Arkansas and the dialect study.
- Walden
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Arkansas and the dialect study.
I was reading from the state-by-state results of Harvard's USA Dialect Survey, and I noticed that the state of Arkansas, while not having identical results, had suspiciously similar results to that of my home state of Oklahoma. I know, and have known some fine people from Arkansas, and, in general, I wouldn't think too much of this kind of thing, but it occurs to me, Arkansas is sitting right there next to Oklahoma! If they come to a question they didn't understand, wouldn't it be awfully easy for them to just sneak a peak over at Oklahoma's answers?
Did Arkansas cheat?
It's hard to say. It could be just a big coincidence, but, one wonders.
Did Arkansas cheat?
It's hard to say. It could be just a big coincidence, but, one wonders.
Reasonable person
Walden
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Re: OT: Arkansas and the dialect study.
By "Oklahoma", do you mean "Far North Texas"?Walden wrote:I was reading from the state-by-state results of Harvard's USA Dialect Survey, and I noticed that the state of Arkansas, while not having identical results, had suspiciously similar results to that of my home state of Oklahoma. I know, and have known some fine people from Arkansas, and, in general, I wouldn't think too much of this kind of thing, but it occurs to me, Arkansas is sitting right there next to Oklahoma! If they come to a question they didn't understand, wouldn't it be awfully easy for them to just sneak a peak over at Oklahoma's answers?
Did Arkansas cheat?
It's hard to say. It could be just a big coincidence, but, one wonders.
When she was around college age, my sister had a good friend from up thataways, and she picked up a bit of her accent. My mother hated it. I remember her saying, "Suzanne, quit a-talkin' through yore nose."
And how come you think the cheatin' didn't go in the other direction. (By "Arkansas", I assume you mean "Far Northeast Texas".)
Mike Wright
"When an idea is wanting, a word can always be found to take its place."
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"When an idea is wanting, a word can always be found to take its place."
--Goethe
- Walden
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Re: OT: Arkansas and the dialect study.
No. No. I believe you're thinking of Perryton.Darwin wrote: By "Oklahoma", do you mean "Far North Texas"?
We settled the border dispute years ago. Greer County remains, as nature intended it, a part of western Oklahoma.
Well I sure didn't cheat off 'em!Darwin wrote: And how come you think the cheatin' didn't go in the other direction.
Reasonable person
Walden
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Re: OT: Arkansas and the dialect study.
I couldn't help it, I swear! I can easily see Oklahoma from my house, so the answers were right there in front of me!Walden wrote: Did Arkansas cheat?
It's still an interesting survey, as these surveys tend to include Tulsans and Little Rockers, but not Fort Smithians and Northwest Arkansas residents. I do remember one survey on the pronunciation of "wh" (e.g. Wales vs. Whales) which shows a strong distinction in Little Rock, but a weak one in Tulsa. Fort Smithians are more like Tulsans in that respect.
Watch for a new OT poll!
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I do not feel obliged to believe that that same God who has endowed us with sense, reason, and intellect has intended us to forgo their use.
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Re: OT: Arkansas and the dialect study.
And yet, the names don't give you any clue that this is the case. What we need is an Anarchist president. The first task of this administration would be to create a better naming convention for the states, perhaps alphabetical, or following the Dewey Decimal System.Walden wrote:Arkansas is sitting right there next to Oklahoma!
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No, we need the oil, so we should hang on to both Oklahoma and Baja Oklahoma.SirNick wrote:Can we give Oklahoma and Texas to Mexico?
Come on..bring it on Texans!
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Q1: How do you really offend someone from Oklahoma?
A1: Tell them they have a Texas accent.
Q2: How do you really offend someone from Texas?
A2: Tell them they have an Oklahoma accent.
Q3: How to offend them both?
A3: Tell them they sound alike.
I have lots more - my grandmother was born in Oklahoma, back when it was still "Indian Territory" rather than a state, and had rather . . . strong . . . opinions about that larger state to the south.
The only problem I have with folks from either state is that if I spend more than a couple of minutes talking to them I pick up their accent. I'm not a natural linguist, but I grew up hearing it, and I automatically switch my speech patterns from "US West Coast" to "Oklahoma/Texas" whenever I hear it.
Wasn't it H. Allen Smith who observed that it was a sign of a merciful God that both men and women from west Texas shared the same accent? For if the men alone were thus afflicted they'd be condemned to lives of solitude and sexual frustration.
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Is that the same H. Allen Smith who once made the best chili in all Christendom and who would have proven it such at the Great Terlingua Chili Confrontation had not that lower than a snake's belly, skunk of an unwashed Texan Wick Fowler cheated?
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I just know that when I re-entered Canada in 1966 after spending a month in Kingfisher and Norman Oklahoma visiting my great aunt and families, the Canadian customs agent wouldn't believe me, when I showed her my Canadian army ID, birth certificate etc that I wasn't an American trying to pass myself off as a Canadian.
Got to remember it was the age of the draft dodgers (1964 to 1970), which Canada took a lot in.
Even my own family couldn't believe how much of an accent I picked up down there.
MarkB
Got to remember it was the age of the draft dodgers (1964 to 1970), which Canada took a lot in.
Even my own family couldn't believe how much of an accent I picked up down there.
MarkB
Everybody has a photographic memory. Some just don't have film.
Got it in one!gonzo914 wrote:Is that the same H. Allen Smith who once made the best chili in all Christendom and who would have proven it such at the Great Terlingua Chili Confrontation had not that lower than a snake's belly, skunk of an unwashed Texan Wick Fowler cheated?
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Reference Kansas vs. Arkansas -- Both come from Native American terms, Arkansas from the Quapaw and Kansas from the Sioux. But the French had a hand in naming Arkansas. Need I say more?
OK, I will.
Kansas was named for Konza (also called Kansa or Kaw) Indians, a Siouan tribe that lived in the area. One source said it means "people of the south wind."
Arkansas came from the Quapaw Indians, by way of early French explorers, who apparently could not properly pronounce "Ugakhpah," which means "people who live downstream".
They still live downstream, for the Arkansas River flows through both. But in Kansas, it is pronounced "Ark-Kansas" river, and it doesn't have any water in it because Colorado stole it all. There is a town called Arkansas City that is prounounced "Ark-Kansas" as well.
OK, I will.
Kansas was named for Konza (also called Kansa or Kaw) Indians, a Siouan tribe that lived in the area. One source said it means "people of the south wind."
Arkansas came from the Quapaw Indians, by way of early French explorers, who apparently could not properly pronounce "Ugakhpah," which means "people who live downstream".
They still live downstream, for the Arkansas River flows through both. But in Kansas, it is pronounced "Ark-Kansas" river, and it doesn't have any water in it because Colorado stole it all. There is a town called Arkansas City that is prounounced "Ark-Kansas" as well.
Crazy for the blue white and red
Crazy for the blue white and red
And yellow fringe
Crazy for the blue white red and yellow
Crazy for the blue white and red
And yellow fringe
Crazy for the blue white red and yellow
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Avanutria - this won't help any, but growing up a Kansas native I always found it amusing that we have a river flowing through our state - the Arkansas river - which is pronounced Ar-Kansas and not pronounced like the state.
I know both Kansas and Arkansas are named after the Kansas (or Kanza or Kaw) indian word for southwind. I'm pretty sure the Kansas indians were not in Arkansas territory though...so I'm not sure why Arkansas was named after them.
Eric
I know both Kansas and Arkansas are named after the Kansas (or Kanza or Kaw) indian word for southwind. I'm pretty sure the Kansas indians were not in Arkansas territory though...so I'm not sure why Arkansas was named after them.
Eric