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I have never understood why people say they are going to barbecue when they mean cook a hamburger or steak on the grill. Barbecue is a way of seasoning and cooking a boston butt or pork shoulder or ribs, or if you are in Texas, a beef brisket. Grilling a burger is just grilling a burger. :rolleyes::D |
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We have a few words that I believe are unique to the Cincinnati area: "please?" means... pardon? "3 way".... means... spaghetti, chili, and cheese :D |
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to me bbq is the sauce or method, if we are going over to someones house we are having a "cook out" if it is just grilling. So I agree with you |
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Holy Schuper House, I think its derived from me, in honor of a local tavern that had great fish frys on Fridays till the local building inspector burned it down in an insurance scam. |
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I will always be a true Yankee!:) |
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"Hollar" in KY means something completely different. You go over the hollar and to the next stop light to get into town. :p I am originallly from Michigan and still have a hard time with this one!!!! (& I am surprised that none of our born and raised southern belles didn't mention this one!!) |
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Said something last night that got me wondering if others say it: "She's just knee high to grass hopper" (little/child/short) also... "It was a frog strangler" (refering to a lot of heavy rainfall) |
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No... in the mountains of (where I 50% grew up) Virginia/Tenn a Hollar (not sure if spelled correctly) is a valley. My dh said they were called shut ins in the Ozarks. anyone know??? When I looked it up it said hollar ment down the road a spell. My sil will say a "fur peice down the road" or "over yander" it is funny how there are so many different meanings. I love the study of language. |
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we use that expression a lot. Have you heard .. shoulder baby, hip baby, knee baby when referring to age? another... instead of say "at night" we would say "of a night" to be slow is like "a heard of turtles" |
We used to hear the term "don't cotton to" here in Texas when I was growing up but I haven't heard it used for years and years. What is the origin of the idiom don't cotton to that |
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Oh yeah! We've said that around these parts, too. Forgot about it until just now :) |
I thought of two more....piles = hemorrhoid and scoures= diarhea. When my FIL used those terms the first time I had no clue what the he k he was talking about |
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