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Forums => English & Linguistics => Topic started by: Ela on August 31, 2018, 12:09:43 PM

Title: Regionalisms
Post by: Ela on August 31, 2018, 12:09:43 PM
Do we have a topic on this? I couldn't find one and didn't know where to post this so...

Last week, when we were changing out a rental car at the airport, I had to wait next to the old rental car while my spouse took car of getting the new one, because all our stuff was in the trunk of the old car. Someone from the rental agency came up to me and asked me if I'd been helped and I said:
Quote
Yes, I'm just waiting on my husband.

After I said it, I realized that if I'd stayed in NY all my life, I would have said:
Quote
Yes, I'm just waiting for my husband.

Pretty sure saying "waiting on" when you mean "waiting for" is a southern thing, but not sure.
Title: Re: Regionalisms
Post by: Tante Shvester on August 31, 2018, 01:10:40 PM
I grew up in New York, and I never heard it until I moved down South.
Title: Re: Regionalisms
Post by: Jonathon on August 31, 2018, 03:38:12 PM
The OED isn't very helpful in determining whether either of those is a regionalism. I've seen a tool that lets you map words from Twitter (based on the Twitter users' locations), but it only works for single words.

I think I might use both, possibly with slightly different connotations, though I'm trying to figure out what they are.
Title: Re: Regionalisms
Post by: Tante Shvester on August 31, 2018, 03:46:53 PM
In New York or New Jersey, when you wait on someone, you are serving them.

Also, when you are on line, you are not on the internet, you are what they describe elsewhere as in line.
Title: Re: Regionalisms
Post by: Jonathon on August 31, 2018, 04:00:03 PM
So how do you say you're on the internet?
Title: Re: Regionalisms
Post by: Tante Shvester on September 02, 2018, 12:44:53 AM
Being online is not the same as being on line, although you can be both, if you are using a mobile device.
Title: Re: Regionalisms
Post by: rivka on September 02, 2018, 09:28:10 PM
I think I might use both, possibly with slightly different connotations, though I'm trying to figure out what they are.
Me too, actually.
Title: Re: Regionalisms
Post by: Ela on September 03, 2018, 02:38:23 PM
The OED isn't very helpful in determining whether either of those is a regionalism. I've seen a tool that lets you map words from Twitter (based on the Twitter users' locations), but it only works for single words.

I think I might use both, possibly with slightly different connotations, though I'm trying to figure out what they are.

Let me know when you figure it out. ;)
Title: Re: Regionalisms
Post by: Ela on September 03, 2018, 02:39:57 PM
In New York or New Jersey, when you wait on someone, you are serving them.

Also, when you are on line, you are not on the internet, you are what they describe elsewhere as in line.
Being online is not the same as being on line, although you can be both, if you are using a mobile device.

Yup to both. As I said, if I'd never left NY to move south, I'd never say "waiting on" when I meant "waiting for".
Title: Re: Regionalisms
Post by: Noemon on June 19, 2019, 09:31:48 PM
I don't think we really have a thread that this fits into perfectly, but since it's a regional dialect thing I thought that this one would do.

When I was in grade school, there was a girl in my class that used the phrase "has done did", as in "June has done did her homework". At the time, being a judgmental little kid, I just took this as proof that the girl in question was dumb. As an adult, I realize that she'd just internalized the grammar of the English spoken in her home, the same as I had, and that I'd just gotten lucky in terms of having parents who spoke Standard English.

Is that little snippet of grammar enough to identify what her dialect was? If it helps, this was in rural NE Kansas, and I know that her parents (and probably her grandparents) grew up within about 5 miles of where she did.
Title: Re: Regionalisms
Post by: Jonathon on June 20, 2019, 09:34:41 AM
I don't know if that's enough to identify a particular regional dialect, partly because I suspect that that may be widespread across a lot of the US.