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Do other states have multiple dialects the way Louisiana does?

Posted on 9/28/18 at 3:22 pm
Posted by OKTGR580
Baton Rouge to Houston, TX
Member since Apr 2018
6318 posts
Posted on 9/28/18 at 3:22 pm
Many of you should know that a portion of Louisiana people’s accent is your typical southern drawl. But of course most of the southern half of the state has multiple dialects which I won’t get into but they’re definitely unique to the region.


Do other southern states have this as well? Like does a South Georgia person’s accent differ from a north Georgia person’s accent?
Posted by HempHead
Big Sky Country
Member since Mar 2011
55437 posts
Posted on 9/28/18 at 5:02 pm to
quote:

Do other southern states have this as well? Like does a South Georgia person’s accent differ from a north Georgia person’s accent?



Yes - there is a discernible difference in a Southern Appalachian and Lowland Southern accent.
Posted by The Sultan of Swine
Member since Nov 2010
7717 posts
Posted on 9/28/18 at 5:45 pm to
I can always tell when a baw is from De Queen. There will be a few people out there who know what I'm talking about.
Posted by Ronaldo Burgundiaz
NWA
Member since Jan 2012
6534 posts
Posted on 9/28/18 at 5:56 pm to
quote:

I can always tell when a baw is from De Queen
Because they don't speak English?
Posted by kywildcatfanone
Wildcat Country!
Member since Oct 2012
118804 posts
Posted on 9/28/18 at 5:58 pm to
No one talks like Louisianians.



Posted by BowlJackson
Birmingham, AL
Member since Sep 2013
52881 posts
Posted on 9/28/18 at 8:19 pm to
Mobile and south Alabama people sound different from North Alabama people and Birmingham people don't really fit in with either.
Posted by Kentucker
Cincinnati, KY
Member since Apr 2013
19351 posts
Posted on 9/28/18 at 8:24 pm to
Northern Kentucky has the typical midwestern vanilla accent. Southern and Western Kentucky have southern drawls. Eastern Kentucky has the strongest accent, though. They can be hard to understand. It's kind of a mountain/southern mix.
Posted by crispyUGA
Upstate SC
Member since Feb 2011
15918 posts
Posted on 9/28/18 at 8:33 pm to
The South Georgian and North Georgia southern accents and dialects are worlds apart. I don’t think the South Carolina accent changes nearly as much between the upstate, midlands, and lowcountry, but the old southern “genteel” accent is far more prevalent in the low country and the true old Charleston families have an accent that is unique from the rest of the coastal region. There is also the Gullah/Geechie culture in the SC low country and down into the Georgia Sea Islands; they speak a Creole dialect that is unlike anything found in the area.
This post was edited on 9/28/18 at 10:02 pm
Posted by Evolved Simian
Bushwood Country Club
Member since Sep 2010
20449 posts
Posted on 9/28/18 at 9:28 pm to
quote:

Like does a South Georgia person’s accent differ from a north Georgia person’s accent?




They're worlds apart.

Have you ever heard Jeff Sessions speak? Nobody in north Alabama sounds like that. In fact, in state government, north Alabamians often adopt a "Montgomery" accent and dialect to fit in. And south Alabamians go out of their way to lose it when they're campaigning in Birmingham or Huntsville, because it makes them sound like imbeciles.

Unfortunately for Sessions, he's not intelligent enough to lose it when he's speaking in public.
This post was edited on 9/29/18 at 12:41 am
Posted by Woodreaux
OC California
Member since Jan 2008
2790 posts
Posted on 9/28/18 at 10:53 pm to
Yes.

In most of Bayern (Bavaria) the primary dialect is Bayerische (Bavarian), except in Swabia (a region within the state of Bayern) where the folks speak Schwäbische (Swabian).

In New York City, dey got yats like down in NOLA and there are other rhotic and non-rhotic neighborhood/town specific dialects. They say some funny shite.
Posted by The Nino
Member since Jan 2010
21519 posts
Posted on 9/29/18 at 2:20 am to
quote:

Mobile and south Alabama people sound different from North Alabama people and Birmingham people don't really fit in with either.
And then there’s Bayou La Batre, which is a mix of accents from south Alabama, south Louisiana, and Vietnam
Posted by PPeterson1
Choklahoma
Member since Jul 2010
2011 posts
Posted on 9/29/18 at 4:19 am to
It’s very strange in Louisiana. You can drive from Mamou/Ville Platte where they have a heavy Cajun accent to Pine Prairie just 6-7 miles away, and they have a redneck accent.
Posted by cas4t
Member since Jan 2010
70878 posts
Posted on 9/29/18 at 8:08 am to
East Kentucky is kind of scary in a “squeal like a pig” kind of way. Those Appalachia folks are something else.
Posted by wadewilson
Member since Sep 2009
36489 posts
Posted on 9/29/18 at 9:22 am to
So what the hell is up with the chalmation accent?

That might be the most perplexing town in Louisiana.
Posted by real turf fan
East Tennessee
Member since Dec 2016
8567 posts
Posted on 9/29/18 at 2:21 pm to
quote:

n most of Bayern (Bavaria) the primary dialect is Bayerische (Bavarian),
except the MittleFranconian of the area near Wurzburg is different from that of Munchen.

East Tennessee Smokey Mountains still has some folks who are close to England (with dropped and added h's). Then the Valley and Ridge has a lot of words and phrases of its own.

Get out to Memphis and it's a whole 'nother world.
Posted by kingbob
Sorrento, LA
Member since Nov 2010
66975 posts
Posted on 9/29/18 at 3:56 pm to
Yes, just not nearly as many. In Louisiana, populations were so geographically static that populations, even within the same city, were relatively isolated from one-another, allowing them to develop unique dialects despite living less than a mile apart. No other state has as many different variants because few states had so many isolated pockets of people developing language separately and concurrently. Heck, in many parts of the state, the accents change notably every 10-20 miles!
Posted by OG Supreme
Member since Aug 2018
366 posts
Posted on 9/29/18 at 8:31 pm to
The city of St. Louis has different accents.

It's highway forty four or farty far depending on where you're at.

Washington or WaRshington is another classic around here.

Boot heel around of MO has entirely different talking than in other parts.
Posted by KCM0Tiger
Kansas City, MISSOURI
Member since Nov 2011
15510 posts
Posted on 9/29/18 at 9:11 pm to
Most of Missouri has no accent, but the southeastern/bootheel portion of the state has a very strong southern accent
Posted by jawjaTiger
Brunswick, GA
Member since Aug 2018
1565 posts
Posted on 9/30/18 at 3:42 am to
nm
This post was edited on 9/30/18 at 3:45 am
Posted by Wtodd
Tampa, FL
Member since Oct 2013
67478 posts
Posted on 10/1/18 at 5:52 am to
quote:

Do other states have multiple dialects the way Louisiana does?

In Florida we have 1000s; check out the license plates if you don't believe me
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