Everywhere has its own language, or at least, there’ll be bits of it specific to the location. Where I grew up, for instance, when something was noticeably dirty, “it needs warshed.”
I knew a girl from “Picksberg” who talked about a Picksberg neighborhood called “E Slibberty”. I was amazed that any place in America had a name that began with just an “E”. I finally found out that “E Slibberty” was “East Liberty”.
North Carolina was once considered the most diverse state for its dialects before the mass migrations from other parts of the states. Accents and dialect could change dramatically within 15 miles and even less in the mountains. My elder brother had such a good ear he could recognize most changes.
Apparently, in PA people use the short A and say " I bathed the baby" instead of using the long A. (pad vs paid) When I heard a person here keep saying it, I thought she was just odd. Then I asked my sister, who lives central PA about it and she said it’s common back there.
Here in western NY, we have some Pittsburghese. “Crick” instead of “creek”, “spikket” instead of spicot. But rubber bands are not “gumbands” and “submarine sandwiches” are not “hoagies”. We do have the tendency to totally purge the word “an” from the English language. An elevator is “a nelevator”, an apple is “a napple”, an ice cube is “a nice cube”. I had friends who giggled like little girls when we would go to breakfast and I would order “a negg”.
My sis, who lives in the “Pixburg” burbs, has a coffee mug covered with “yinzer” words & phrases such as “dahntahn,” “chicken on the hill,” “redd up,” “it needs cleaned,” “nebby,” etc.
Husband is from Monaca. He has managed to rid himself of a lot of it, although I never minded it. But after a couple beers it sneaks out. One thing that has always stayed is the dropping of “to be” as in, “the beermeister needs opened.”
My wife’s people are all from Pennsylvania, yinz was in common usage. The first time I met the family, I made a derogatory comment about the Pittsburgh Squealers, as a lifelong Raiders fan I had no choice. It all worked out, we have been married 44 years and I still hate Pittsburgh & Franco because of the immaculate deception.
BasilBruce 9 months ago
All I know about Pittsburgh is that there are pirates there.
BE THIS GUY 9 months ago
I hope they have sandwiches with fries on them in prison.
cmxx 9 months ago
Everywhere has its own language, or at least, there’ll be bits of it specific to the location. Where I grew up, for instance, when something was noticeably dirty, “it needs warshed.”
ronaldspence 9 months ago
would that make him a Pittsburgh Stealer?
DanielRyanMulligan1 9 months ago
Unfair bias, anybody? Dan aka…
diazch408 9 months ago
Too much information, Mr. Barfly.
enigmamz 9 months ago
I suppose Pittsburgh was on the book tour a while back.
jimmjonzz Premium Member 9 months ago
In Tennessee it’s pronounced “You’uns” or, in the Tennessee mountains, “Yunz”.
darkaudit 9 months ago
The correct phrase is "Yinz are nuts, n’at.
Sanspareil 9 months ago
Where I’m from you kept the spare tyre in the boot, and tried not to hit the kerb when making a turn!
johndifool 9 months ago
The Immaculate Apprehension.
TonysSon 9 months ago
I’m glad they caught the jagoff and dey’re takin’ him dahntahn.
lavender headgear 9 months ago
Do they call water “wooter” there? Or is that Philadelphia?
PaulAbbott2 9 months ago
I knew a girl from “Picksberg” who talked about a Picksberg neighborhood called “E Slibberty”. I was amazed that any place in America had a name that began with just an “E”. I finally found out that “E Slibberty” was “East Liberty”.
Timothy Abraham Premium Member 9 months ago
Yinz want to go with me to the Giant Iggle dahntahn and then go the bar and grab an Arn City and watch the Stillers n’at.
mscasa919 9 months ago
The Immaculate Detention
markkahler52 9 months ago
Your hair is all “greezy,” too! Now go “red up” your bedrooms!!
Ellis97 9 months ago
I wonder if other states have their own language.
Keno21 9 months ago
Well, ya’ know, assuming things like that aren’t too good a deal, then, dontcha’ know.
colddonkey 9 months ago
Well lets hope he bought a round before getting arrested.
patduck1 9 months ago
Spot on!
SquidGamerGal 9 months ago
Aw, come on! That’s totally racial profiling!
tony57 Premium Member 9 months ago
“If you have to explain the joke….”
marilynnbyerly 9 months ago
North Carolina was once considered the most diverse state for its dialects before the mass migrations from other parts of the states. Accents and dialect could change dramatically within 15 miles and even less in the mountains. My elder brother had such a good ear he could recognize most changes.
chris_o42 9 months ago
LOL He musta ben dahntahn askin d’jeet yet?
Rand al'Thor 9 months ago
Hoagie or sub? Also, it’s cold out so don’t forget a hanky.
txmystic 9 months ago
At least he left his Troy Polamalu wig at home…
artegal 9 months ago
I always wondered what happened to that kid that gave Mean Joe Greene his Coke.
conrad.halling Premium Member 9 months ago
A perfect example of a shibboleth.
Lee26 Premium Member 9 months ago
Actually it was ‘You’unz’ up thru the 80s/90s until I moved away. I still say it. ‘Yinz’ sounds foreign to me. I hate it!
Malph 9 months ago
Probably was hiding in some jagger bushes!
