All things Southern:
I'm a transplanted Canadian, who is flourishing in the Deep South. Didn't take long for me to trade my "eh" for "y'all"and to embrace all things Southern. Okay, maybe not all things. I still don't care for grits.
photo courtesy of preciseportions.com
But from the moment I arrived, I fell in love with the people, their accents, their long-winded stories, and their unique and hilarious sayings. Every time I hear a new one I about bust a gut.
Here's a few sayings employing tasty Southern food:
photo courtesy of pillsbury.com
“Well, butter my butt and call me a biscuit.”
“Well, if that don’t put pepper in the gumbo.”
"Well, that just dills my pickle and frosts my cupcake."
"Can't get blood from a turnip."
"Give me some sugar."
In the South, we love our porches and dogs:
"If you can’t run with the big dogs stay on the porch."
"Looks like somethin’ the dogs been keeping under the porch." "You're lyin' like a no-legged dog."
"Looks like somethin’ the dogs been keeping under the porch." "You're lyin' like a no-legged dog."
And a few more favorites:
"You could start an argument in an empty house.""The engine's running but nobody's driving."
“God love’em cuz' somebody’s got to."
"He squeezes a quarter so tight the eagle screams."
But the following sums up my feelings for the South:
Suzanne, let me say that as a life-long Southerner, you took to Southern like a duck to water. Which brings me to one of my faves. If asked a rhetorical question, like "You want gravy on your mashed potatoes," a Southerner might respond with the following: "Does a baby duck walk barefoot?"
ReplyDeleteAs a Navy brat, my husband grew up overseas. So to him Southern is another language. My usage of "hose pipe" for garden hose threw him for a loop. But you can imagine his confusion when I called dragonflies "snake doctors."
Oh my gosh, Sandy you have some more great Southern sayings. I love "does a baby duck walk barefoot?" :)
ReplyDeleteThanks so much for stopping by.