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Scholars of Twang Track All the 'Y'Alls' in Texas
NY Times ^ | RALPH BLUMENTHAL

Posted on 11/28/2003 6:06:42 AM PST by Pharmboy


Michael Stravato for The New York Times
John O. Greer is an architecture teacher at
Texas A&M University. But when a couple of
researchers sat down and talked with him recently,
they were less interested in what he said than
in how he said it.

COLLEGE STATION, Tex. — "Are yew jus' tryin' to git me to talk, is that the ah-deah?"

That was the idea. John O. Greer, an architecture teacher at Texas A&M University, sat at his dining table between two interrogators and their tape recorder. They had precisely 258 questions for him. But it waddn what he said that interested them most. It was how he said it.

Those responses, part of an ambitious National Geographic Society survey of Texas speech, with its "y'alls," "might-coulds" and "fixin' to's," are helping language investigators throw a scientific light on a mythologized and sometimes ridiculed mainstay of Americana: the Texas twang.

Among the unexpected findings, said Guy Bailey, a linguistics professor at the University of Texas at San Antonio and a leading scholar in the studies with his wife, Jan Tillery, is that in Texas more than elsewhere, how you talk says a lot about how you feel about your home state.

"Those who think Texas is a good place to live adopt the flat `I' — it's like the badge of Texas," said Dr. Bailey, 53, provost and executive vice president of the university and a transplanted Alabamian married to a Lubbock native, also 53.

So if you love Texas, they say, be fixin' to say "naht" for "night," "rahd" for "ride" and "raht" for "right."

And by all means say "all" for "oil."

In addition to quickly becoming enamored of Western garb like cowboy boots and hats, big-buckled belts, western shirts and vests, newcomers to the state — and there are a lot of them — are especially likely to adopt the lingo pronto.

At the same time, the speech of rural and urban Texans is diverging, Dr. Bailey said. Texans in Houston, Dallas, Fort Worth and San Antonio are sounding more like other Americans and less like their fellow Texans in Iraan, Red Lick or Old Glory.

Indeed, Dr. Tillery and Dr. Bailey wrote in a recent paper called "Texas English," a new dialect of Southern American English may be emerging on the West Texas plains. It is not what a linguist might expect, they wrote, "but this is Texas, and things are just different here."

The changes are being tracked by researchers for the two San Antonio linguists, who are working with scholars from Oklahoma State University and West Texas A&M in Canyon, outside Amarillo, under the sponsorship of the National Geographic Society. They divided Texas into 116 squares and are interviewing four native Texans spanning four age groups— from the 20's to the 80's, in each.

As part of the latest effort, two master's students in linguistics from the University of North Texas at Denton, Amanda Aguilar, 24, and Brooke Earheardt, 23, arranged recently to record Mr. Greer, 70, as he responded to an exhaustive 31-page questionnaire.

Ms. Aguilar first probed some of Mr. Greer's attitudes toward Texas. Was it a barren state?

"It's in the ahs of the beholder," responded Mr. Greer, who was born in Port Arthur. The state, he said, was "dee-vahded, you kin almost draw a lahn."

Was it a progressive state?

"Compared to who?" he said. "Califohnia? Baghdad? Ah'd have to say Texas is a progressive state."

Distinctive?

"Most are distinctive in their own way," he said, smiling, "with the possible exception of Ah-wah." (That was Iowa.)

Next Ms. Aguilar quizzed Mr. Greer on a lexicon of Texas words and phrases. Had he ever heard the expression "y'all?"

Of course. "Ah think `you' sometimes just duddn't work bah itself."

Could you use it for just one person?

"Ah would trah to confahn it to the plural," he said. "It's just like `youse guys.' "

Had he heard "fixin' to?"

Of course again. " `Ahma' often goes with it," he said. "Ahma fixin' to go."

The questions and Mr. Greer's answers kept coming. A dragonfly? That's a "miskeeta hahk." A wishbone was a "pulleybone." A cowboy's rope was a lasso or a lariat, or just a "ropin' rope." A drought was worse than a "drah spell"; no rain, or "it haddn for a long tahm." You wait "for" a friend who haddn shown up, but you wait "on" someone who is nearby and delayed, perhaps upstairs putting on makeup.

