The cartoon character you said no one could understand: His name is BOOMHAUER - and, he's a character on the television show: King Of The Hill - and, YES: I understood every word he said. :) I'm from TEXAS! :) I can translate for you, if you like: "I tell you what: Did you see that part where danged-old George come in there; he was talkin' about tastin' his own bourbon. Cramer come slidin' in, just like he always do.....I tell ya what, Man: them danged old New York boys...hehehe". :)
The auctioneer at the beginning of this video is fantastic. There are schools that will teach you to do the proper auctioneer patter. It ain't a proper auction unless you have that chatter.
@@MoreAdamCouser@19:14 you absolutely have to watch an episode of King of the Hill. Please do. It's a great show. The dude talking his name is Boom Hower. Awesome Awesome speech lol
lol I understood everything Boomhauer from King of the Hill said. I’m from Shreveport Louisiana in the northwest corner of Louisiana and about 20 minutes from the Texas border. I actually understood everything everyone said.
19:02 "I tell you what, you see that part where dang old George come in there, talkin' about tasting his own bourbon, [Kramer - name?] comes sliding in...tell you what, those dang ole' new york boys-" ...it wasn't that hard 😂
Yes, Texas really WAS that big before the Louisiana Purchase in 1803. Yes the Spanish were traveling through and exploring in the 1500s in search of gold. The people being talked about in that segment set in Galveston was about LaSalle who was the only Frenchman who landed in and explored Texas. They found the shipwreck of La Belle in the Matagorda Bay and its remains are in the museum in Corpus Christi. What Im a little surprised about is how he doesnt mention how much German has influenced Texas. There are a lot of German names in the Hill Country, a lot of Polish and Czech in South Texas and East Texas. There's even a town that was settled by the Alsatians!
The english used to pronounce Aluminum the way we do in the states. Then they changed to what they say now for aluminum. The word y'all will always be used in the South. We will never get away from using it, It just makes sense.😊
There's a big different between understanding what they're saying and knowing where the accent originates. I can understand what they're saying just fine but I don't know what part of the state they're from. :)
Adam, there are massive fires that broke out last night in the Los Angeles area, which are rapidly being spread by nearly hurricane force winds. They are consuming hundreds of homes, schools and businesses along the Pacific Coast Highway near Pacific Palisades and Malibu. You might want to check it out.
Being a native Texican I could teach you a little. Not Tejano, German, or Deep Eastern but I know most of the others. 'Far Tar' (fire tower) 'Bob War' (barbed wire) . . . No? Carry on with the video then.
Adam I, seriously, want to hear you sing 😊. You have a lovely voice 😍. Just saying. I'm from California and we have difficulty understanding the accent. It's amazing how different my country is. I appreciate the diversity. It's all I know. I'm uncomfortable being in a culture that is not so diverse. As Americans, we are very different 😅
Here you go this is another Texas accent for you.......German. Yes, I said German and there is a whole bunch of people in Texas who speak a dialect of German. Thought I'd post that just to confuse you even more.
@@MoreAdamCouser You have a great channel and your attitude is outstanding. I lived in Cork, Ireland for quite some time. Ireland is such a beautiful and wonderful country.
I was surprised that there was no mention of the German at all!! There are a lot of older Germans that still speak the "antique" german of the settlers (1850s)
Happy NewYear Adam Couser! Remember when you reacted to King of the Hill? That one guy you could not understand at all? That is Texas! King of the Hill takes place in Texas! LOL
I live in Austin and grew up in Houston. I have heard Boomhauer (the cartoon character who is so hard to understand) before and it takes concentration but I can understand him. There are people in this state who do talk like that. But they do play up his unintelligibility on that show (King of the Hill).
The auctioneer is not actually using a genuine "Texas accent." The Auctioneer's Call (Also known as an Auction Chant), is a rhythmic style of speaking used by auctioneers to take bids at an auction. It involves a rapid-fire combination of English numbers, words, and sounds that helps keep the auction moving.
