9 Difficult Texas Accents You WON'T Understand

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  • čas přidán 18. 05. 2024
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    🐎 Everything is bigger in Texas-even the accents! How well do you know your twangs from your drawls? I found 9 wild accents that I’m convinced y’all won’t understand. Let me know how many you got right in the comments. And if I’ve missed your accent, never fear! It might show up in the next video.
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    ⏱ TIMESTAMPS:
    0:00 - Why are Texas accents captivating?
    0:18 - Accent #1
    3:48 - Accent #2
    06:44 - Nord VPN
    08:51 - Accent #3
    10:29 - Accent #4
    12:11 - Accent #5
    14:30 - Accent #6
    15:36 - Accent #7
    17:36 - Accent #8
    19:29 - Accent #9
    📜 SOURCES & ATTRIBUTIONS:
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Komentáře • 1,6K

  • @storylearning
    @storylearning  Před měsícem +21

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    • @chuckburroughs6427
      @chuckburroughs6427 Před 13 dny +1

      It's pronounced "Boo-ee", not "Bough-ee" when you're referring to Jim Bowie, or the town of Bowie,TX.

    • @earlewilliams4262
      @earlewilliams4262 Před 13 dny

      Texan here. Just spent 12 beautiful days in Scotland. Loved the food, countryside, people, and trains. I experienced the same thing with the Scottish accent. I did pretty well. However, I had to translate for my wife🙃

    • @buggjohnson1648
      @buggjohnson1648 Před 10 dny +2

      South Eastern Okie here (I can throw a rock and hit both Texas and Arkansas). I just spent 22 minutes trying to figure out what it is that is supposed to sound so weird, lol.

  • @jennifercarter1265
    @jennifercarter1265 Před měsícem +783

    Life-long Texan here and this just sounded like Thanksgiving dinner to me lol. I barely even register that those accents are different. They all just sound like rural Texans to me.

    • @ReckFamily
      @ReckFamily Před měsícem +19

      Yeah - me too!

    • @vw2rover
      @vw2rover Před měsícem +29

      Houstonian here, they all sounded the same to me.

    • @Lazurikittie
      @Lazurikittie Před měsícem +28

      Half of the clips I was just like "wait they're supposed to be talking with an accent??" It just sounded so normal to me lol

    • @erinvelasquez3316
      @erinvelasquez3316 Před měsícem +4

      Hahaha same!

    • @silentw1979
      @silentw1979 Před měsícem +6

      @@Lazurikittiesame!

  • @kitty80352
    @kitty80352 Před měsícem +607

    It’s South Texas, not Southern Texas. We don’t add that -ern business.

  • @AN-12345
    @AN-12345 Před měsícem +146

    It cracks up my friends that I understand Boomhauer just fine, i didnt know until I got to college that Boomhauer wasnt supposed to be easy to understand.

    • @jamessloanofficial
      @jamessloanofficial Před měsícem +16

      Boomhauer sounds like half of my family reunion.

    • @philomelodia
      @philomelodia Před měsícem +1

      Very similar experience. I got buddies talk just like him. I didn’t know other people couldn’t understand him until this girl I liked told me about it.

    • @stephenaulds2925
      @stephenaulds2925 Před měsícem +8

      Dang ol Boomhauer, talkin' 'bout I tell ya what man.

    • @Jaster832
      @Jaster832 Před 15 dny +2

      Yeah, like... in the clip shown here he's talking about Seinfeld and how Kramer slides into his apartment. As far as that accent is concerned Boomhauer's is pretty easy to understand. I know a fella who has that accent here near Tyler and it takes me a while to aclimate to his speech cuz he talks has that accent, plus he talks quieter and with a deeper voice that's gravely.

    • @magustacrae
      @magustacrae Před 15 dny +4

      Me too! Boomhauer sounds normal to me

  • @cindot2520
    @cindot2520 Před měsícem +183

    I'm a native Texan. Lived most of my life on the Gulf Coast. I don't have a thick accent but I'm guilty of saying fixin to, over yonder, & I use y'all a lot. Word of warning, if you ever hear a Texan say "Ah hell no!" RUN!

    • @deborahmatherne
      @deborahmatherne Před 22 dny +6

      jajajahahaha! ya betcha! And where is the Ft. Worth to Microplex lingo?

    • @brendadungan7641
      @brendadungan7641 Před 16 dny +7

      True statement. RUN AND RUN FAST

    • @brendaduncan4347
      @brendaduncan4347 Před 16 dny +10

      I'll never forget the response of someone from Maine when he heard me say "fixin' to".

    • @laurakaszuba6785
      @laurakaszuba6785 Před 16 dny +5

      Yeah, and don't stop till you run out of road.

    • @marshahamilton1329
      @marshahamilton1329 Před 15 dny +5

      My Texas roots run deep, ancestors where at the Battle of San Jacinto.

  • @Tyrannosaurus_Wrexx
    @Tyrannosaurus_Wrexx Před měsícem +584

    My boyfriend and I are from Dallas, and we went to London a couple times last year. He’s a cowboy, so people were drawn to him, asking him to say “Howdy” and “Y’all”.

  • @EFeffie
    @EFeffie Před měsícem +461

    As a native Texan, I can say this was mostly spot-on, however, I kept waiting for the video to include the HUGE German influence - especially in the middle of the state! From Brenham, to San Antonio, Fredericksburg to Austin, and even more southern - German had an absolutely enormous influence on the state and accent. Most people (Texans included) don’t know that German was almost the official language of Texas before English! Spanish was a close third! True story!

    • @storylearning
      @storylearning  Před měsícem +22

      Good point! You may be interested in this video 👉 czcams.com/video/VxrL8La1BjM/video.htmlsi=yATxkCKdhejv19t4

    • @EFeffie
      @EFeffie Před měsícem +6

      @@storylearning Excellent! I’ll watch it! And thanks, as always, for great videos! You always put out terrific content. 🤠🐄🐴🧲

    • @Native_Creation
      @Native_Creation Před měsícem +17

      Agreed, there's a lot of German influence (which heavily influences Hill Country), San Antonio has it, in addition to Central / Coastal / Southern / and Eastern Texas accents on that note. Along with a variety of Spanish accents from different parts of Mexico/Latin America.

    • @bluesdealer
      @bluesdealer Před měsícem +7

      That’s mostly gone, though. In my region, we called those old timers with the German influence “hanyaks.” It was “dat dere,” not “that there.” That accent died with the WW1 and WW2 generations.

    • @xiabelle
      @xiabelle Před měsícem +4

      Right? I’ve heard plenty of people around Brenham with a German tinge to their accent.

  • @nubbyrose87
    @nubbyrose87 Před měsícem +88

    I live in San Antonio. People here say ma’am a lot. My two year old picked up “yes sir/no sir” from day care. She told her father - “Don’t wake the baby. No, sir.” Regarding everyone looks like a cowboy - ranchers, people from rural areas or small towns dress in cowboy style and it’s not a costume. It’s a very common to see and it doesn’t look unusual.

    • @bdwon
      @bdwon Před 9 dny

      it is the military influence in SA

    • @TheSightOfTheStars
      @TheSightOfTheStars Před 7 dny

      We moved to San Antonio when i was in Kindergarten and my sister was in second grade. She went with my mom to enroll in school, and excitedly answered "yes!" when the secretary asked her if she liked school. The teacher mean mugged her and asked "Yes what?" and my poor sister broke down crying because she didn't know she was meant to say "Yes, ma'am!" and for that matter, neither did my mom, lol.

    • @roxygidz3428
      @roxygidz3428 Před 2 dny

      tru

    • @williamsstephens
      @williamsstephens Před 17 hodinami +1

      We do our kids a disservice if we don't teach them "yes, sir" and "no, ma'am". To us native Texans, a young person who doesn't "ma'am" us has very poor manners indeed. Brought up in a barn, or worse yet, a Yankee.

  • @cejay5288
    @cejay5288 Před 11 dny +14

    I’m 74, a native West Texan, understood ever word just fine.

