I'm from the South & there's so many funny things that people say here that are just normal to me because I hear them all the time. What are some of the funny things your family & friends say in your part of the country?
ETA: Extra points & cookies for explaining to us outsiders what the quote or saying means!
Re: GTKY: Popular sayings, quotes or words where you live.
Southern sayings that I hear all the time -
1) Hanging in there like a hair in a biscuit.
IE: "How's your dad John?"
"Aww, he is so stubborn. He keeps hanging in there like a hair in a biscuit."
2) Trying to get sick.
IE: Sickness is supsected but not full force yet. "Lucy is coughing. Is she okay?" "Yeah, but I think she's trying to get sick."
I'm sure I've got more but I know there other Southerners from my part of the country that can share.
Lately I've been saying "well fuck me gently with a chainsaw" when being sarcastic. No idea where it's from lol but it's just weird enough for me to like it.
"Fixin' to" : I will be doing so presently, promptly or in a moment's time.
ie: DH: Oh no! We are out of ice cream!
Me: I know, it's ok I'm fixin' to go to the grocery store.
Buggy: Cart at the grocery store.
There are a whole bunch more. I will update them as I come across them, bless your heart!
LOL I forgot about "squirrely"! But absolutely, I say this all the time along with "Froggy" which means about the same thing.
I'll add -
3) Up a creek without a paddle in a wire canoe.
IE: The situation is bad. REALLY bad. Lol.
4) I don't have a dog in that race.
IE: When asked for my opinion & I don't want to give it or don't have any thoughts on a subject.
5) That dog won't hunt.
IE: Someone is trying to convince you of something & you're calling bullcrap on them.
@jensavicci
Oh good grief that's going to give me nightmares tonight. Lol
@jaybzo Hilarious! My grandmother used to say "Pissy legged boy" in reference to anyone's boyfriend that was up to no good. Lol. I've never heard anyone else say it but your memaw sounds like she might!
My dad says "Up shit's creek without a paddle!" which I find hilarious.
A Few More:
Come hell or high water! Something is happening no matter what!
ie: Come hell or high water, I am getting the house painted today!
Drunker than Cooter Brown! Cooter Brown was a draft dodger who allegedly lived on the Mason-Dixon line and spent the entire Civil War drunk so as to be unfit for battle. Thus, neither the Confederate nor the Yankee army wanted him.
ie: Did you see Tim last night? He was at the pool hall all night and went home drunker than Cooter Brown!
Yankee someone who is either from or lives above the Mason-Dixon line.
ie: Did you go to Anna's wedding? Lord, it was awful. She's a Yankee though, bless her heart! Sometimes this is used in a not nice way, but mostly I've heard it used to explain someone who isn't from around these here parts and doesn't quite get the customs. For example, I have a friend who thinks it's so weird that we sit in chairs on our front porch or driveway in the Summer time and wave at folks as they drive by. It's not a bad thing, she's a Yankee so she doesn't get it.
I also occasionally hear the Civil War referred to as "The War of Northern Aggression" but that is always in jest.
ETA:
High Cotton back during the cotton boom if your crops did particularly well that year it was known as high cotton.
ie: If someone did well financially one year you might refer to them as living in high cotton! "Did you see Ron bought a new boat and fixed up his lake house? He is living in high cotton this year!"
Yankee! :P
Lol. One thing I've noticed my Northern family does is make some things plural. Like, "I'm going to Targets" or "I love Krogers".
"I Declare, he is going to run me to an early grave!"
@baby+drumm
"I declare" made me laugh. My 2 year old son is now saying, "Oh dear!" & I think he got it from watching Pollyanna the old Disney flick. LOL.
@ashcross
Sweet Home Alabama
It probably helps that I work with 13 men & I hear their banter 40 hrs a week.
@ashcross @luckynumbers81
I so loved hearing Boston Rob talk on Survivor! I remember him saying "wicked" a lot.
jensavicci
I've used the phrase Good Lord willing and the creek don't rise. It basically means baring anything major happening to prevent it.
So I am going to be on time Lord willing and the creek don't rise. I am going to be on time baring anything major happening.
Outside or Lower 48- Both terms mean the continental 48 states. Alaskans refer to Hawaii as Southern Alaska.
Eskimo Ice Cream- Fat of a seal or Caribou whipped to a creamy texture and eaten with nuts and berries.
Termination Dust- The light layer of snow that hits the mountains in the fall. Means Winters on its way
Break-up- Springtime in Alaska where car color is undeterminable because there is so much dust that has been trapped in the snow all winter and it is sprayed on the cars in road spray.
Cheechako- Someone new to Alaska that doesn't understand the way things work up here.
Denali- Native term for Mt. McKinley (Tallest peak in North America). Great way to confuse cheechako's
Combat Fishing- People fishing for Salmon up here. Nice days have the heaviest and easiest accessed streams with people shoulder to shoulder fly fishing. It is very frequent the hook lands in another fisherman vs the fish you want.
Alcan- Alaska Canadian Highway
13 yr old boy with ASD, ADHD and PICA, 11 yr old boy, 3 yr old Girl, & baby Girl.
--------------what is with my quotes today------------
Is it? I've never seen it. My friends have been saying it and I loved it!
I've got another one. "Child it is hotter than a bell peppers coochie out here" xD I also stole this from a movie a made it mine.
Some of the ones I use that are from my great-grandmother (known as Nana-isms) so they're not really regional:
"As useless as tits on a bull": used when someone or something is entirely pointless.
"You bet your sweet bippy": you can count on it
"Nuttier than squirel turds": someone is really acting really crazy/weird
That's from where I know it. You should watch the movie (if you don't mind late 80s black comedy), it is kind of a cult classic.