Afterward, Ms. Aguilar and Ms. Earheardt said that Mr. Greer, though white, employed some noticeable African-American and Deep South speech patterns. There were also Spanish influences, common in Texas, where Spanish was widely spoken for nearly a hundred years before English.

Dr. Tillery and Dr. Bailey warned that it was possible to exaggerate the distinctiveness of Texas English because the state loomed so large in the popular imagination. Few speech elements here do not also appear elsewhere.

"Nevertheless," they wrote in their paper on Texas English, "in its mix of elements both from various dialects of English and from other languages, TXE is in fact somewhat different from other closely related varieties."

Perhaps the most striking finding, Dr. Tillery said, was the spread of the humble "y'all," ubiquitous in Texas as throughout the South. Y'all, once "you all" but now commonly reduced to a single word, sometimes even spelled "yall," is taking the country by storm, the couple reported in an article written with Tom Wikle of Oklahoma State University and published in 2000 in the Journal of English Linguistics. No one other word, it turns out, can do the job.

"Y'all" and "fixin' to" were also spreading fast among newcomers within the state, they said, particularly those who regard Texas fondly. Use of the flat `I,' they found, also correlated strikingly to a favorable view of Texas.

But they found some curious anomalies, as well.

One traditional feature of Texas and Southern speech — pronouncing the word "pen" like "pin," known as the pen/pin merger — is disappearing in the big Texas cities, while remaining common in rural areas, Dr. Tillery said. Texans in the prairie may shell out "tin cints," but not their metropolitan brethren.

Urban Texas is abandoning the "y" sound after "n," "d" and "t," exchanging dipthongs for monophthongs. So folks in the cities read a "noospaper" — what their rural counterparts call a "nyewspaper." They'll hum a "tyewn" on the range, a "toon" in Houston. The upgliding dipthong, too, is an endangered species in the cities, where a country "dawg" is just a dog.

Why city Texans, more than country folk, should disdain to write with a "pin" is not clear, although it seems that some pronunciations carry a stigma of unsophistication while others do not.

It was such mixed patterns that suggested the emergence of a new dialect on the West Texas plains, Dr. Tillery said.

Other idiosyncrasies have all but vanished over time. Texans for the most part no longer pray to the "Lard," replacing the "o" with an "a," or "warsh" their clothes. How the interloping "r" crept in remains an especially intriguing question, Dr. Bailey said. Trying to trace the peculiarity, he asked Texans to name the capital of the United States, often drawing the unhelpful answer "Austin."

The opposite syndrome, known as r-lessness, which renders "four" as "foah" in Texas and elsewhere, is easier to trace, Dr. Bailey said. In the early days of the republic, plantation owners sent their children to England for schooling. "They came back without the `r,' " he said.

"The parents were saying, listen to this, this is something we have to have, so we'll all become r-less," he said. The craze went down the East Coast from Boston to Virginia (skipping Philadelphia, for some reason) and migrating selectively around the country.

Other common Texas locutions that replace an "s" with a "d" — "bidness" for "business," "waddn" for "wasn't" — are simply matters of mechanical efficiency, Dr. Bailey said. "With `n' and `d' the tongue stays in the same position," he said. "It's ease of articulation."

So even "fixin' to" becomes "fidden to" or "fith'n to." And fixin' to — where did that come from, anyway?

"Who knows?" Dr. Bailey said.


TOPICS: Culture/Society; Front Page News; News/Current Events; US: Texas
KEYWORDS: allyall; dialects; linguistics; melungeon; messnwithtexas; yall
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To: Brandybux
Good tale! If you want a REalll Texas Drwallll...

Visit around WACO! Just a bit further south.
21 posted on 11/28/2003 6:56:32 AM PST by steplock (www.FOCUS.GOHOTSPRINGS.com)
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To: Wallace T.
One has to take into consideration the Melongeon influence on the population. Many who came "over the Avery" (the trail through NC and East Tenn that is now US 70 and I-40) included them. They settled first in northern Alabama, Mississippi and East and Middle-Tenn. After the Civil War, a number migrated to Texas.

I always thought when I heard someone from the Panhandle or the Red River talk about having a "Cherokee grandma" it was just as likely they had a Melongeon ancestor.