Buddy.... Adam..... My guy...You live on the island of misfit accents and thought Texas had one accent? ahahahaha You of all people should know how many accents can fit in a square kilometer.🤣
Strongest texas accent on TH-cam is Matt Carriker's dad, Dr Lee. He has a channel called "Out on the Ranch" and it is about life as a retired veterinarian in the Texas Hill Country. He has a deep drawl that takes some getting used to before you can fully understand him.
"Hey" from the Tampa Bay area of Florida, USA. Currently freezing my butt off in a winter storm the USA ain't seen in years. Below freezing temps during the night and rising to the mid-50Fs during the day. Cold as all hell ! :( Enjoy ya videos. Keep making them. I've spent a lotta time in Texas and as the video expressed there are lotsa different accents. Lots ! Maybe you'll find out some day with a visit ? Oh yeah, not only do we say Aluminum different here in the USA, but it is even spelled different than what's used in the UK. Y'all in the UK spell it aluminium . . . . thus the different pronunciation. ;) Have fun and be safe. :)
By the way, Texas wasn’t the safest place for bandits to escape to. There was this bunch of guys called Texas Rangers, law enforcement, who were likely as dangerous as the bandits. The Badlands were a better choice.
Wait until you find the southern accents (Louisiana, Georgia, and Florida have at least 100 different ones), then the mountain accents (Kentucky, and Tennessee), and the rest. An hour drive in any direction in this country and the accent changes. All part of our "charm" .. lol
Back when I was a kid teachers in Texas tried to get us to stop using the word ain't. One of my teachers used to tell us all the time that ain't ain't a word because ain't ain't in the dictionary. I raised my hand and she asked me why. I said " Mrs. Xx ain't is a word then because ain't IS in the dictionary. It's an improper contraction of are not." She looked like I'd smacked her in the face with a catfsh. She went over to her bookshelves and pulled out the newest edition of the dictionary and looked it up. I thought she was going to be mad but she started laughing instead. She said she guessed she'd have to stop using that phrase now.
I was born and raised in Texas, north of Dallas. We have a twang in our English. Our language is a mixture of English and creole with a touch of Tejas.
In the 1960s, outside houston, one of the high schools had a corral where the kids could put their horses. They were riding horses to school. One of my friends lived on a ranch so far out it took him almost an hour to drive in to school.
I understood everything Boomhauer from King of the Hill said too. I was raised in Seattle WA but my grandparents came to the Yakima Valley in 1910 from Oklahoma and Arkansas. We are just about done with the accents in my generation but still understand through our grandparents accents.
I wouldn’t say we Texans have 9 accents. There is a Texas Twang and Texas Drawl. We tend to speak slowly, drop the G at the end of words, and have some fairly unique phrases (ex: fixin to). Also it’s pronounced Ah-Loo-Min-Um.
I understood every word that the cartoon guy from 'King of the Hill' said. But I'm from Oklahoma, the state just north of Texas. He said "I'll tell you what, you see that part when old George came in there he talkin' 'bout tasting his own bourbon, Kramer come slidin' in just like he always do, i'll tell you what man, them dang old New York boys Hehe" He was talking about the show 'Seinfeld'
The Boomhauer clip is exactly what I grew up listening to from my step-dad. As a teen and beyond when my friends were around him...he would speak....they would look at me...I translated. I was officially dubbed as their Boomhauer translator.😂
I got em! I grew up in south Texas- Corpus Christi along the Gulf of Mexico (may soon be the Gulf of America). I have always been told I talk really fast. When we moved to West Virginia and I got a job with the state I had to slow down and pronounce my 9s better. I also had to watch how a I said ice so I could be understood at drive-thrus. Now that I am not working- Welcome back accent!
i suppose one way to tell Texans from southerners is the drawn-out vowels and syllables, another being the vernacular; also Texas originates from Taysha and Tejas the Caddo and Spanish words for friend/ ally also, Nevada is a completely different state that's where Las Vegas is, although there is a town called Nevada (Ne-VAY-da) in Texas
As a Texan, I consider some of these accents to be from other states. The lady in the blue shirt is probably closest to a "real" Texas accent. Some of these people sound like they're from Mississippi, or some other southern state. You want "real" strange southern accents, try Appalachian people, or the Carolinas...now there's some serious hard to understand languages.