  • @moxdonalds925
    @moxdonalds925 Před měsícem +274

    I’m from Houston and I’ve heard every one of these accents

  • @vworre2589
    @vworre2589 Před měsícem +106

    I’m a native Texan, the accents do change by just driving a hundred miles. I can be anyplace in the world and I know when someone’s from Texas. The easiest accent to spot in Texas is the east Texas twang.

    • @highschooloutcastrecords1055
      @highschooloutcastrecords1055 Před 28 dny +4

      Issa Texas Thang

    • @LateNightHam
      @LateNightHam Před 28 dny +2

      I always know because my great aunt is from east Texas so every time I hear someone it's 🔔🔔🔔.

    • @Jaster832
      @Jaster832 Před 15 dny +6

      It's funny though, the women talk with a twang and the guys with more drawl, but both are distinctly East Texas (and not Deep East Texas like Beaumont.) Terrell, Texarkana, Tyler, Palestine, Athens area.

    • @Lunacat33
      @Lunacat33 Před 13 dny +5

      People still say y’all in Texas. I wasn’t born in Texas but I got here as fast as I could - 40 years and growing. Best people in the world.

    • @xXswtXx
      @xXswtXx Před 11 dny

      So funny. But soooo true.

  • @amyroundtree2204
    @amyroundtree2204 Před 16 dny +14

    I worked with a woman who told me “You have a thick accent”. I said, “I have an accent! You’re from Boston. You have an accent!” LOL

  • @dawiecful
    @dawiecful Před 15 dny +21

    I was in Tech Support in Texas for the US and Canada. Sometimes I’d get a call from NYC. Now we needed to know what was going on before we shipped them thousands of dollars worth of hardware. I had quite a few call, talk real fast, and demand parts with no troubleshooting. Honestly it pissed me off. But I laid on my slow Western Texas accent, like “well,seems like you’re in a bad way. Why don’t we take a look at this critter, and see what’s goin on”. 90% of the time they agreed, or couldn’t understand what I was talkin about. Hilarious!

    • @dessaarnold7540
      @dessaarnold7540 Před 7 dny

      Yep, dealt with a new Yorker the other day. I got slower and slower and he confessed where he was from.

  • @csebesta84
    @csebesta84 Před měsícem +176

    I said y’all while I was in NYC. The guy in front of me in line turned around and said, “Did you just say y’all?”

    • @jmwild22
      @jmwild22 Před měsícem +4

      😂

    • @trey85031
      @trey85031 Před měsícem +21

      I travelled all over New England and was surprised at how many people said y'all. They did find it hilarious every time one person in our group said, "big ol" as in, "that's a big ol house" though

    • @mikemilne
      @mikemilne Před měsícem +14

      ​@trey85031 lol I was having lunch with friends and as we left the restaurant I saw a huge tree across the way.
      "Dang!" I says, "Look at that tree!"
      Someone says "You know what kind of tree that is?"
      "No, what is it?"
      "That is a biggo tree."

    • @Blinkerd00d
      @Blinkerd00d Před měsícem +1

      Yup... had that happen to me too. Lol

    • @misstasha
      @misstasha Před měsícem +5

      My nieces, who are 4 and 6 years younger than me, grew up in Michigan and would tease me all the time for saying y'all and ain't. 😂

  • @marygillies5452
    @marygillies5452 Před 11 dny +8

    My late father-in-law was raised in Plainview. His Texas speech was the prettiest English I ever heard. RIP Doss.

  • @user-wc8hg5lv6t
    @user-wc8hg5lv6t Před 19 dny +24

    Well done! Native Texas, born in Sweetwater, raised in Uvalde, went college in Apline, ran ranches Kilgore, Ft. Stockton, Floresville, Florence. Moved to Seguin and to Lubbock and back to Seguin and retired in Yoakum. When I speak everyone knows who I’m because of my Texas accent! Long Live Texas!🤠🇺🇸

  • @amissasada
    @amissasada Před měsícem +86

    This Texan understood everything that was said in the video and of course, while I don't hear my own accent, I was pegged as a Texan at Gatwick Airport in London once. When a Californian moved to Fort Worth for work and she brought her Californian boyfriend to lunch one day, when I asked, "What are y'all doing for lunch?" he looked at her in disbelief that I said "y'all."

    • @deborahmatherne
      @deborahmatherne Před 22 dny +7

      When I arrive on an international flight and the agent asks where were you born and I say Sweetwater Texas, I get a look of recognition, a stamp and a pass.

    • @baronhausenpheffer
      @baronhausenpheffer Před 17 dny +11

      Wait'll they get a load of the plural: "all a' y'all"!

    • @poeticaddictionful
      @poeticaddictionful Před 16 dny +4

      Everyone is saying y'all now, even NewYorkers

  • @thefceUSMC
    @thefceUSMC Před měsícem +95

    The police officer at 5:35 is the sheriff of the county I grew up in out in west Texas. Pretty funny running across him here. And, I don't have an accent, y'all do.

  • @lreece60
    @lreece60 Před 15 dny +16

    I’m a native Texican - born in Juarez but grew up in El Paso. I’ve lived a long time in Houston & Galveston. The Gulf Coast is the best. My husband & kids are native Texans! We moved up to Indiana for 9 years & folks always thought it was funny to hear the phrase “all y’all”. Living with these “Yankees” took some doin’ in learning how they speak & their mannerisms. Boy howdy - God called us back home & now we’re living in high cotten! God bless Texas & thanks for the nice video! ❤🇨🇱🇺🇸

  • @kg1966
    @kg1966 Před měsícem +49

    Your North West Texas is what we call West Texas. I have always referred to El Paso as Far West Texas. I live in San Angelo.

    • @missy9355
      @missy9355 Před 10 dny +1

      San Angelo here also. Nice to meet you.

    • @locknload4691
      @locknload4691 Před 9 dny +2

      I live near the Wichita Falls metropolitan area (most of my life), and the land between Childress and Nocona has consistently been referred to as Texoma as far I can recall. He mentioned Bowie (pronounced "Boo-wee") and Puducah being in NW TX, but the distance between those towns are over 165 miles let alone the geographies are heck of a lot different. I've also resided in Ft. Worth, Midwest TX (i.e., Big Country) and San Antonio areas. I wasn't a fan of the latter two.

    • @432Tx
      @432Tx Před 3 dny

      Yup I live in Fort Stockton close to Odessa/Midland. El Paso is far west

  • @4evrtrenchbaby
    @4evrtrenchbaby Před měsícem +148

    never seen a video being this specific on texas accents. as a houstonian who has lived in a bunch of cities in texas, youre spot on right for the areas

    • @luddite4change449
      @luddite4change449 Před měsícem +16

      He skipped right over the Houston accent, which is very distinctive from those folks up in Dallas.

    • @4evrtrenchbaby
      @4evrtrenchbaby Před měsícem +3

      @@luddite4change449 no he didn’t. he included thesouthern/houston accent in the gulf coast

    • @luddite4change449
      @luddite4change449 Před měsícem +10

      @@4evrtrenchbaby The Houston accent isn't like Beaumont, Corpus, or Victoria/Port Lavaca.

    • @Hornsfan64
      @Hornsfan64 Před měsícem +3

      @@luddite4change449Those are Houston suburbs. 😊

    • @luddite4change449
      @luddite4change449 Před měsícem +4

      @@Hornsfan64 LOL
      They certainly are now. I drove San Antonio to Austin a couple of weeks ago along I-35. It should be listed at the worlds longest continuous strip mall.

