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Arugula Latte

(50,566 posts)
109. This word compression has been going on forever ...
Wed Jun 25, 2014, 02:46 PM
Jun 2014

"Gonna" is a prime example.

Languages are organic and constantly changing, which is why we would have a hard time understanding someone speaking "English" centuries ago.

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Don't blame the South. dawg Jun 2014 #1
I didn't mention any region, and only gave MineralMan Jun 2014 #5
What I find interesting about those extra syllables: merrily Jun 2014 #9
Regional accents and colloquialisms fascinate me. There are lots of parallels between ... dawg Jun 2014 #24
You might want to wander into the Massachusetts forum for a minute. merrily Jun 2014 #43
I got pegged as a "yankee" madamesilverspurs Jun 2014 #52
I think "grits" might be two syllables in Maine as well. merrily Jun 2014 #55
OK, how does one get a second syllable in "grits"? ManiacJoe Jun 2014 #110
GREE-yuts madamesilverspurs Jun 2014 #111
What are you saying? Milk has only one syllable? Arkansas Granny Jun 2014 #11
LOL, bless your heart. MineralMan Jun 2014 #23
Hey, Granny--how is your little feral kitty doing? nt tblue37 Jun 2014 #71
lol!! Sissyk Jun 2014 #19
Except for words like "Y'all". randome Jun 2014 #54
That's not a dropped syllable. dawg Jun 2014 #59
"N'Awlins," and its slightly less drawled cousin, "N'Orlins" tblue37 Jun 2014 #72
Nyorlins. dawg Jun 2014 #86
We never had a "y" sound in our "N'Orlins." I did stretch my tblue37 Jun 2014 #112
Hey now, it does have two syllables with our drawl, which I happen to like. redqueen Jun 2014 #113
It's like spoken texting. The Velveteen Ocelot Jun 2014 #2
I guess it bothers me most when I hear it from news anchors MineralMan Jun 2014 #8
Where's Professor Higgins when you need him? betsuni Jun 2014 #77
One more complaint betsuni Jun 2014 #78
Another one more complaint betsuni Jun 2014 #84
You can thank Southern California and Valley Girls for that, it happened due to flamingdem Jun 2014 #79
It was the nannies! betsuni Jun 2014 #81
That, I agree with. redqueen Jun 2014 #114
Does it really matter? In certain parts of the country you wouldn't be understood either. nt kelliekat44 Jun 2014 #3
Actually, that's not true. I have never had any difficulty MineralMan Jun 2014 #12
Perhaps those erstwhile misunderstandings are washed away by your overwhelming humility Orrex Jun 2014 #34
Splutter! dixiegrrrrl Jun 2014 #47
There was a large amount of win Aerows Jun 2014 #107
ell-oh-ell! unblock Jun 2014 #4
I'm finta alert on this. Ron Green Jun 2014 #6
Well, when you get through fixing to do that, MineralMan Jun 2014 #25
I gree. nt clarice Jun 2014 #7
I've only heard the first. gollygee Jun 2014 #10
They are. Listen closely and you'll hear both of them. MineralMan Jun 2014 #17
Just heard Joe Biden say something very close to "Vice Presen'ited States of America" Chiyo-chichi Jun 2014 #90
Yup. Just about everyone does it. MineralMan Jun 2014 #91
I hadn't noticed that one... Chiyo-chichi Jun 2014 #96
dancin' Armstead Jun 2014 #13
The twittering down of America. Skidmore Jun 2014 #14
How bout the people who leave out the R's when it's actually IN the word.... clarice Jun 2014 #15
Those are purely regional accents and manners of speech. MineralMan Jun 2014 #18
The r's travel. missingthebigdog Jun 2014 #58
LOL....I hear yer. nt clarice Jun 2014 #62
But other countries don't have regional speech.... Dreamer Tatum Jun 2014 #16
Of course they do. MineralMan Jun 2014 #20
Or it could be that we don't truly have regions anymore. Dreamer Tatum Jun 2014 #26
Your example is in broader use than that. MineralMan Jun 2014 #28
Actually, that burnishes my point. Dreamer Tatum Jun 2014 #29
Dippy Eggs. That's a nice one. MineralMan Jun 2014 #35
But soft-boiled eggs are "eggy in a cuppy eggs." nt tblue37 Jun 2014 #74
Wuts dippy aigs? TexasProgresive Jun 2014 #39
That is a Germanic language trait. You'll find it in tblue37 Jun 2014 #73