I dont know that Ive ever heard a "Gulf Coast accent" before. Im a little surprised that he didnt cover a Houston accent, but I guess its easier to lump it into East Texas. It is true though that in the big cities, everyone is taking on the generic Standard American accent. I can tell you right now, I live west of Houston, but whenever I travel to visit with my husband's side of the family in East Texas, I can definitely hear the difference!
Boomhaur says random real words in there. He was talking about Seinfeld and something about Kramer sliding in the room, then shaking his head at New York City boys.
When you watch enough King of the Hill you understand Boomhauer perfectly. It's a great show you should watch it. Great insight into Americans and American values.
My dad, from North Carolina and Florida, went to college in N. Texas and Oklahoma, and I'm shocked he didn't pick up any of that accent. Maybe he did when he was younger?
As I understand it, the character on Yellowstone is named "Teeter," but being from Georgia myself, it sounds to me like she's saying "Tater"--like my grandfather used to refer to a potato.
East Texan is more “Southern” sounding. It’s also a very swampy region that bumps up next to Louisiana. Beyond the “pine curtain” which a region with many pine forests that separates East Texas from the rest of Texas the accents change. And you begin to hear more of a “general Texan” accent which is more Cowboy sounding with the long drawn out words and such. I’m from the DFW area and I’m definitely what one would call a city boy. I don’t like to brag but I think I’m well educated due to having earned my masters degree as well plans on entering a doctoral program soon. But still I have a very strong General Texan accent. Stronger than most people I know. I don’t even wear western clothes or listen to country music and people still think I’m some stupid, uneducated uneducated hick when in reality I’m just as well educated as many of them.
Haha I did actually understand. Where I am from we have what is called guinea-men language and it's very close to creole and appalachian accents combined.
Oh yeah btw I'm in Dallas and yeah T jones,T lady,or T ma is used in mostly African American slang but we all know it lol and younger kids don't use it much anymore.❤
I’m from Arkansas. I can’t say oil, boil, foil.. any of them. It should like “ul” kind of. I have a drawl and I talk fast. I have a call center job and people like to guess my accent. They always guess Texas. lol.
I was born and raised in the place in the world. I’m a born and raised Texan and I’ll die here. I know I have an accent and every time I go to another state people know that I’m. TEXAN without asking. It’s not how I dress but it’s my accent and my manors. All the people who are moving here from other states are ruining the culture and manors. My kids have had yes sir, no sir, yes man and no man beat into their head. I work in the oil field and I’ll die there feeding my family with the dinosaurs I bring back up to the surface from below. Have a blessed and wonderful day or night y’all.
Im from TX. All my family is from TX. I hate the word "Yonder". It can mean anything from the next room - the neighbor's - a county over - anywhere your heart can imagine. My Memaw said what I was looking for was "over yonder". That ment nothing to me. Where, in the context of this conversation, where in the heck is "over yonder"?
going live, come chat! www.twitch.tv/adamcouser
The cartoon character you said no one could understand: His name is BOOMHAUER - and, he's a character on the television show: King Of The Hill - and, YES: I understood every word he said. :) I'm from TEXAS! :) I can translate for you, if you like: "I tell you what: Did you see that part where danged-old George come in there; he was talkin' about tastin' his own bourbon. Cramer come slidin' in, just like he always do.....I tell ya what, Man: them danged old New York boys...hehehe". :)
That's funny, that you understood every word that he said, lol! 🤣
We all say aluminum like that over here in the US
illuminum 🤣
Yep. A lot like we say vita-men where the British say vit-a-min for the word vitamin.
@@MoreAdamCouser Like the fact your comment can be translated to "light"
Not quite. She said "illum". I'd say "uh-llum". But we all say "minum" not "minium".
@@MoreAdamCouser No lol
The auctioneer at the beginning of this video is fantastic. There are schools that will teach you to do the proper auctioneer patter. It ain't a proper auction unless you have that chatter.
honestly ive never heard anything like that in my life hahaha
Auctioneers all over the south do that. It isn't an accent.