  • @bellathereader1328
    @bellathereader1328 Před 12 dny +21

    Moved to Texas 2 years ago. My favorite expression is "fixing to", in the sense of "I'm fixing to go to the store" or "I'm fixing to go mow my lawn"

    • @sharoncruzen1942
      @sharoncruzen1942 Před 11 dny +3

      Yeah! 🤣 We live in Oklahoma & my 10 year old nephew was at my house once when my neighbors had company from CA. They had a boy his age & they were out tossing the ball. We started to leave so told him to tell him. He looked at him & said, “we’re fixin’ to leave”. The kid said “WHAT?” He repeated it & he still didn’t get it. Finally I said “we’re leaving”. The kid was like “ahh, ok!” 🤪🤣

    • @jstringfellow1961
      @jstringfellow1961 Před 7 dny +4

      Well, you're close. It's fixin' not fix-ing. Run it together and drop the g.

    • @scottballentine1846
      @scottballentine1846 Před 4 dny +2

      On my first work trip to California, I said to the hotel clerk "I'm fixin to go up to my room" and it took a few minutes to explain that nothing was broken and I was not trying to 'fix' something myself.

    • @sharoncruzen1942
      @sharoncruzen1942 Před 4 dny

      @@scottballentine1846 🤣

    • @bellathereader1328
      @bellathereader1328 Před 4 dny

      @@scottballentine1846 lol!

  • @CrayolaCrack
    @CrayolaCrack Před měsícem +18

    Central Texas here. Dude went all around and left us out 😂😂

    • @petertrudelljr
      @petertrudelljr Před měsícem +3

      San Antonio Sad Face here...

    • @MrJim5280
      @MrJim5280 Před 12 dny

      Hill county?

    • @kathleenherzik9858
      @kathleenherzik9858 Před 9 dny +1

      Well they did highlight us Central Texans, they had Matthew McConaughey on for a bit and lumped us in with enchanted rock too. If you blinked you might have missed it. 😁

    • @maxlil6161
      @maxlil6161 Před 5 dny +1

      Same kept waiting for central Texas.

    • @t.thompson8985
      @t.thompson8985 Před 3 hodinami

      They always do 😩😩

  • @claycaster3838
    @claycaster3838 Před 27 dny +17

    I actually made it in This video at 4:40. How many beers did I have in me when I did that interview with Markian? I don’t even know!😂 God Bless Texas! Thanks for adding me and and my buddies in the clip!

    • @kmcc6
      @kmcc6 Před 15 dny

      Do you remember doing the interview? 🤣

  • @Miesque1973
    @Miesque1973 Před měsícem +64

    I'm from Central Texas, with deep roots in Williamson, Burnet, Llano and San Saba counties, and am an 8th generation Texan. I lived in PA for a while and people couldn't understand me. One time someone thought I was saying 'white' when I was saying 'black'! I'm proud of being a Texan and I love the old terms we use: 'might shoulda', 'used to could', 'shouldn't oughter', 'might be gonna', 'he's all horns and rattles'...

    • @Blinkerd00d
      @Blinkerd00d Před měsícem +4

      Yup. My family has been in Texas since before it was part of the Union. We are mostly from the southeast, around Victoria. (Little 'ol Edna, Tx)

    • @Miesque1973
      @Miesque1973 Před měsícem +2

      @@Blinkerd00d I had dinner with a lady from Edna, just this past Thursday! LOL!

    • @Blinkerd00d
      @Blinkerd00d Před měsícem

      @@Miesque1973 my uncle owned an auto repair shop in town for years, Dennis Ray Repair. The building is still there, but he passed away a couple of years ago.

    • @MsAmericanMaid
      @MsAmericanMaid Před měsícem +3

      Houston native, moved to central PA. First time I heard "you'ins" I thought I was being insulted. Had to repeat myself over and over so I could be understood sometimes, Never lost my accent, now in NC and boy hidey do they have an accent. lol

    • @artugert
      @artugert Před měsícem +2

      I can’t imagine how black and white could get mixed up. That’s really wild.

  • @lizardsofozz
    @lizardsofozz Před měsícem +92

    This makes me so happy. I'm a Texas native and have been saying this for ever! My family is from East Texas, my husbands family is from West Texas. Our accents are very different. Throw in that my mom's family is from Michigan and my accent can vary.

    • @misstasha
      @misstasha Před měsícem +1

      Lol. Mine varies. I moved to a small town near Fort Worth, Texas with my family when I was about 4. I picked up an accent while growing up. Sometimes it's stronger, sometimes weaker. My maternal grandmother and step grandfather raised me with my half aunt and uncle like I was one of their own kids. I lived a short while with them in Michigan, where my step grandfather was from. My grandmother is from South Carolina. I grew up with all sorts of accents around me, and sometimes one of those pops up unintentionally. When I first talked to my bio dad on the phone 3 years ago, he told me I sounded like a Southern Belle, lol. 😂 Now he brags he has a daughter with a Texas/Southern accent. 🤦🏽‍♀️🤣

    • @New517creation
      @New517creation Před měsícem +4

      Same here. It's funny how I tend to shift my accent to accommodate who I'm talking to. Otherwise, they don't understand what I'm saying.

    • @kathleenkirchoff9223
      @kathleenkirchoff9223 Před měsícem +1

      As a Houstonian who married a man from Lubbock and spent most of our life in Dallas, I can say East and West Texas are very different. They even Two Step a bit different. My husband teases me about my twang getting thicker when we visit my family.

    • @user-lr7xt6nc4u
      @user-lr7xt6nc4u Před 28 dny +2

      From Lubbock TX, husband is from the Piney Woods. I am used to but to others his accent is strong as is his parents. Most of these represent more rural accents. It is less prominent in cities. However, EVERYONE says “y’all” in both speaking and written countless times a day. Many Scots migrated this way and you hear it in common sayings and phrases. Our community is between 50-75% Hispanic so that is a whole other accent and influence.

    • @Talon18136
      @Talon18136 Před 15 dny +1

      Mine will vary as well I’ll use the city accent when I’m talking to customers on the phone at work and when I’m off work my thick accent drops in and I can speak fast and slow in both 😂

  • @johnnyshell2839
    @johnnyshell2839 Před 9 dny +8

    Dang. As a Southern resident of the USA, I appreciate your appreciation. Thanks for not trying to badmouth us. We our own people round here. These are great folks.

  • @rubyj777
    @rubyj777 Před 16 dny +15

    being a Texan i can totally relate to the fact that our accent really comes out when we're talking about Texas😂😂

    • @t.thompson8985
      @t.thompson8985 Před 3 hodinami

      We really get so excited and it amps right up for real!

  • @Danilo111
    @Danilo111 Před měsícem +75

    Thank you for covering Texas accents. People don't know how diverse accents are in Texas going from Spanish mexican accent in the South to Cajun accent in the East

  • @dutchreagan3676
    @dutchreagan3676 Před měsícem +45

    When you hear 'oil' pronounced as 'awl', or 'Highland' and 'Allen' sound exactly the same.... you're somewhere close to Marshall, Texas!

    • @WranglerAg96
      @WranglerAg96 Před měsícem +5

      Yep down near Houston its “ohl”

    • @hwgray
      @hwgray Před měsícem +1

      "Marshall, Texas!" My birthplace, y'awl. Also lived in Yewston.

    • @dutchreagan3676
      @dutchreagan3676 Před měsícem

      @@hwgray Skeeters the size of small helicopters

    • @jrm2fla
      @jrm2fla Před měsícem +1

      Some great southern variations: “all” and “erl”

    • @reddmutt1916
      @reddmutt1916 Před měsícem

      I was born, and raised in Marshall,Texas.

  • @BethOvertonCPMmidwife
    @BethOvertonCPMmidwife Před měsícem +16

    That was fun. I'm a Texas girl. Born in east Texas piney woods, lived most my life on the Gulf coast in Corpus Christi. Since my mom had the strong east Texas accent, that one can come out in me easily. I was once teased by a New Zealand friend for being the only person she knew who could put 3 syllables in the word "dog" pronounced "daw-oo-guh"

  • @LilliLamour
    @LilliLamour Před měsícem +16

    As a Texan that grew up in Cali and moved back home to Texas...these accents sound normal to me. Side note. Selana and I sound a lot alike. But hey we're from Corpus and she lived a couple of houses down from my granny in Molina😊

  • @LisaHooverdharma
    @LisaHooverdharma Před měsícem +82

    Boomhauer! Nobody talks like that, but King of the Hill is the most accurate representation of Texas on TV.
    I have the Texas Gulf Coast accent and was pleasantly surprised to hear it in the video. I don’t live in Texas anymore, but I kept the accent and I say y’all as often as I can. I also say all y’all when it’s called for.