I had a girlfriend from the Panhandle who looks Scots-Irish but with olive skin. People thought she was Jewish. I have olive skin and when I was in India, the locals though I was an Anglo-Indian from Delhi.

Not that these observations have much to do with speech patterns, but it explains a little about who many Texans are.
22 posted on 11/28/2003 7:02:26 AM PST by lavrenti ("Tell your momma and your poppa, sometimes good guys don't wear white." The Standells)
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To: Mercat
Much like the Ents in Tolkein, in Texas, it ain't worth sayin it if it don't take a long time to say it.
23 posted on 11/28/2003 7:04:37 AM PST by nhoward14 (Don't *MISS* out on *ROOTING* for *THE* Cowboys! Go *QUINCY*)
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To: Pharmboy
All Americans, even if they're from the South and 'stupid,' should be represented," - Wesley Clark
24 posted on 11/28/2003 7:05:50 AM PST by steplock (www.FOCUS.GOHOTSPRINGS.com)
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To: tet68
Nobody mentioned "yuns" Ohio-midwest, contraction of you-un's as in "yuns gonna meet us there, or what?"

Listen to upperclass British accents. There are words that don't seem to differ in accent from the American South: "War" springs to mind.

While the southern accents are often endearing, and, when spoken by, respectivly, men or woman are the eptoime of masculinity and feminity (Go figure), New Yorks phrases and accents seem to either baffle ("I could care less!") or amuse ("fuhgedabboudit" or"whaddayadointameovahheah").
25 posted on 11/28/2003 7:05:58 AM PST by TalBlack ("Tal, no song means anything without someone else...")
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To: Pharmboy
Next Ms. Aguilar quizzed Mr. Greer on a lexicon of Texas words and phrases. Had he ever heard the expression "y'all?"

They actually asked a 70-year old native Texan this question?

26 posted on 11/28/2003 7:06:26 AM PST by Dog Gone
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To: Allegra
Ping-A-Roonie, Y'All...
27 posted on 11/28/2003 7:09:38 AM PST by JennysCool
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To: Pharmboy
Any other Texas ever heard of "yonder"? When my husband and I lived 4 years in Nashville, besides the obliging y'all and fixin to, his entire office were in stitches to hear him say he lived "out yonder" (pointing to the county to the south). Out yonder sounds like "ow-chonder." Can be used like "Take that thing out yonder."
28 posted on 11/28/2003 7:14:22 AM PST by NTegraT
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To: Pharmboy
I wonder when the Tahms will take such a in-depth look at the gibberish they speak in N'yawk. What are Texans, some kinda lingustic sahd-show that the hah and mahty can come down and stare at? Hope they didn't get nuthin' on they fancy loafers whilst they was a-gawkin' at the rubes.

Maybe it's just me, but this here awticle sounds a trahfle patronizing.

29 posted on 11/28/2003 7:14:24 AM PST by IronJack
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To: wizardoz
30 years ago I worked running a mobile navigational radio station in locations all over the south.

I was born in South Carolina, my mother's family is from North Carolina, My father's from Memphis.I had little trouble with accents.

Then I had a location near Plain Dealing, Louisiana, just across the river from Texas. Predominantly a poor rural black population, I could not understand what they said, nor they, me. I had to have a translator -- the daughter of a black minister/famer who had worked in Los Angeles.

It was a strange experience. I have always wanted to see a linquistic study the area and to tell me the origin of the local dialect. I suspect it may have been an African language. It did not seem to be the creole one associates with Louisiana.
30 posted on 11/28/2003 7:15:53 AM PST by Wisconsin
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To: TalBlack
I know people from the Tidewater who sound English.
31 posted on 11/28/2003 7:20:37 AM PST by lavrenti ("Tell your momma and your poppa, sometimes good guys don't wear white." The Standells)
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To: texaslil
I beg to differ. It would be "Over" to Houston and "Down" to San Antonio.

Æ
32 posted on 11/28/2003 7:23:56 AM PST by AgentEcho (If there are no dogs in Heaven, then when I die I want to go where they went. - Will Rogers)
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To: The_Victor
I remember when my aunt, uncle and cousins--Texas ex-pats from Michigan--came to visit us one summer. I don't think I'd ever met anyone from outside Texas in person at that young age, and I was repulsed and offended by my cousin--older than me by a year--and the way he spoke. "Hey, do you guys want to come oatside to the backyerd and play with my toy kerrs and trucks?"