@@MoreAdamCouser@19:14 you absolutely have to watch an episode of King of the Hill. Please do. It's a great show. The dude talking his name is Boom Hower. Awesome Awesome speech lol
There is a song named The Auctioneer I think you would like… it’s by Leroy Van Dyke you should check it out
@@melissaschnellhammer9766 Highly recommended!
lol I understood everything Boomhauer from King of the Hill said. I’m from Shreveport Louisiana in the northwest corner of Louisiana and about 20 minutes from the Texas border. I actually understood everything everyone said.
'I understood Boomhauer' may be my favorite response to any video. Love this!!
Same
I do too. I'm from Michigan though.
I'm from North Texas and I understood it too😂
Nevada is a state of its own lol. Its a 2 day drive from me. 😂 I live in the Panhandle in Lubbock TX. 😂
This was great and funny😂😂
19:02 "I tell you what, you see that part where dang old George come in there, talkin' about tasting his own bourbon, [Kramer - name?] comes sliding in...tell you what, those dang ole' new york boys-"
...it wasn't that hard 😂
Yes, yes, you took the words right of my mouth!! 😂 Man, I’ll tell you what: I love Boomhower!!! He cracks me up!! #KingOfTheHill
@@ron5934 Thanks for the confirmation! I don't watch KOTH regularly, so I wasn't sure on the names dropped.
Nevada, as you were referring, is a state
But there is a Nevada, TX (pronounced Ne-vay-duh)
I Love the cartoon "King of the Hill". I could understand everything he said and i'm not from texas, but I am from the South.😊
Propane and propane accessories
Yes, Texas really WAS that big before the Louisiana Purchase in 1803. Yes the Spanish were traveling through and exploring in the 1500s in search of gold. The people being talked about in that segment set in Galveston was about LaSalle who was the only Frenchman who landed in and explored Texas. They found the shipwreck of La Belle in the Matagorda Bay and its remains are in the museum in Corpus Christi. What Im a little surprised about is how he doesnt mention how much German has influenced Texas. There are a lot of German names in the Hill Country, a lot of Polish and Czech in South Texas and East Texas. There's even a town that was settled by the Alsatians!
Weird way to describe the Spanish r*ping pillaging and murdering Native people but okay.
Adam, Nevada is a separate state over 500 hundred miles from Texas.
😆
The english used to pronounce Aluminum the way we do in the states. Then they changed to what they say now for aluminum.
The word y'all will always be used in the South. We will never get away from using it, It just makes sense.😊
There's a big different between understanding what they're saying and knowing where the accent originates. I can understand what they're saying just fine but I don't know what part of the state they're from. :)
Ummm... Yes, I did understand Boomhauer. ROFL
I live near the border of Louisiana. Around here you have a mix of a Texan accent and a Cajun one.
Nevada is a separate state that’s north west of Texas
Nevada? Nevada is a state.
Adam, there are massive fires that broke out last night in the Los Angeles area, which are rapidly being spread by nearly hurricane force winds. They are consuming hundreds of homes, schools and businesses along the Pacific Coast Highway near Pacific Palisades and Malibu. You might want to check it out.
im seeing all over twitter, heart breaking to see!
4:25 Almost all Americans and even Canadians say aluminum instead of aluminium.
You may not like your accent Adam, but I do. I like all of the UK accents.
19:33 I 100% understood that and I’ve heard that accent around town
Being a native Texican I could teach you a little. Not Tejano, German, or Deep Eastern but I know most of the others. 'Far Tar' (fire tower) 'Bob War' (barbed wire) . . . No? Carry on with the video then.
Adam I, seriously, want to hear you sing 😊. You have a lovely voice 😍. Just saying. I'm from California and we have difficulty understanding the accent. It's amazing how different my country is. I appreciate the diversity. It's all I know. I'm uncomfortable being in a culture that is not so diverse. As Americans, we are very different 😅
Adam, stop and think about how many accents can be found in the UK. Then stop and think about how much larger Texas is than the UK.
Here you go this is another Texas accent for you.......German. Yes, I said German and there is a whole bunch of people in Texas who speak a dialect of German. Thought I'd post that just to confuse you even more.
awesome!
Yes, a large part of Texas was settled by German settlers.
@@MoreAdamCouser You have a great channel and your attitude is outstanding. I lived in Cork, Ireland for quite some time. Ireland is such a beautiful and wonderful country.