    • @briansmith48
      @briansmith48 Před měsícem +8

      The creator of King of the Hill is from Texas. So he would know his Texas accents. 😊
      Mike Judd also created Beavis and Butthead. 😅

    • @olliolivine9770
      @olliolivine9770 Před měsícem +5

      I feel like theyre known to talk like that in College Station, you hear Aggies start talking about Gig em they can start to sound a bit like that.

    • @LisaHooverdharma
      @LisaHooverdharma Před měsícem

      @@olliolivine9770 lol! Hook ‘em.

    • @petertrudelljr
      @petertrudelljr Před měsícem +8

      Heard someone behind me talkin' just like Boomhauer one day in the HEB. I've heard all the accents in King of the Hill around town.

    • @assignments5094
      @assignments5094 Před měsícem +5

      Mike Judge is from Garland. A suburb of Dallas. Drop the first and last letters and you have, Arlan, the setting of King of the Hill. And there are people who talk exactly like Boomhauer. We sat in front of a guy at at a Rangers game once that sounded just like that.

  • @nohzazu3395
    @nohzazu3395 Před měsícem +35

    12:25 Wow, Selena! My favorite Texan singer of all times. She’s an icon in Latin American.

    • @jmwild22
      @jmwild22 Před měsícem +3

    • @Andomalo
      @Andomalo Před měsícem +1

      She’s only iconic in Texas. Not so much in the rest of Latin America

    • @frankiemendez4601
      @frankiemendez4601 Před měsícem +5

      ​@Andomalo She has a far-reaching influence within the U.S. among Hispanics.

    • @Mantis-yg6fv
      @Mantis-yg6fv Před 15 dny +1

      That was a pleasant surprise to see Selena! 😊😊

  • @joeysanders4094
    @joeysanders4094 Před měsícem +14

    Native East Texan here with a very thick, undeniable Texas accent. I even text in accent, and didn't realize it, until my wife(from another state) informed me of this. According to Her I vary the thicknesses level of my accent depending on the Accent level of whomever I'm talking to. Apparently as She has pointed out, I can also speak right along with other dialects from neighboring southern states like her State of Arkansas. For me it's just normal conversation with other country folk.

    • @Jaster832
      @Jaster832 Před 15 dny +1

      I'm the same way, don't get me around my cousins who have lived their entire lives in Van Zandt. If I'm with them for longer than an hour or two my accent goes from midway between Dallas (where I was born) and East Texas to damn near as thick as their accent. I don't fight it though, I live out here now too and ain't ever going back.

    • @wildershoney2439
      @wildershoney2439 Před 12 dny +1

      Born and raised in TX. My family traces back to before TX was TX. Scary times but im the same. I didn't get an accent detectable at work on the phone from others in different states until i lived in East TX. Lol it comes out thick if i talk to others with a thick accent from any state.

  • @LarryRobinsonintothefog
    @LarryRobinsonintothefog Před 14 dny +3

    As a former Texan lived in Fort Worth and never heard some of the Dallas lingo but some guys in junior college had a real twang. Have used ya'll, plus 'been there, done that'. Grew up in north Texas and had no problems understanding other Texans even when traveling to Houston or west Texas.

  • @McJulieO
    @McJulieO Před měsícem +31

    Loved that you launched your accent journey with a “Howdy!” from a girl Aggie from Texas A&M University, one of the largest schools in the country. That traditional campus greeting has helped meld generations of students from all parts of Texas, the US, and the world into a unified, though diverse, student body.
    “Howdy” is a delightful sound, particularly when uttered by a native Norwegian or Japanese or Nigerian or even Californian Aggie student.

    • @kathleenkirchoff9223
      @kathleenkirchoff9223 Před měsícem +5

      Howdy is definitely an Aggie tradition. And would say not as widely used outside of College Station, the good old boy Aggie network is very strong through many professions especially engineers.

    • @rwtx7781
      @rwtx7781 Před 8 dny

      Gig ‘em! 👍🏻

    • @williamsstephens
      @williamsstephens Před 16 hodinami

      ​@@kathleenkirchoff9223 we say howdy out in the world, too, when we're greeting other Ags.

  • @MrDameius
    @MrDameius Před měsícem +70

    You really missed out on covering Houston which, because of its incredible diversity (over 145 native languages spoken in the city), there are a number of, lack of a better word for me, pidgin accents as all the different language groups mix together.

    • @ninadreams127
      @ninadreams127 Před měsícem +12

      I agree! I think people don’t realize Texans separate Houston/Galveston and the Costal Bend as two different regions. Houston’s history and diversity makes it distinctly different, even though it’s all along the Gulf of Mexico.

    • @danielemmons3513
      @danielemmons3513 Před měsícem +8

      My favorite shop owner was this little Vietnamese woman. Now picture her dressed to the nines in cowboy duds and when she talked a Vietnamese accent with a deep East Texas drawl

    • @MrDameius
      @MrDameius Před měsícem +8

      @@danielemmons3513 The Vietnamese diaspora is huge in Houston so that is not an uncommon site.

    • @EDDY_D26
      @EDDY_D26 Před měsícem +4

      Htown here

    • @LateNightHam
      @LateNightHam Před 28 dny

      I'm in the middle of everywhere, texas I-10 90 and 77 all run through my town, main streets, actually. You have all these city folk stopping for gas and vapes, grabbing a bite to eat just to deal with some country fucks in a town with a German name they cannot pronounce, and watching then is gold.

  • @SugarBooger10
    @SugarBooger10 Před 12 dny +3

    From East Texas, when I moved to California for a while I worked in restaurants and they thought it was so funny how I said "tin foil" and they finally figured out that I was talking about aluminum foil. In Texas we say foil and oil with one syllable.

    • @micheleb2558
      @micheleb2558 Před 2 hodinami

      Cracks me up when people put that "tin" in front of foil. My TN relatives do that some times. I am like "Dude, it's just foil. We all know what it's made of! (Aluminum)"
      I hear "y'all" world wide. A of mine in colleague in France uses it, loads of my Asian friends, and a few British CZcamsrs. Best export ever is "y'all" and "all y'all!" Now we just need to get the rest of the world on board with "fixin' to"

  • @LB-gi7dx
    @LB-gi7dx Před 3 dny +3

    Can I just say, thank you for making this video! As a native South Texan who has been all over this beautiful state, I have long appreciated the variance in our accents. A super special thanks for covering the tejano variance too, its often left out, but it's what I hear in the voice of my people daily.

  • @jaymemcbee4821
    @jaymemcbee4821 Před měsícem +59

    Long-time viewer here. So nice to hear accents of my home discussed. Couple of notes: We consider anything west of I-35 "West Texas." El Paso is El Paso. Ask a Texan about El Paso, and you'll likely hear it's "closer to LA than Houston." It feels kind of disconnected from the rest of the state (from the viewpoint of someone east of I-35). Oh, and there aren't mountains in the RGV (roughly Laredo to Brownsville. I'm sure a local will correct me). That thumbnail pic made me chuckle. We were taught in school that they called it a "valley" to lure settlers down there in the 1800s.

    • @ninadreams127
      @ninadreams127 Před měsícem +9

      Glad I’m not the only one that noticed this😅 I thought I was just being picky

    • @jeanniearnold6726
      @jeanniearnold6726 Před měsícem +6

      El Paso isn’t Texas 😂.