Huckleberry Hiroshima 9 months ago
Not your underwear. Just your nose pee-pee.
PaulSones 9 months ago
I read once that the Pittsburgh dialect was the most annoying dialect in the US.
Snolep 9 months ago
Hoagy, , grinder, sub, or hero?
gluetrap 9 months ago
Immaculate perception
Geezer 9 months ago
https://en.wikipedia.Org/wiki/Yinzer
jfh0555 9 months ago
Soda=pop=coke=tonic
Flatlander, purveyor of fine covfefe 9 months ago
Https://Www.cbc.Ca/news/canada/saskatchewan/saskatchewan-slang-video-a-big-hit-1.2983009
Queen of America 9 months ago
Apparently, in PA people use the short A and say " I bathed the baby" instead of using the long A. (pad vs paid) When I heard a person here keep saying it, I thought she was just odd. Then I asked my sister, who lives central PA about it and she said it’s common back there.
anamchara42 9 months ago
Pittsburghers are often called “yinzers.” Steph used “yinz” correctly too. It’s most often used to start a sentence.
prrdh 9 months ago
Has anyone here drunk from a bubbler? Or gone out to buy some bakery?
CaveCat87 9 months ago
I’m from Washington state, but my mom used to live in Arkansas, and so I inherited a mild Southern accent from her and from my grandma and grandpa.
retrocool 9 months ago
yeppers, I thought Pastis was a yinzer.
cldisme 9 months ago
Am I trying too hard to find the Franco Harris underwear and Immaculate Reception joke in there?
ajr58(1) 9 months ago
Shouldn’t that be “Pittsburghers?”
John Jorgensen 9 months ago
This isn’t why I believe in standard pronunciations and grammatical constructions, but it does help.
perryed 9 months ago
It`s actually “ya`ll”.
PaulAbbott2 9 months ago
Here in western NY, we have some Pittsburghese. “Crick” instead of “creek”, “spikket” instead of spicot. But rubber bands are not “gumbands” and “submarine sandwiches” are not “hoagies”. We do have the tendency to totally purge the word “an” from the English language. An elevator is “a nelevator”, an apple is “a napple”, an ice cube is “a nice cube”. I had friends who giggled like little girls when we would go to breakfast and I would order “a negg”.
anomalous4 9 months ago
My sis, who lives in the “Pixburg” burbs, has a coffee mug covered with “yinzer” words & phrases such as “dahntahn,” “chicken on the hill,” “redd up,” “it needs cleaned,” “nebby,” etc.
jjwfat 9 months ago
it’s yuens. "where yuens going?’
northbraddock52 9 months ago
It is a good thing the cops were nebby
CeceliaWD Premium Member 9 months ago
Husband is from Monaca. He has managed to rid himself of a lot of it, although I never minded it. But after a couple beers it sneaks out. One thing that has always stayed is the dropping of “to be” as in, “the beermeister needs opened.”
Thomas R. Williams 9 months ago
“Helloi?” “Krazy Kat” spoke “Yat”, a New Orleans dialect similar to a New York Working Class dialect.
Retired engineer 9 months ago
My wife grew up in Pittsburgh. We don’t clean, we “rid up the house”, because the “carpet needs vacuumed”, so “get out of my road”.
BRI-NO-MITE!! Premium Member 9 months ago
I posted this one on a Steelers fan page and the Lords of Facebook decreed that this is “hate speech” and they deleted it.
zeexenon 9 months ago
And their pittsburg paints are great too.
SofaKing Premium Member 9 months ago
In Chicago if we’re going to the large grocery store chain, we take da car outta da gratch to go over by da Jewels for a coupla two-tree things.
[Unnamed Reader - 14b4ce] 9 months ago
Those cops know a “Pirate” when they see one
[Unnamed Reader - 14b4ce] 9 months ago
Try Boston,which has a different word for everything in the dictionary
Doctor Go 9 months ago
Now, if they were looking for someone from Kentucky and I said “y’all…”
John Jorgensen 9 months ago
English really could use a standard second person plural pronoun. I’m partial to youse.
annqueue 9 months ago
Wow, yinz got everything except chipchop ham. One of my favorites when I was a kid.
pchemcat 9 months ago
Yes rat, Pittburghese is a real thing.
marko92752 9 months ago
In Texas “fixin to” doesn’t mean you are going to repair something, it means you’re planning on doing something.
badeckman 9 months ago
he shoulda been eating a dippy egg and scrapple
elgrecousa Premium Member 9 months ago
His head needs fixed.
will 9 months ago
Spoken like a Yankee… It’s y’all not ‘you all’
Goat from PBS 9 months ago
Franco Harris underwear? If I had underwear of any team, I’d have the my biggest rival teams.
beezzll 9 months ago
you daresn’t say that
Ammo hates the comment policy Premium Member 9 months ago
My wife’s people are all from Pennsylvania, yinz was in common usage. The first time I met the family, I made a derogatory comment about the Pittsburgh Squealers, as a lifelong Raiders fan I had no choice. It all worked out, we have been married 44 years and I still hate Pittsburgh & Franco because of the immaculate deception.
daftish_birdman 7 months ago
as someone from pittsburgh, i can confirm this is how we speak