I was surprised that there was no mention of the German at all!! There are a lot of older Germans that still speak the "antique" german of the settlers (1850s)
So happy I randomly stumbled across your stuff today
Happy NewYear Adam Couser! Remember when you reacted to King of the Hill? That one guy you could not understand at all? That is Texas! King of the Hill takes place in Texas! LOL
I live in Austin and grew up in Houston. I have heard Boomhauer (the cartoon character who is so hard to understand) before and it takes concentration but I can understand him. There are people in this state who do talk like that. But they do play up his unintelligibility on that show (King of the Hill).
The auctioneer is not actually using a genuine "Texas accent." The Auctioneer's Call (Also known as an Auction Chant), is a rhythmic style of speaking used by auctioneers to take bids at an auction. It involves a rapid-fire combination of English numbers, words, and sounds that helps keep the auction moving.
Lol, Boomhauer is hilarious but you get used to the dialect eventually 😊
I'm sure there's probably a town called Nevada, Texas, but the one you're talking about is a whole other state!
Buddy.... Adam..... My guy...You live on the island of misfit accents and thought Texas had one accent? ahahahaha You of all people should know how many accents can fit in a square kilometer.🤣
And that's why they had a solgan "Texas. It's Like a Whole Other Country”"
Strongest texas accent on TH-cam is Matt Carriker's dad, Dr Lee. He has a channel called "Out on the Ranch" and it is about life as a retired veterinarian in the Texas Hill Country. He has a deep drawl that takes some getting used to before you can fully understand him.
Yes, I subscribe to his channel! 👍🏻
Well to be fair it's about life as a retired vet, as Matt and Drew's Dad, and about how they keep building up here in Boerne/Fair Oaks lol.
You should check out the coverage of the wildfires in LA right now. The Santa Anna winds have made it spread so fast. My prayers go out to them.
My uncle's a retired auctioneer so I understood every word the auctioneer in the video said. LOL
"Hey" from the Tampa Bay area of Florida, USA. Currently freezing my butt off in a winter storm the USA ain't seen in years. Below freezing temps during the night and rising to the mid-50Fs during the day. Cold as all hell ! :(
Enjoy ya videos. Keep making them.
I've spent a lotta time in Texas and as the video expressed there are lotsa different accents. Lots ! Maybe you'll find out some day with a visit ?
Oh yeah, not only do we say Aluminum different here in the USA, but it is even spelled different than what's used in the UK. Y'all in the UK spell it aluminium . . . . thus the different pronunciation. ;)
Have fun and be safe. :)
By the way, Texas wasn’t the safest place for bandits to escape to. There was this bunch of guys called Texas Rangers, law enforcement, who were likely as dangerous as the bandits.
The Badlands were a better choice.
She said Tater. Her name
Is Tater. That’s a clip from a TV show called Yellowstone. I’ve never watched it but seems to be huge over here
"They call me..... Tater salad."
Wait until you find the southern accents (Louisiana, Georgia, and Florida have at least 100 different ones), then the mountain accents (Kentucky, and Tennessee), and the rest. An hour drive in any direction in this country and the accent changes. All part of our "charm" .. lol
Back when I was a kid teachers in Texas tried to get us to stop using the word ain't. One of my teachers used to tell us all the time that ain't ain't a word because ain't ain't in the dictionary. I raised my hand and she asked me why. I said " Mrs. Xx ain't is a word then because ain't IS in the dictionary. It's an improper contraction of are not." She looked like I'd smacked her in the face with a catfsh. She went over to her bookshelves and pulled out the newest edition of the dictionary and looked it up. I thought she was going to be mad but she started laughing instead. She said she guessed she'd have to stop using that phrase now.
1:52 He plays Georgie in Young Sheldon and Georgie and Mandy's first Wedding
13:23 Is Selena, she was shot and killed by her fan club president
I was born and raised in Texas, north of Dallas. We have a twang in our English. Our language is a mixture of English and creole with a touch of Tejas.
Sweetie, Nevada is another American state, like Texas is an American state. Nevada AIN'T in Texas, hon! Thanks for your reaction.
