she was a walking, talking, linguistic lexicon of all things Southern.  If I had a nickel for every time she said “Hissy Fit” or “I S’wanee,” I’d  be “livin’ in high cotton.”

My foreign-born wife is fascinated with our cultural articulations, not only in the words used but also in how we say them.  She respectfully refers to my verbal heritage as “y’allbolisms.”  I just accept them as the best way to express my feelings or desires. This vocabulary, much of which I still use, reflects more than my linguistic heritage; it is part of my cultural DNA. 

Are you still using any of these 50 down south phrases?

  1. Bless Your Heart
  2. She Was Madder Than A Wet Hen
  3. If I Had My Druthers
  4. Full As A Tick
  5. Worn Slap Out
  6. Hankering
  7. Tore Up
  8. Might Could
  9. Fixin’ To
  10. Over Yonder
  11. Til The Cows Come Home
  12. If The Creek Don’t Rise
  13. Let Me Let You Go
  14. Carry Me to…
  15. . A Month Of Sundays
  16. Hill Of Beans
  17. More Than Carter’s Got Little Pills
  18. No Bigger Than A Minnow In A Fishing Pond
  19. You Can’t Make A Silk Purse Out Of A Sow’s Ear
  20. Plumb
  21. Hotter Than Blazes
  22. Piddlin’
  23. Pretty As A Peach
  24. Gimme Some Sugar
  25. Gussied Up
  26. Hold Your Horses
  27. Well, I Declare
  28. He Was Funny As All Get Out
  29. Heavens To Betsy
  30. Hush Your Mouth
  31. Well, I S’wanee
  32. I’ll Tell You What
  33. Well, Butter My Backside And Call Me a Biscuit
  34. I Reckon
  35. Too Big For His Britches
  36. She’s Got Gumption
  37. A Rooster One Day And A Feather Duster The Next
  38. Quit Being Ugly
  39. He Thinks The Sun Comes Up Just To Hear Him Crow
  40. Livin’ In High Cotton
  41. The Porch Light’s On But No One’s Home
  42. He Ain’t Got The Sense God Gave A Goose
  43. Y’all
  44. Can’t Never Could
  45. That’s Cattywampus
  46. It’s Blowin Up A Storm
  47. Hissy Fit
  48. Three Sheets To The Wind
  49. Preachin’ To The Choir
  50. It’ll All Come Out In The Wash

Unfortunately, non-Southerners equate the Southern voice with that of Forrest Gump and deem Southerners as poorly educated and less intelligent.  That’s ironic because Forrest Gump proved to be a font of wisdom.  The now familiar quotes “Life is like a box of chocolates, you never know what you’re gonna get,” and “If you do not like my family and friends, I do not want to hear anything about it. They may mean nothing to you, but they mean everything to me,” and ”I’m not a smart man, but I know what love is” should remind us all that wisdom and knowledge mean two different things.  Our drawl may be slower than yours, but underestimate the Southern mind at your peril.  We forego the direct approach in favor of a more colorful, nuanced version.  It’s called creativity. For example, Southerners are masters of the backhanded compliment or phrasing that softens an unpleasant observation: “Honey, it’s not your fault. You just didn’t know any better.

I walk our dog around our neighborhood two or three times a day. Waving at passing cars is usually returned with a hand wave or a head nod. Encountering other walkers often results in a brief pause to exchange pleasantries and compliments as to the beauty of our Bernedoodle.  Sometimes, a neighbor stops his truck and rolls down the window for a “how ya doing” conversation.  Making eye contact and exchanging greetings are normal in the Southland. Heck, making conversation with strangers in public is considered good manners here.  Hospitality and politeness still mean something in most of the South. This is just a sign that yo momma raised you right.  After all, when a waitress says Honey, Sugar, Pumpkin, or Sweetie Pie, she is not referring to food.

I “reckon” I may be “preachin’ to the choir,” but it’s been a “month of Sundays” since I last exalted my Southern heritage.  But “I’ll tell you what,” talking Southern is no “piddlin” matter.  Our manner of speaking has been around for hundreds of years, and “Lord willing and the creek don’t rise,” it will be around for hundreds more.

Besides, some words just sound better when spoken by Southerners.  And, if you have a problem with that, well, then, “bless your heart.”

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  1. Cathy Crumbley

    You brought back some wonderful memories with this article. Thank you. Cathy

    Sent from my iPhone

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  2. Warren A Thrasher

    “Plumb Nelly” and there is a road by that name in Athens, Georgia. As my mom informed me the correct spelling is Plum Neilly which is short for “plumb out of town and nearly (in Southern “neilly”) out of the county.”

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    1. Buddy McElhannon

      There is never a short supply of unique names of roads in the South. There is one just north of Athens called “Nowhere Rd.” I can only imagine that it leads to you know, nowhere. :)

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