    • @jennifercarter1265
      @jennifercarter1265 Před měsícem +8

      Lol it depends on what part of Texas you’re from. I grew up in Abilene and I really thought of west Texas as Odessa (though I’ve lived in DFW for 12 years and I started referring to Abilene as west Texas not long after moving here). My mom grew up in Odessa and she considered west Texas to be Big Bend. Her mom grew up in the Arklatex region and her definition was more in line with yours. To be fair, growing up in Abilene when I got on I-20 there was a sign that El Paso was 399 miles west. And it’s 762 miles from El Paso to Longview on I-20 so there is more Texas west of Abilene than east of it.

    • @loverlyredhead
      @loverlyredhead Před měsícem

      As a central Texan, there's west Texas (Abilene, Lubbock, Odessa, Del Rio all qualify) and Far West Texas (that's El Paso, the Big Bend area, etc). West of 35 is the Hill Country (Blanco, Fredericksburg, Junction, Kerrville) before it ever gets to West Texas.​@@jennifercarter1265

    • @D940
      @D940 Před měsícem +6

      El Paso pre 80's was def Texan through and through. Its different now though, sadly. My mom is Born and Raised in EL Paso and she doesn ever want to go back to that city as it is now. Im used to the Guf Coast and East Texas. Every time I go to the hill country my allergies kick up 5 times more lol.

  • @vcwloves9864
    @vcwloves9864 Před měsícem +28

    Thank you for covering Tejano, this is something that many accent videos fail to mention. I wish you would have expanded it, though. All of border Texas speaks it, not just the South. The accent also differs from generation. The first generation differs from the second and third. Either though, thanks!

    • @MM-cj6kk
      @MM-cj6kk Před 4 dny +1

      So true! Beyond the accent though, its an entire way of life with its own music, food, and art.

  • @ethandavis961
    @ethandavis961 Před měsícem +3

    28 years a Texan from about 50 miles north of Houston, I couldn't tell you where any of those accents came from but i understood all of them lol

  • @RockinLocks4u
    @RockinLocks4u Před měsícem +6

    Lived for a long time in SE Texas...that accent is pretty unique as well...kind of a blended hill country & gulf coast with a ton of cajun/creole influence

  • @cathiesmith0812
    @cathiesmith0812 Před měsícem +32

    I lived and still have family that lives in Odessa, which is West Texas. I LOVE how we talk y'all

    • @cookielady7662
      @cookielady7662 Před měsícem +2

      I'm your neighbor in Seminole.

    • @whopper526
      @whopper526 Před měsícem +1

      ​@@cookielady7662i used to live there. I miss it. Love Seminole❤

    • @whopper526
      @whopper526 Před měsícem +1

      Yay for Odessa❤i love our west texas accent too

    • @suzanneballou97
      @suzanneballou97 Před měsícem +1

      I was born in the Bronx, lived in New York most of my life. Moved to Odessa, TX nearly 19 years ago. Lived in Lubbock for about 10 years, now living in Midland, TX. I wish I could afford to move back east, I've never been able to adjust to the heat here.

    • @luckynumber2305
      @luckynumber2305 Před 17 dny +1

      Hey y'all....Big Spring here!

  • @terrimobley6067
    @terrimobley6067 Před měsícem +31

    Y'all and yonder and might could are ESSENTIAL Texas conversation❤

    • @wordforger
      @wordforger Před měsícem +4

      Fixin' to. Used ta could.

    • @franciet99
      @franciet99 Před 13 dny +1

      @@wordforgeryep, I was surprised that ‘Fixin to’ wasn’t discussed.

    • @kathleenherzik9858
      @kathleenherzik9858 Před 9 dny +2

      Don't forget about 'reckon' .

  • @virginianance4051
    @virginianance4051 Před měsícem +7

    When I was a kid, I used to spend a lot of time on my grandparents ranch west of Waco. There was an old man who lived in the area who was a real throwback.
    His accent was unique and he talked exactly like Festus on Gunsmoke. Don’t know where he got it, but it was genuine for sure.

  • @markallen8679
    @markallen8679 Před měsícem +5

    While I'm not a Texas Native, but I got here as quick as I could 37 years ago. An old boy here told me that "Fixin to" came from fix a team to a wagon. And it morphed to preparing to do nearly anything, as in, "Ahm fixin to open up a number 10 can of whoop ass onat sucker"

  • @bhami
    @bhami Před měsícem +17

    It's funny how accents work. I love it when Olly speaks Spanish because all of a sudden -- no more weird British accent!

    • @dutchreagan3676
      @dutchreagan3676 Před měsícem +1

      Yeah; he'd be a much better teacher if he learned to speak without that weird Island tone.

    • @TheAutisticFrog
      @TheAutisticFrog Před měsícem

      @@dutchreagan3676truly.

  • @NelsonClick
    @NelsonClick Před měsícem +186

    I am on a campaign to legitimize the exceedingly useful Texas phrase, "fixin to". I have not heard another English word that means the same. "Fixin to" is a courtesy announcement or declaration that an event or change is imminent: "It's fixin to start. It's fixin to rain. We're fixin to leave". The implied courtesy indicates that some degree of preparation or adjustment would be prudent on your part. Now, what other English words can do that? Whoever in England is in charge of deciding the legitimacy of an English word - I submit this proposal to you.

    • @angelastarling3052
      @angelastarling3052 Před měsícem +10

      My two future tense phrases I used all my life are 21:36 fixin' to and "I'm gonna go". I have a San Marcos accent with some northern Mississippi thrown into it. I've visited New York City and I definitely used my accent with a lot of y'alls. I'm proud to be a native Texan with my distinctive accent.

    • @caseywhitworth3414
      @caseywhitworth3414 Před měsícem +10

      @NelsonClick head on down to southeast Texas and “fixin to” becomes “finna” or “fittin to.” Lol I can’t say those phrases have never come outta my mouth before. 😂😂

    • @mattbelinski7760
      @mattbelinski7760 Před měsícem +5

      Yeh, that phrase is used just about everywhere. I remember a girl I worked with about 7 years ago used to say it...on the east coast.

    • @ronnewlin-ml6lu
      @ronnewlin-ml6lu Před měsícem +6

      I'm a Kentuckian transplanted in to Texas. I've heard this phrase since I was 5. I'm in my 50's now.

    • @mikentx57
      @mikentx57 Před měsícem +9

      YES!! I totally agree there. That phrase deep in my brain for sure. Even when I try to tamp down my Texas accent. "Fixin to", pops right out without me knowing it. I will be talking to someone and sooner or later I will hear from them. "'Fixin to?' what is that?". But I love to use it. As far as I can tell it is pretty much just used here in Texas.

  • @158tmail
    @158tmail Před měsícem +19

    Hey there. I'm from East TX. I got 6 of these right, the 1st one most definitely. This is very educational, learning more accents in my native state. Cool. Texas Pride!

  • @imelda512atx
    @imelda512atx Před 6 dny +2

    I'm from Austin and yeah the younger generations have lost most of the accents, but the farther you go outside of the major cities the thicker the accents get.
    Thanks for the video ❤

  • @lindeleasley
    @lindeleasley Před měsícem +7

    I got most of them, but I'm a fairly well traveled Texan. I currently live east Texas (probably the "gateway" to east Texas) near a town called Gun Barrel City.

  • @amandagfuller
    @amandagfuller Před měsícem +39

    I didn't know people couldn't understand what Boomhaur was saying until I moved to Florida for a year. 😂 I also understand everything Tater says on Yellowstone. My husband's from Iowa, and sometimes he will pause the show and ask me to translate what she's saying. 😂

    • @lindariley7037
      @lindariley7037 Před měsícem +5

      I'm a Native Texan (SE TX, Beaumont area) & I think THIS is the first time I understood ALL of what Boomhauer said. My first hubby (raised in Conroe - 40 mi. North of Houston) used to say "tar" & I had to look around & figure out whether he was talking about tar, car tires or a radio tower.

    • @mistydawn-4884
      @mistydawn-4884 Před 18 dny +1

      I lived in IA for a bit and my ex (that’s from HI) had to translate for me everywhere I went….used to drive me crazy trying to order food at a restaurant lol

    • @Jaster832
      @Jaster832 Před 15 dny +2

      Isn't Tater supposed to be from Texarkana, but she has a Beaumont accent?

