state and run
Sep. 16th, 2009 12:35 pmFascinating:
--Connie Eble, "The Englishes of southern Louisiana." Available in "English in the Southern United States," eds. Nagle and Sanders.
(Pop, who insisted that "it wasn't named for Louise," was from Jones, which is about three miles from the Arkansas border.)
[Poll #1458385]
Ran two miles on Monday morning despite not having been out running in two weeks, which I figured meant I was in decent shape. Today, struggled to get through one, and after a bit of cooldown made it most of a second. I am saddened to report that They're right when They say it's not the heat, it's the humidity. 90% is nobody's friend even if it's 68 degrees Fahrenheit. Maybe Friday will go better.
The people of southern Louisiana. . . consider their culture unique, inherently interesting, and more fun than that of fellow Southerners who live in the Bible Belt north of Alexandria, Louisiana, and across northern Mississippi and Alabama. Their cultural and linguistic affinities run east and west along the Gulf of Mexico, and Northern Louisiana might as well be a separate state. This divide shows up in the pronounciation of the state name, with northern Louisiana favoring four syllables beginning [luz-] and southern Louisiana favoring five syllables beginning [luiz-].
--Connie Eble, "The Englishes of southern Louisiana." Available in "English in the Southern United States," eds. Nagle and Sanders.
(Pop, who insisted that "it wasn't named for Louise," was from Jones, which is about three miles from the Arkansas border.)
[Poll #1458385]
Ran two miles on Monday morning despite not having been out running in two weeks, which I figured meant I was in decent shape. Today, struggled to get through one, and after a bit of cooldown made it most of a second. I am saddened to report that They're right when They say it's not the heat, it's the humidity. 90% is nobody's friend even if it's 68 degrees Fahrenheit. Maybe Friday will go better.
no subject
Date: 2009-09-17 01:14 pm (UTC)There's a weak correlation between 'raised southern' and 'four syllables,' in that not all southerners use four, but everyone who uses four was raised southern. (I learned to talk from two Arkansans, so I count myself as 'raised southern' here.)
As to your actual question :) I think it's a distinction between 'south Louisiana' (Creole country) and 'the rest of the South.' NC and VA and KY, and even TN, are weird in that regard, they've had some linguistic drift towards Yankee speech patterns. (Just don't tell them that.)
no subject
Date: 2009-09-17 01:24 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2009-09-17 02:51 pm (UTC)