OldTurtle
Moderator - Deceased
Since we are heading into the "Slow Time" of the year, I thought it might be interesting to do something a little different...And in the interest of learning from each other, an exchange of odd words that some of us don't know about that are specific to a culture or area..
I grew up in a small rural farm county in Central Missouri and have a couple of words that I haven't heard for quite a few years that were common to me as a boy, that for some reason have been bouncing around in my head and thought that maybe some of you might have something similar..The county had a strong German population, with a Southern influence..
I'm not an academic, so spelling and pronunciation will have to be hard, as I don't remember ever seeing them written down, but I'll give them a try to see if anyone else is familiar with them...I'm pretty sure that there are others from around the country/world that would be interesting as well..Let's try to keep it clean and educational...
My words are Jitney and Choagie....
Jitney (Gitney) was usually used to refer to an older car, jalopy, or buggy...
Choagie was used to mean movement, as in going somewhere else...
If I was found somewhere that I wasn't really welcome, or just shouldn't have been at the time, it wasn't unusual for someone to say.. "Why don't you get in that Jitney and Choagie on down the road?" or "Get your Jitney and run to the store for me, but Choagie back here in a hurry"..
Let's see what you can come up with..
I grew up in a small rural farm county in Central Missouri and have a couple of words that I haven't heard for quite a few years that were common to me as a boy, that for some reason have been bouncing around in my head and thought that maybe some of you might have something similar..The county had a strong German population, with a Southern influence..
I'm not an academic, so spelling and pronunciation will have to be hard, as I don't remember ever seeing them written down, but I'll give them a try to see if anyone else is familiar with them...I'm pretty sure that there are others from around the country/world that would be interesting as well..Let's try to keep it clean and educational...
My words are Jitney and Choagie....
Jitney (Gitney) was usually used to refer to an older car, jalopy, or buggy...
Choagie was used to mean movement, as in going somewhere else...
If I was found somewhere that I wasn't really welcome, or just shouldn't have been at the time, it wasn't unusual for someone to say.. "Why don't you get in that Jitney and Choagie on down the road?" or "Get your Jitney and run to the store for me, but Choagie back here in a hurry"..
Let's see what you can come up with..