    • @WTHshedoingnow
      @WTHshedoingnow Před 14 dny +2

      @@Jaster832 I kept waiting for him to go over the Texarkana accent! I always thought that's why she was so hard to understand!

    • @jukesngambits
      @jukesngambits Před 12 dny

      From Florida but understand Boomhaur, I think it just depends on a combination of your class & location here. There's many different Floridas all on top of each other.

  • @WifeMomOsi
    @WifeMomOsi Před měsícem +24

    I was born and spent the first 5years of my life in Texas. I then moved to Nebraska, my Texan accent was so strong, I was put into speech therapy to get rid of it.
    I wish they wouldn't have, I love the Texan accent. I do have some of it left...but not much.

    • @lisamarydew
      @lisamarydew Před měsícem +5

      I'm sure you sound lovely :)

    • @lamp8112
      @lamp8112 Před měsícem +3

      I had a thick Italian American accent growing up. It was kind of a Brooklyn accent. Then I had speech therapy for something entirely different and the therapist decided to teach me things like, it's not dis, dat and de odder ting, its this, that and the other thing. Now I do not have much of my accent left either. It comes back when I talk to relatives or sometimes it pops out on words like qwadaah, which is quarter. I catch myself correcting it., or my adult children do. Bummer huh? It was like Marisa Tomeh's character on "My Cousin Vinny." Not any more.

    • @andreabryant9979
      @andreabryant9979 Před měsícem +6

      Awww, I enjoy different accents. It’s a shame when people in “authority” want us to sound the same.
      How boring the world would be if we were all the same!

    • @redhead8777
      @redhead8777 Před 15 dny +2

      Thaaaat's chilllld abuuuuse! Lol!

    • @Jaster832
      @Jaster832 Před 15 dny +1

      Born in Texas, but started school in Kansas and went back to Texas in 6th grade. I started new schools three times in Kansas (K, 4th, 5th grades) and every single time everyone asked me where I was from. No one asked me where I was from when I got back to Texas in the 6th grade. Was wonderful.

  • @whosme8221
    @whosme8221 Před měsícem +5

    Grew up in the Rio Grande Valley in Texas. My family is in fact Sephardic Jew and Slavic and we in fact do speak with a Tejano accent. While my husband used to speak with more of a Gulf Coast accent. He would stutter as well so it would really draw out his accent.

  • @ginnydoll0703
    @ginnydoll0703 Před 10 dny +2

    When I was 4 years old my family moved to Nacogdoches, very East Texas, from Southern California (LA County). We moved back to SoCal when I was 9½ years old.
    I remember being tormented by other kids because of my very intense accent, and words they'd never heard of before.
    I was bullied so badlyI had to remove these words completely from my vocabulary. The first word was fixin'.
    It seemed like I used that word in every sentence. Each time I said it, everyone would try to mimic the way I said for at least 5 minutes.
    The other word I was constantly bullied for saying was, "ya'll". Just like when I said "fixen" everyone would mimic and mock me for at least 5 minutes afterwards with every person taking a turn saying it.
    I don't know how long it took before I was able to stop stop saying these two words in every single conversation I had, but I do know it was years.
    Another kids loved to torment me over how I pronounced it was birthday.
    They would exaggerate how slow I spoke by drawing out the syllables of the marking it last much longer than it should have. They also placed emphasis on the first syllable changing the sound of the first vowal, AND the'th' sound to a very long extended 'f' sound. It would sound like I was saying "b•u•u•u•r•r•r•f•f•day".
    Although I eventually lost my accent, whenever anyone from back there called, if the call lasted, within a half hour my accent immediately returned lasting several hours before being able stop speaking like that.
    I'm sure there were many other words I was tormented over how I said them, but these 3 had the most prominent affect on me.
    To this day I still can't pronounce the words iron, bear, and poem correctly. They come out sounding like ion as a single sylable or if I attempt to consciously pronounce the letter "r", it'll sound like I'm saying "I- URN", bear sounds more like bare or beer, poem will sound like "pome" or "poi•ēm" similar to saying 'boi' but with a 'p'.
    Then there are a few words that I pronounce reflecting a tinge of a Boston accent due to my mother not completely losing the accent from the city she was born, a few words reflect the influence of an ex who was a Puerto Rican from the Bronx, with two or three words reflecting a strange accent combo mix from my father's early childhood in Kansas City, Kansas, & Denver Colorado before growing up in SoCal. And of course, my accent will be heavily influenced by ESL speakers, with a heavy East LA sound sprinkled into the mix also.
    My accept will often depend on the accents of the person of who I'm conversing with, reflecting their accents mixed in with how I pronounce certain words.

  • @bonnieparnell7631
    @bonnieparnell7631 Před měsícem +15

    The ascents are spot on but "y'all", we must definitely still use y'all! We know how to citify our speech when we feel the need but don't let that fool you.

  • @cathiesmith0812
    @cathiesmith0812 Před měsícem +15

    I'm a native Texan!! How are y'all doing?

  • @TraciSoloGrayWitch
    @TraciSoloGrayWitch Před měsícem +4

    I love accents. It's tells you a lot about people. Each state has its unique sound and language. Just like each nation. And accents grow with each language learned.

  • @maxine7088
    @maxine7088 Před 11 dny +1

    I'm a Texan. l love the accents and drawls of Texans. This video was very interesting to me, since I haven't been to every part of Texas. Thank you for sharing.

  • @argophontes
    @argophontes Před měsícem +15

    I'm really glad you brought up the "don't make fun of other people's accents" bit, I grew up in the town next to Enchanted Rock, and I spent a good chunk of my childhood getting rid of my natural accent, which is basically like 1:00 . I replaced it with a made-up accent that's somewhere between a newscaster and "Mid-Atlantic", because I saw people on TV making fun of people that talked like I did. I'm in the process of getting it back, though, and it's fun to watch people's reactions. It is nice to see someone point out that there are several different accents in Texas, though!

  • @christopherfairs9095
    @christopherfairs9095 Před měsícem +11

    Mundee, Tuesdee etc is how I pronounce the days of the week and I'm English (in my 70s). Remember the rhyme Solomon Grundy, born on a Monday - to rhyme with Grundy. A lot of older people in the UK say the days of the week like this and it's how you can tell their age as Stephen Fry once remarked.

  • @hellohannahk
    @hellohannahk Před měsícem +3

    It's crazy how fast you pick up "y'all". I'd only been living here for a year or two when I started saying it without thinking. Back in Wyoming for Christmas my siblings were laughing at me because it kept slipping out without me realizing. 😂

  • @FNG_Star
    @FNG_Star Před měsícem +3

    There is a mesquite accent. Its like the mid Texas accent, but add a bit of twang, and a little drawl. You here this accent where ever large amounts of mesquite grows.

  • @cellgrrl
    @cellgrrl Před měsícem +9

    I moved to Texas from Michigan in 1962. I was a child then but I never picked up a Texas accent. People in Texas still ask me where I am from, and I am in my 70's now. If I travel up north people will also ask me where I am from. I don't sound like anything in particular. It is not Texan except for my word choices, not my accent. As for this lovely video, I understood every single Texas accent. I live in deep East Texas and believe me the accent is very thick here. Have a good'un y'all.

  • @jerrywood4508
    @jerrywood4508 Před měsícem +15

    Excuse me? Nothing about Houston? We are different from Dallas, you know. I grew up using the word 'tump' to describe the action of something falling over, as in, "I almost tumped over the milk." And we old timers have a non-standard pronunciation of the word 'bayou,' which we pronounce 'BI-oh.' And it goes on from there. Lots of outside influences from French Louisiana, Mexico, the American South, etc. Also, and this is common in a lot of the south, accenting tends to be on the first syllable, as you heard in a lot of other Texas accents. FI-nance, IN-surance, MON-roe, etc.

