I'm from Texas also. When I moved to Seattle I got a lot of strange looks when I said tump.the elephant wrote:Everyone back home uses that word. It is quite common. It is used here, too.Mark wrote:The real test is who knows the word tump?
Again, back home means South Texas, and here means central Mississippi.
"Mr. Rackley! Paging Mr. Rackley!"
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Mark
Re: "Mr. Rackley! Paging Mr. Rackley!"
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scottw
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Re: "Mr. Rackley! Paging Mr. Rackley!"
[/quote]
I'm from Texas also. When I moved to Seattle I got a lot of strange looks when I said tump.[/quote]
Okay, I'll bite: what is "tump"?
I'm from Texas also. When I moved to Seattle I got a lot of strange looks when I said tump.[/quote]
Okay, I'll bite: what is "tump"?
Bearin' up!
- The Big Ben
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Re: "Mr. Rackley! Paging Mr. Rackley!"
Here's some more info:
Using the link from Uncle Beer's post:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sunshower" target="_blank
"In the United States, particularly in the Southern United States, and in Hungary as well, a sunshower is said to show that "the devil is beating his wife" because he is angry God created a beautiful day. The rain is said to be his wife's tears. A regional variant from Tennessee is "the devil is kissing his wife".[4][5] In French, the phrase is "Le diable bat sa femme et marie sa fille"[6] (i.e., "the devil is beating his wife and marrying his daughter"). In the Netherlands they say that there is a "funfair going on in hell". [7]"
So, I guess the phrase is linked to the old good vs. evil thing.
Using the link from Uncle Beer's post:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sunshower" target="_blank
"In the United States, particularly in the Southern United States, and in Hungary as well, a sunshower is said to show that "the devil is beating his wife" because he is angry God created a beautiful day. The rain is said to be his wife's tears. A regional variant from Tennessee is "the devil is kissing his wife".[4][5] In French, the phrase is "Le diable bat sa femme et marie sa fille"[6] (i.e., "the devil is beating his wife and marrying his daughter"). In the Netherlands they say that there is a "funfair going on in hell". [7]"
So, I guess the phrase is linked to the old good vs. evil thing.
- MaryAnn
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Re: "Mr. Rackley! Paging Mr. Rackley!"
Well, ok, maybe what I've heard as "take a dump" was actually "take a tump?" Or am I connecting two disparate thingys?
- Donn
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Re: "Mr. Rackley! Paging Mr. Rackley!"
Yes, please disconnect them right away.
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Mark
Re: "Mr. Rackley! Paging Mr. Rackley!"
As opposed to tip which only applies to cows.bloke wrote:"tump" is to disturb something that wasn't meant to be disturbed:
ex: "Who tumped over my watering can !?!?"
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Bob Kolada
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Re: "Mr. Rackley! Paging Mr. Rackley!"
It's a sun shower, duh!
Wade, you sure it wasn't "gol'durned minute"?
I'd pity my potential kids for the odd phrases they'd hear, but I'd pity myself more for having them (kids)!
Wade, you sure it wasn't "gol'durned minute"?
I'd pity my potential kids for the odd phrases they'd hear, but I'd pity myself more for having them (kids)!
- chronolith
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Re: "Mr. Rackley! Paging Mr. Rackley!"
My mother, from rural Georgia, was often guilty of "fixin' to...". Another one that always bugged me as a kid was that if I was playing too rough, my mother would tell me I was going to "ruin" something (furniture, clothing, whatever).
Except that it was not pronounced "ruin" but more like "rurn" (rhymes with burn).
Except that it was not pronounced "ruin" but more like "rurn" (rhymes with burn).
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tbn.al
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Re: "Mr. Rackley! Paging Mr. Rackley!"
When I was a kid, that phrase always had an "a" in front. As in "I'm a fixin to go to the store." Or "It's a fixin to come up a cloud."
I am fortunate to have a great job that feeds my family well, but music feeds my soul.
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Bob Kolada
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Re: "Mr. Rackley! Paging Mr. Rackley!"
Al, I thought it was I'm'a whatever?

Joe watches TV???bloke wrote:THE FUNNIEST thing to hear is some dopehead or dopeheadress in a movie or TV show "doing" a "southern" accent.
- k001k47
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Re: "Mr. Rackley! Paging Mr. Rackley!"
Down here it's "What is this strange liquid falling from the sky? Mine eyes are not accustomed to such a sight!" . . . or something in Spanish. Probably something in Spanish.