“Is Nevada even in Texas?” Haaaaaaaaaa! 😂😂😂
brits spell aluminum different then the u.s you add an extra i
true!
In the 1960s, outside houston, one of the high schools had a corral where the kids could put their horses. They were riding horses to school. One of my friends lived on a ranch so far out it took him almost an hour to drive in to school.
Pretty sure half of these Texas accents are caused by people having dip( chewing tobacco) in the mouth😂
*watching a video on Texas*
Adam: NEVADA!!!
"This area has all types of things, a haunted road, a bunch of cowboys"
Adam: NEVADA!
🤣
Aluminum is our aluminium. We lost an "i" in the pond (Hi, Lawrence!) and made the first letter sound like it. Illuminum.
0:11 me too adam me too 😂😂
😭😭😭
I understood everything Boomhauer from King of the Hill said too. I was raised in Seattle WA but my grandparents came to the Yakima Valley in 1910 from Oklahoma and Arkansas. We are just about done with the accents in my generation but still understand through our grandparents accents.
Standard British accent is my favorite. I was a high-school drama teacher and taught it for years. (I’m a Pacific NW American)
I wouldn’t say we Texans have 9 accents. There is a Texas Twang and Texas Drawl. We tend to speak slowly, drop the G at the end of words, and have some fairly unique phrases (ex: fixin to). Also it’s pronounced Ah-Loo-Min-Um.
I understood every word that the cartoon guy from 'King of the Hill' said. But I'm from Oklahoma, the state just north of Texas. He said "I'll tell you what, you see that part when old George came in there he talkin' 'bout tasting his own bourbon, Kramer come slidin' in just like he always do, i'll tell you what man, them dang old New York boys Hehe" He was talking about the show 'Seinfeld'
Watching from the Cowboy Capital of the World, Bandera Texas
The Boomhauer clip is exactly what I grew up listening to from my step-dad. As a teen and beyond when my friends were around him...he would speak....they would look at me...I translated. I was officially dubbed as their Boomhauer translator.😂
I got em!
I grew up in south Texas- Corpus Christi along the Gulf of Mexico (may soon be the Gulf of America). I have always been told I talk really fast. When we moved to West Virginia and I got a job with the state I had to slow down and pronounce my 9s better. I also had to watch how a I said ice so I could be understood at drive-thrus. Now that I am not working- Welcome back accent!
i suppose one way to tell Texans from southerners is the drawn-out vowels and syllables, another being the vernacular; also Texas originates from Taysha and Tejas the Caddo and Spanish words for friend/ ally
also, Nevada is a completely different state that's where Las Vegas is, although there is a town called Nevada (Ne-VAY-da) in Texas
The first person was actor Montana Jordan, who plays Sheldon's big brother Georgie on Young Sheldon.
I’ve been to the bar with the saddles..fun!
Sorry, I did understand all of the accents. BTW, Adam can slide into Southern accent very easily!
As a Texan, I consider some of these accents to be from other states. The lady in the blue shirt is probably closest to a "real" Texas accent. Some of these people sound like they're from Mississippi, or some other southern state. You want "real" strange southern accents, try Appalachian people, or the Carolinas...now there's some serious hard to understand languages.
I dont know that Ive ever heard a "Gulf Coast accent" before. Im a little surprised that he didnt cover a Houston accent, but I guess its easier to lump it into East Texas. It is true though that in the big cities, everyone is taking on the generic Standard American accent. I can tell you right now, I live west of Houston, but whenever I travel to visit with my husband's side of the family in East Texas, I can definitely hear the difference!
Love the Louisiana accent. Carolina's Xavier Legette has my heart. Understand half of what he is saying but could listen to him all day.
That's how we say aluminum here
My Uncle Jack was an auctioneer! 👍🏻
1:41 That man is an actor. He played Sheldon's big brother in Young Sheldon. Which tells the story of Sheldon from Big Bang Theory.
Boomhaur says random real words in there. He was talking about Seinfeld and something about Kramer sliding in the room, then shaking his head at New York City boys.
Accents are charming! Your’s too!
You have a great voice when you sing. Makes me want to hear you sing more
When you watch enough King of the Hill you understand Boomhauer perfectly.