    • @jennifermauricio2300
      @jennifermauricio2300 Před měsícem +2

      I feel like he could do a whole episode on how we say words in H-Town. Kuykendahl, Alief, Fuqua, etc.

    • @mmtx73
      @mmtx73 Před měsícem +2

      @@jennifermauricio2300 Always said I could tell a long-time Houstonian by how they pronounced Kuykendahl and San Felipe.

    • @EmpressNatiLocs
      @EmpressNatiLocs Před měsícem

      Thanks for pointing this out, I kept waiting for Houston as well. I definitely say all the words you mentioned, just like you wrote it 😅

    • @dianevacante9382
      @dianevacante9382 Před měsícem +2

      Tump! Yes!!! My husband makes fun of me saying this all the time. Like what's the problem. It's dump and turn combined. Duh!!!😂

    • @williamsstephens
      @williamsstephens Před 16 hodinami

      Trump! My husband used that word earlier today!

  • @shakarussanders9911
    @shakarussanders9911 Před měsícem +7

    I'm a Texas native i grew up in the Dallas/Ft Worth area but more specific I'm from Ft Worth there's a difference between Dallas and Ft Worth accents even though they are not far from each other i can tell when hear a Dallas resident and when i hear a Ft Worth resident

    • @monikapanko2800
      @monikapanko2800 Před 29 dny +1

      Really? I live in Dallas and other places in the metroplex and I can't tell a difference. What are some differences you hear?
      I know my siblings sound more country than me. They all live ft worth and out west more.

    • @shakarussanders9911
      @shakarussanders9911 Před 29 dny

      @@monikapanko2800 Lol yeah out west of the metroplex we are definitely more country sounding! For example I can tell if you're from Dallas or Ft Worth on the way you say here or stairs 😄

    • @theshape8992
      @theshape8992 Před 13 dny +1

      Im from west Fort Worth and I can definitely agree with this. The way people drive in traffic is even different . You can usually tell when you go from driving in Fort Worth to driving in Dallas. The people in Dallas tend to drive a bit more aggressive than folks in Fort Worth.

  • @HelloKittyFreak96
    @HelloKittyFreak96 Před měsícem +2

    South Texas here and I’m so glad you used SELENA as an example, that’s the perfect accent of what people sounds like here

  • @zanepetty7854
    @zanepetty7854 Před měsícem +16

    Olly, I’m so glad that you got to visit Texas. You know you barely scratched the surface, right. You need to do a follow up. Come to Odessa and I’ll introduce you to a few more accents heard around the oil patch (Permian Basin).

    • @amandagfuller
      @amandagfuller Před měsícem +2

      I was surprised he didn't mention the Permian Basin accent. My grandma has it, and and people LOVE the way she talks. Although, so many people pass through there working in the oil field that it's starting to blend in with other Texas accents. Maybe that's why he didn't cover it. My grandma is 94, so her accent is pretty unique and an excellent example of how accents slowly shift over time.

    • @zanepetty7854
      @zanepetty7854 Před měsícem

      @@amandagfuller our OOs and OHs are emphasized. It’s unique.

  • @HistoryNerd808
    @HistoryNerd808 Před měsícem +17

    As someone who used to live in Texas, I only missed two outright: the Far West Texas one where I thought it was Panhandle and the Austin one(thought Michael McC. was from San Antonio) but I was too specific on a few others: I said the Permian Basin for West Texas(was an easy one for me since my Grandpa had a very strong West Texas accent from working in the oil business for most of his life), the Valley for South Texas, and Houston for the Gulf Coast.

    • @amandagfuller
      @amandagfuller Před měsícem +4

      I was too specific on most of them too. 😅 Except for the Hill Country. Enchanted Rock gave that one away.

    • @ninadreams127
      @ninadreams127 Před měsícem +3

      The section for West Texas had two different accents in my opinion so that kinda messed me up. I’m from Midland but I’ve never heard that area be called “Northwest Texas.”

    • @Native_Creation
      @Native_Creation Před měsícem

      There's a lot of crossover in the video, so it's hard to pinpoint. Lipan Apache one on Coastal could also be from border or Southern.

  • @jimmyaber5920
    @jimmyaber5920 Před 13 dny +1

    I am an instructor for a car manufacturer from north Texas and have students that I've taught periodically for 25 years. I am amazed at immigrant accent evolution. South Tezas twang on a Swede, East texas drawl on top of German, West Texas accent on top of Farsi. "Oil" is a word that can be pronounced in an almost infinite number of ways.🎉

  • @ivorybow
    @ivorybow Před 12 dny +2

    I am from Amarillo and I spent a lot of my life in Houston and Austin. I understand all those people perfectly. My mother was a stickler for perfect English, and she taught me to speak beautifully with proper grammar and a large vocabulary. But I do it with my Texas accent. I have lived all over the world and people always recognize that I am from Texas.

    • @williamsstephens
      @williamsstephens Před 16 hodinami +1

      I too speak Standard American English, learned from my English teacher mother. But nobody is fooled; they know immediately I'm Texan.

  • @nomaderic
    @nomaderic Před měsícem +11

    I'm mainly number 9 houston but have a mix of all of them. Alot of ppl say I sound like Louisiana as well. I have a unique accent because I spent time back and forth from big city houston and small rural south texas. I grew up around a lot of black people so the way I talk turns heads wherever I go. Even in texas. The moment I go to another state people instantly know I'm from somewhere else. I'm a Mexican guy from a black environment in white small town texas. That last statement is what makes it all happen. Texas residents are all mixed together. You can go to any small town BBQ or get together and there's gonna be mexicans, white people, and black people, all together, all raised together, etc. We all have a melting pot blend of all these accents

    • @chazfu
      @chazfu Před měsícem +2

      I was born in Houston and grew up close by, and I've also gotten the Louisiana comment about my accent.

    • @nomaderic
      @nomaderic Před měsícem

      @chazfu yea I think ppl born and grew up in houston and South East texas have a lot of Louisiana culture and accent in them. I mean we are the gulf coast

  • @kyt-nh1ef
    @kyt-nh1ef Před měsícem +9

    I just realized this is the first time I heard y'all in a British accent😅

  • @VagabondTexan
    @VagabondTexan Před 2 dny +1

    You just made me seriously homesick. I don't sound particularly Texan until I've had a bit to drink, but it's always there. One of my favorite experiences was being in a pub in Nottingham very late one evening (early in the morning?) and talking about accents. I said I was fascinated by how you could localize someone very accurately in England by the accent. I was then told, "Yeah, you Americans really don't have that many accents." I proceeded to take them on a 10 minute tour of accents around the USA. The best compliment I got was the bartender you just said, "That was magnificent!" after I finished. A great time was had by all.

  • @ryanmartin5668
    @ryanmartin5668 Před 15 dny +3

    As a native Texan, I can tell you that my daughter turns the word “legs” into a 4 syllable word, and after a few beers or when I get pissed off, you’re gonna need subtitles to understand me. 😂

  • @phronsieone
    @phronsieone Před měsícem +13

    Austin accent and Hill Country are almost the same.
    Many of the old timer men you used as examples, no matter which region they were from, definately DID have their speech patterns changed by having a big wad of chew in their mouth.
    You should add the accent from the gulf near the Louisiana border. Their’s is very specific.
    Ham’s Orchard has amazing peaches, blackberries and a fun day out in the country!

    • @lisamarydew
      @lisamarydew Před měsícem +4

      I agree about the old timers! :)

  • @rquinn0111
    @rquinn0111 Před měsícem +10

    West Texas represent! We don't all sound like King of the Hill.

  • @Khornecussion
    @Khornecussion Před 14 dny +1

    Girlfriend is from West Texas, I'm from deep Southeast Texas. She absolutely loves the " Vidor twang " I have when I get too excited talking about something and I start shortening ten word sentences down to four or five compound words.