Interesting. Thanks. MineralMan Jun 2014 #100
Absolutely; just look how Latin has changed since the time of Cicero. eShirl Jun 2014 #21
Language changes for precisely those reasons among others. nt Bonobo Jun 2014 #22
Of course. Language is never static. MineralMan Jun 2014 #27
I live in New Mexico abakan Jun 2014 #65
I grew up in a California farm town. MineralMan Jun 2014 #66
eye know huh ? NM_Birder Jun 2014 #97
I don't think so... abakan Jun 2014 #101
"inhabitants of Burqe" freakin hilarious NM_Birder Jun 2014 #106
Or "goodbye," from "God be with you." nt tblue37 Jun 2014 #75
Elision and reduction of consonant clusters is a normal feature of language Spider Jerusalem Jun 2014 #30
My favorite is the Boston neighborhood of Dorchester TexasProgresive Jun 2014 #40
Dot's wert's at! Eleanors38 Jun 2014 #83
"Ima," I think, is a bit of a joke of sorts . . . kickitup Jun 2014 #31
Kanye West didn't invent I'ma, though. MineralMan Jun 2014 #37
Yeah, Ima Hogg TexasProgresive Jun 2014 #41
I remember Ima Hogg. It was giggle worthy many years ago. MineralMan Jun 2014 #42
She was famous in Houston TexasProgresive Jun 2014 #44
Whenja Gimmee Jenoch Jun 2014 #32
I'ma object to your excessive use of elision/elided Orrex Jun 2014 #33
You have used several contractions throughout this thread, Tanuki Jun 2014 #36
Quite correct. MineralMan Jun 2014 #38
This is English evolving in the way spoken languages always do. KitSileya Jun 2014 #45
Absolutely. MineralMan Jun 2014 #46
Also "Slough", in Berkshire (rhymes with "bough") Spider Jerusalem Jun 2014 #50
Nice example. MineralMan Jun 2014 #51
Well, considering I teach EFL in Norway, KitSileya Jun 2014 #61
Vonnegut commented very well on this, as on so much else: Orrex Jun 2014 #49
People really say... 3catwoman3 Jun 2014 #57
Clarification:"He was sat" is a substitution of either the simple past tense or the past participle tblue37 Jun 2014 #76
That's not a trend. That's normal. knitter4democracy Jun 2014 #48
"Co'cola" madamesilverspurs Jun 2014 #53
In California, it was just Coke. MineralMan Jun 2014 #56
This message was self-deleted by its author flamingdem Jun 2014 #80
language changes and when it does every generation fights for the purity of the language that they La Lioness Priyanka Jun 2014 #60
We're re-watching The Story of English by Robert MacNeil and it retains its fascination Hekate Jun 2014 #63
I LOVED that series when I saw it in the 80's! pink-o Jun 2014 #67
I've noticed a general tendency on TV rock Jun 2014 #64
midwest urban youth-speak "fitn-na" salin Jun 2014 #68
I only notice Tree-Hugger Jun 2014 #69
Ever since I transferred Jamaal510 Jun 2014 #70
The "th" sound and the lazy theory flamingdem Jun 2014 #82
It's a living language...What do you want? Blue_Tires Jun 2014 #85
The DC terms POTUS and FLOTUS are either signs of rampant laziness LiberalEsto Jun 2014 #87
Acronyms. Everyone loves 'em. MineralMan Jun 2014 #88
BLOTUS plays a role too LiberalEsto Jun 2014 #102
First time I've seen that one. MineralMan Jun 2014 #103
I just made it up LiberalEsto Jun 2014 #105
Hey! You know how we can ALL tell that MineralMan is not a trained linguist? Romulox Jun 2014 #89
I'm not. Just a writer. MineralMan Jun 2014 #92
We're ALL writers, here. This is a political message board, not your own blog. nt Romulox Jun 2014 #93
Oh, OK. As you say. MineralMan Jun 2014 #94
Obviously, if people read your blogs, you wouldn't need so many off topic vanity posts here. Romulox Jun 2014 #95
Thanks for taking so much interest in my activities. MineralMan Jun 2014 #99
"baby mamma" It should be legal to throat punch anyone who uses that. NM_Birder Jun 2014 #98
I'm not really much into punching people in the throat. MineralMan Jun 2014 #104
I think the only time I had trouble with regional speech patterns... NCTraveler Jun 2014 #108
This word compression has been going on forever ... Arugula Latte Jun 2014 #109
Latest Discussions»General Discussion»Regional speech patterns ...»Reply #109