I'd never been called a "guy" until then. Of course, the fact that they'd never been taught to say "Sir" and Ma'am" didn't score big hits with my parents, either. They were doomed from the beginning when they came driving up our driveway in a Volkswagen bug, and my dad decided right then and there that they must be Communists because "good" Americans would have been driving Chevies, Fords, or Chryslers.

33 posted on 11/28/2003 7:48:08 AM PST by hispanarepublicana (Mr. Fox, give us our water!!!)
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To: TalBlack
Nobody mentioned "yuns" Ohio-midwest, contraction of you-un's as in "yuns gonna meet us there, or what?"

I always considered "yuns" to be a West Virginia import and pretty rarely spoken in Ohio.
34 posted on 11/28/2003 7:48:28 AM PST by mylife
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To: Wallace T.
I was born in a small mountain town on the eastern Kentucky and southwestern West Virginia border. Obviously, I developed a "mountain twang". Through the years, I've lived in Texas and south Alabama. Much that I read in this article is what I've heard in all of these places.

When I lived in Ft Worth, the message I recorded on my answering machine was a source of much merriment for many of my friends and relatives back "east". Note: a "ranchette" is five acres or less. My message replete with twang went thus: "Howdy partner, you've reached the ______ ranchette. I'm out on the back 4 rite now, but your call is mighty important to me, so at the sound of the cattle call, leave me a message an I'll git rite back to you. Pronto. Audios. I had many messages that contained nothing but the sound of the caller's breathing while they listened to my message, followed by outbursts of laughter.

Ah luv this langwidge.
35 posted on 11/28/2003 7:50:18 AM PST by miele man
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To: NTegraT
Any other Texas ever heard of "yonder"?

HEARD it? Hell, we USE it every day in my house. Only, we say, "You're looking for your boots? They're over-yonder in the back of the garage." But, other times, it's used alone, as in, "Honey, yonder in the far side of the den is a spider. Can you please kill it? Because, I'm fixin' to scream if you don't."

36 posted on 11/28/2003 7:54:26 AM PST by hispanarepublicana (Mr. Fox, give us our water!!!)
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To: Pharmboy
One of my favorite Texas colloquialisms is "Pallet", basically an improvised bed, sleeping bag or blanket on the floor. "Pa, kin we sleep on a pallet 'n front uh the TV tonaht?"
37 posted on 11/28/2003 7:54:28 AM PST by mylife
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To: IronJack
What are Texans, some kinda lingustic sahd-show that the hah and mahty can come down and stare at?

"I've always wondered just WHAT THE HELL IS THAT BAAHSTON ACCENT ABOUT, ANYWAY?"

38 posted on 11/28/2003 7:56:47 AM PST by hispanarepublicana (Mr. Fox, give us our water!!!)
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To: nhoward14
it ain't worth sayin it if it don't take a long time to say it.

As long as I can remember, I have prefaced any new bout of conversation with a little history, or justification, or providing of sources for what I am about to say.  It has to come from insecurity of some sort, I'm sure.  Anyway, I went into my boss's office once and began the verbal groundwork to tell him what I was going to tell him.  It finally got to him, I guess, because he interrupted me to say, "Shut up and talk!"

Then we both took on a startled look realizing what he had said, and cracked up.
39 posted on 11/28/2003 7:57:15 AM PST by gcruse (http://gcruse.typepad.com/)
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To: Pharmboy
There never was a 'Texas' accent.

Fourty years ago I could tell where any Texas native I met came from within 50 miles based on their accent. The accents were so different that, for instance, thse with a 'Brazos Bottom' accent from 50 miles Southwest of Houston and those with a 'Galveston' accent from 75 miles to the Northeast of there found it very difficult to understand each other.

All that is left of Texas accents, or Southern accents, is a tiny whisper of what they once were.

That is why Southerners and Texans almost always laugh at movie accents.

So9

40 posted on 11/28/2003 8:01:16 AM PST by Servant of the 9 (Real Texicans; we're grizzled, we're grumpy and we're armed)
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