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- Newsgroups: alt.appalachian
- Path: sparky!uunet!ornl!fedc04.fed.ornl.gov!nestorm
- From: nestorm@fedc04.fed.ornl.gov
- Subject: Southern speech impediment (Was Re: Mawmaw and Pawpaw...)
- Message-ID: <19NOV92.14323052@fedc04.fed.ornl.gov>
- Sender: usenet@ornl.gov (News poster)
- Organization: MIT PLASMA FUSION CENTER
- Date: Thu, 19 Nov 1992 19:32:30 GMT
- Lines: 26
-
- Oh, that I had a nickel for every time someone has peered at a name badge
- and said, "You're not FROM Tennessee, are you?" because I didn't sound
- like I'd walked off the set of the Beverly Hillbillies!
- For general consumption I speak what my family calls "educated Southern,"
- but I'm fluent in Appalachian and (thanks to having grandparents in Middle
- Tennessee, one set of whom were refugees from North Georgia) a dialect that
- for lack of a better name I'd call Mid-South. (Deep South is another tongue
- altogether.) It always amuses my husband when he hears me talking to another
- child of the South on the telephone -- but at least I don't pronounce the
- word "sure" as though it were spelled "shirr," as he and other Midwesterners
- are apt to do. And don't think I don't kid him about that.
- My best and favorite bit is to get someone started in on how I don't sound
- like a Southerner and then turn on the moonlight and magnolias -- they
- freak every time.
- Yes, it's a prejudice, but hey -- if others choose to deprive themselves of
- access to your wisdom [:-)] because they can't get past your accent, its
- (oops, I mean "it's") THEIR loss.
- And if it keeps outlanders from moving in, then let's start a campaign to
- preserve the Southern accent. One of my favorite bumper stickers (seen
- regularly in Florida, I understand, and moving this way) reads, "We don't
- give a *%#@ how you did it up North!"
-
- Bonnie Nestor
-
- DISCLAIMER: I'm not even sure they know I work here, but I'm quite sure
- that I'm not speaking for them.
-