It's a great show you should watch it. Great insight into Americans and American values.
My dad, from North Carolina and Florida, went to college in N. Texas and Oklahoma, and I'm shocked he didn't pick up any of that accent. Maybe he did when he was younger?
Boomer was talking about George from sinfield and how Kramer was sliding in
As I understand it, the character on Yellowstone is named "Teeter," but being from Georgia myself, it sounds to me like she's saying "Tater"--like my grandfather used to refer to a potato.
🤣🤣🤣 No, Nevada isn't in Texas. It is its own state, near California. That was a fun watch. And by the way your accent is great.
The young man in the East Texas part that was talking about how he was not a theif is the young actor that played Georgie in "Young Sheldon"
Bro, Nevada is its own state. Lol
📻🎶"Northeast Texas Women" Willis Alan Ramsey
1:43 OH THATS GEORGIE FROM YOUNG SHELDON
"Illuminum" VS Aluminium is a country-wide thing. My phone literally just tried auto-correct aluminium to aluminum. It bugs the tits off of me. Lol
Uh oh- I do say 'might could' as a form of positive non-commitment. And that Lonestar song was what, 25 years ago? Still solid.
East Texan is more “Southern” sounding. It’s also a very swampy region that bumps up next to Louisiana. Beyond the “pine curtain” which a region with many pine forests that separates East Texas from the rest of Texas the accents change. And you begin to hear more of a “general Texan” accent which is more Cowboy sounding with the long drawn out words and such. I’m from the DFW area and I’m definitely what one would call a city boy. I don’t like to brag but I think I’m well educated due to having earned my masters degree as well plans on entering a doctoral program soon. But still I have a very strong General Texan accent. Stronger than most people I know. I don’t even wear western clothes or listen to country music and people still think I’m some stupid, uneducated uneducated hick when in reality I’m just as well educated as many of them.
Is Nevada even in Texas? 😂😂😂😂😂
Hoosiers have an accent all our own.
Probably 3 different types. Facts!
Those Texans need to sing what they're trying to say so we can all understand them!😅
I live in South Texas Adam very close to the Mexican Border 🤠 about 30 miles from Space X, and yes we do talk like that. 🐎
I worked with a guy who talked just like Boomhower" half the time when he talked you just had to smile and nod
The woman at 13:30 looked like Selena the Tejano star.
Yes that is Selena.
@@dcbs8691 I thought so. She was so beautiful.
Haha I did actually understand. Where I am from we have what is called guinea-men language and it's very close to creole and appalachian accents combined.
Born and raised in Texas (65 years)....got 'em all lol. I don't think people understand how huge Texas is.
Auctioneers are not just found in Texas! I used to go to livestock options with my grandpa all the time in Utah and there would be Auctioneers.
bro said Nevada is in Texas😂😂😂🤦♂️
Oh yeah btw I'm in Dallas and yeah T jones,T lady,or T ma is used in mostly African American slang but we all know it lol and younger kids don't use it much anymore.❤
The first guy talking about oil is Georgie from young Sheldon yes he is a Texan.
The looks on your face is hilarious!
I’m from Arkansas. I can’t say oil, boil, foil.. any of them. It should like “ul” kind of. I have a drawl and I talk fast. I have a call center job and people like to guess my accent. They always guess Texas. lol.
I was born and raised in the place in the world. I’m a born and raised Texan and I’ll die here. I know I have an accent and every time I go to another state people know that I’m. TEXAN without asking. It’s not how I dress but it’s my accent and my manors. All the people who are moving here from other states are ruining the culture and manors. My kids have had yes sir, no sir, yes man and no man beat into their head. I work in the oil field and I’ll die there feeding my family with the dinosaurs I bring back up to the surface from below. Have a blessed and wonderful day or night y’all.
Lol I'm from California but I understood every single word the cartoon character from Family guy said.
Im from TX. All my family is from TX. I hate the word "Yonder". It can mean anything from the next room - the neighbor's - a county over - anywhere your heart can imagine. My Memaw said what I was looking for was "over yonder". That ment nothing to me. Where, in the context of this conversation, where in the heck is "over yonder"?