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Do We Talk Funny? 51 American Colloquialisms

Jennifer Maravillas
/
Ikon Images/Getty Images

Has American English become homogenized? Have our regional ways of saying particular things — sometimes in very particular ways — receded into the past? Or do we talk as funny as ever?

When I was researching an NPR History Dept. piece on lost American slang words recently, slanguist Tom Dalzell — author of a raft of books, including Vietnam War Slang and Flappers 2 Rappers: American Youth Slang — told me: "For 100 years, we have trended away from regional slangs to a national slang. Radio, then television, then MTV and then the social media have all served to homogenize the slang that we use."

There is, Dalzell said, "very little regional slang left. Hecka or hella in Northern California or wicked or pisser in New England are examples of the few that survive." (Hecka, hella and wicked mean "very" or "really"; pisser means "stroke of bad luck.")

But what about nonslang regionalisms and colloquialisms? "There is a huge overlap between slang and colloquial and regional," Dalzell says. "Some would argue that cool is no longer slang but is so commonly used as to have lost the identity value and so is merely colloquial."

Cool.

'Dropped Egg'

Meanwhile, according to the website of the expansive Dictionary of American Regional EnglishDARE -- language researchers are "challenging the popular notion that our language has been 'homogenized' by the media and our mobile population." They proffer that "there are many thousands of differences that characterize the dialect regions of the U.S."

Centered at the University of Wisconsin, DARE is celebrating its 50th year of studying our country's regional words and expressions — through field interviews in the early years and more recently through written materials spanning the history of the U.S. The dictionary has produced a multivolume reference work and continues to report on regionalisms through its website. With support, DARE is hoping to conduct more personal interviews using online surveys.

"Some regionalisms from a half-century ago have gone out of use," says Joan Houston Hall, the chief editor of DARE. "Dropped egg, for instance, was a strongly New England term for a poached egg. But at that time, most of the speakers who used the term were over 60 years old, so I suspect that we would find very few instances if we were to ask the question again."

Why did folks drop the word dropped?

"No one knows for sure," Hall says. "Maybe it was a term associated with rural life; maybe with the popularity in the late '60s of Julia Child's Mastering the Art of French Cooking, it was more fashionable to switch to poached egg. Often the changes are generational, for no apparent reason."

But new words come into use, Hall says, "and if they serve a purpose in a limited area, they become new regionalisms. Take slug, for instance, in the D.C. area. Here's our definition: one who hitches a ride with a driver who needs passengers in order to use a high occupancy vehicle lane."

Other recent regionalisms, she says, include: squeaky cheese — fresh cheese curds, chiefly in Wisconsin; tiger meat — steak tartare, also called a "cannibal sandwich," chiefly in Wisconsin; spendy — expensive, chiefly in the North, especially the Pacific Northwest and Upper Midwest; and stuffie — a stuffed clam shell, chiefly in Rhode Island.

"Regionalisms change," Hall says, "some of them dying, some expanding or contracting and others coming into our vocabularies."

Whoopensocker

Which set me to thinking about some of the regionalisms from DARE's 50 years of research — and wondering if they still pop up in popular parlance.

Are the following 51 DARE-designated regionalisms from the past or from the present? Don't be laggy. Please take a look and let me know:

1. Alabama: flip — slingshot

2. Alaska: skijoring — being pulled on skis

3. Arizona: greasewood — creosote bush

4. Arkansas: renthouse — a house that is rented out

5. California: make the riffle — to succeed

6. Colorado: buck — a brace for cutting firewood

7. Connecticut: pigsticker — sled with pointed front

8. Delaware: sneak — tennis shoe

9. District of Columbia: slug — a hitchhiking commuter

10. Florida: scaper — rascal or critter

11. Georgia: burk — vomit

12. Hawaii: huhu — angry

13. Idaho: lucerne — alfalfa

14. Illinois: scramble dinner — potluck supper

15. Indiana: belling — loud celebration

16. Iowa: kittenball — softball

17. Kansas: doodinkus -- unspecified object

18. Kentucky: ridy-bob — seesaw

19. Louisiana: cowcumber — cucumber

20. Maine: putty around — be idle

21. Maryland: snoopy — finicky

22. Massachusetts: diddledees — pine needles

23. Michigan: sewing needle — dragonfly

24. Minnesota: ish — expression of disgust

25. Mississippi: squab — fat person

26. Missouri: hall tree — clothes rack

27. Montana: coulee — valley

28. Nebraska: on pump — on credit

29. Nevada: pogonip — thick, icy fog

30. New Hampshire: crawm — food waste

31. New Jersey: laggy — lethargic

32. New Mexico: colchon — mattress

33. New York: spiedie -- marinated meat sandwich

34. North Carolina: table tapper — amateur preacher

35. North Dakota: limpa — rye bread made with molasses

36. Ohio: dope — dessert topping

37. Oklahoma: larruping — delicious

38. Oregon: cho-cho — small boy

39. Pennsylvania: skimmelton — shivaree

40.Rhode Island: driftway — access road to the sea

41. South Carolina: cascade — vomit

42. South Dakota: soak — serious drinker

43. Tennessee: hunk — bumpkin

44. Texas: worrit — nag

45. Utah: sluff school — play hooky

46. Vermont: pestle around — putter about

47. Virginia: garlicky — bad flavor, said of milk

48. Washington: marblehead — winter squash

49. West Virginia: slicky slide — playground slide

50. Wisconsin: whoopensocker — something extraordinary

51. Wyoming: dout — extinguish


Follow me @NPRHistoryDept; lead me by writing lweeks@npr.org

Copyright 2021 NPR. To see more, visit https://www.npr.org.

Linton Weeks joined NPR in the summer of 2008, as its national correspondent for Digital News. He immediately hit the campaign trail, covering the Democratic and Republican National Conventions; fact-checking the debates; and exploring the candidates, the issues and the electorate.
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