  • @LeaC816
    @LeaC816 Před 24 dny +1

    East Texas girl here, these folks all sound normal to me and I struggle to hear the difference in most of the examples but see how they might sound different to non Texans. Thanks for the fun video!

  • @LorettaCordes
    @LorettaCordes Před měsícem +8

    There is an accent that is rarer and is fading away, some of the older generation that are children of Czech immigrants will still have a faint Czech accent sometimes you will hear it around La Grange and surrounding areas.

    • @kevinr5187
      @kevinr5187 Před měsícem

      Granger, Cameron and Taylor also.

    • @kevinr5187
      @kevinr5187 Před měsícem

      From central 5th generation, joined the Air Force all the guys said man you got a Texas accent, I said no I don’t….they said you got it bad you just don’t know it because they all talk like you. The English ladies would say your from Texas aren’t you and I would say how did you know? There response was your accent!

    • @frankiemendez4601
      @frankiemendez4601 Před měsícem +1

      I even notice a hint of it in Elgin.

    • @josephbravo2590
      @josephbravo2590 Před měsícem +2

      Pick me up some Kolache from the Czech Stop. 😉

    • @willbass2869
      @willbass2869 Před 12 dny +1

      Jak se más ?

  • @lightbearer972
    @lightbearer972 Před měsícem +7

    I'm a native Texan who has lived in the suburbs of Dallas all his life. I'm definitely atypical when it comes to accent, though, as my parents are from New York and I have a General American accent with some New York influence. I don't use many "Texasisms" at all but I was able to pin down most of the accents you featured. Thanks, Olly!

  • @Mackenzie_Zimmerman
    @Mackenzie_Zimmerman Před 27 dny +2

    Believe it or not, my boyfriends deep Texas accent is what MAJORLY attracted me to him. I'm sad that nowadays I don't quite hear it anymore since I've picked up the accent too. But when my mom who isn't from Texas visited, I told her beforehand he's got a very Texan accent and the first thing she said when she met him was "dang you really do have a southern accent"
    Anyways I find Texas accents SO attractive, even the stronger ones.

  • @pattyenglish4552
    @pattyenglish4552 Před 12 dny +2

    6th gen Texan here, 18 years in south Texas, 10 in Central, 10 in East Texas and a very brief stint in Dallas with a few quick comments...
    The Ham orchards clip was grouped with West Texas but Ham's is in Terrell (about 9 hours from El Paso and just East of Dallas). I pass it almost daily. Also the west texas segment had multiple distinct accents, one of which is common all along the nearly 2,000 mile Texas / Mexico border.
    Matthew McConaughey is from North East Texas (Longview) but he did talk about him moving around and he does have significant time to Austin. Austin is in central TX but don't be mistaken, Austin is NOT Central TX and should never been identified as such (caution should be used in even grouping it with central Texas and to be clear it hardly qualifies as Texas even though its in the middle of the state) Lol
    I second what someone else said about "southern" TX. It's South Texas..the ern is an unnecessary waste of syllables.
    The coast of Texas is about 367 miles so there's quite the variety of accents just in this region alone.
    Finally, how did San Antonio not even get a passing mention?

  • @lamp8112
    @lamp8112 Před měsícem +10

    Love these accents! My husband was in the Navy for 20 years and we moved around a lot. Made friends from all over the US. I have an Italian American Northeast accent which was softened in speech therapy. I loved the southern accents. One guy was from Alabama and pronounced penny pineee. It took me a good 10 minutes to understand a sentence he was saying. "Youer Daugta lahst herrrr pineee." LOL! You're daughter lost her penny. I loved meeting all those people! So great! I now live in the North Minneapolis area. Its fun to bump into Minnesota small town people who still have their Minnesota accents. Oooo dawn che know! Accents are just fun! I like your accent too! 😊

    • @phronsieone
      @phronsieone Před měsícem +1

      My bestie, from MN, woukd call up and say, “Would ya ever wanna take the kids to the zoo today?” Or “Would ya ever wanna meet for coffee at 10?”

    • @lamp8112
      @lamp8112 Před měsícem +1

      @@phronsieone Also, can you borrow me that pen? I was first tempted to ask if I was needing a pen which obviously I wasn't since I was being asked to lend the pen. Very confusing LOL!

    • @phronsieone
      @phronsieone Před měsícem +1

      @@lamp8112 funny!
      I lived for a few years in the KC area, we had lovely peonie bushes. I was surprised that everywhere I’ve lived in the US, some people called a peony a “Pinney” . We pronounced it “Pee oh’ knee”.

  • @jamesbell6203
    @jamesbell6203 Před měsícem +12

    I'm a native Texan now living in Northern California. I can't even understand some of these accents!

    • @katschrodinger954
      @katschrodinger954 Před měsícem +3

      Have you been kidnapped?!? One "Remember the Alamo" for yes and two for no.

    • @alaneskew2664
      @alaneskew2664 Před měsícem +1

      My biggest sympathyies that you've been captured by the heathens

    • @432Tx
      @432Tx Před 3 dny

      Texas to cali is WILD

  • @leehanson1416
    @leehanson1416 Před měsícem +11

    Pretty accurate. There is a bit of German and Czech in central texas, and there are large Asian and Sub-continent populations around Houston. One of the last shows Anthony Bourdain did was about the diversity of Houston. Not sure how much bleedover there is in the accents, but we love the variety of food available.

    • @crypandora66
      @crypandora66 Před 27 dny

      There's a HUGE accent bleed of the texas accent into german

  • @ea4602
    @ea4602 Před měsícem +3

    My grandfather Pentecost was an Austin's 300. He fought for us all. My GG Uncle fought at the San jacinto battleground.

  • @RandomGaijin
    @RandomGaijin Před měsícem +7

    i understood ALL of these, including boomhowers

  • @mikerich9227
    @mikerich9227 Před měsícem +6

    Being from N. Central Tx. I got the drawl & Slang, When in College (out of State) & Military my friends would ask me to say certain words phrases. Best words - #1 the word coke - coke can refer to any soft drink i.e pepsi, dr pepper, big red & so on (Not pop or soda). #2 Laundry detergent/soap is simply washin powder. Best story In the military stationed in California (before cell phones) I maid a collect call (yes from a pay phone). The operator said "I absolutely love you Texas boys and your accents). Dang it she hung up before I could get her number lol.

  • @vellaropedart9190
    @vellaropedart9190 Před 14 dny +1

    I was told by a true blood Glascow,Scottish friend that if I ever travel abroad,don't claim to be an American,claim your Texas heritage because then you're like a rock star! My dad also once told me when he passed through a diner in Michigan everybody kept asking him to say something, just to hear his accent. And if you live here in Texas long enough, you'll get an accent too😂😂

  • @tannerdorsett9288
    @tannerdorsett9288 Před 27 dny +2

    I'm from Texas A&M. Sometimes I get so used to hearing other people from different backgrounds talk, and it's getting to a point I can't understand other Texans.

  • @ninadreams127
    @ninadreams127 Před měsícem +13

    When you showed a clip of Selena, I thought this was for the Corpus Christi area because that’s where she was born and raised. That’s where her accent comes from so I was surprised that the answer was South Texas. Also fun fact, Texas has the 2nd longest stretch of barrier islands in the world! The islands do have well known towns on them like Padre Island and Port Aransas so those areas have more localized slang and accents.

    • @yukinoloveless2617
      @yukinoloveless2617 Před měsícem

      Selena is from Lake Jackson not Corpus.

    • @ninadreams127
      @ninadreams127 Před měsícem

      @@yukinoloveless2617 I just looked it up and she moved to Corpus when she was 9.

    • @Jaster832
      @Jaster832 Před 15 dny

      The guy in the video just doesn't know Texas regions very well. There's a difference between "South Texas" and the RGV (which he just lumped in with South Texas). At 12:07 he pinpointed a spot about 75 miles due East of Midland/Odessa as "Northwest Texas," which is not a thing, ffs. "Northwest Texas" = Panhandle. The spot he pinpointed is West Texas, or Eastern West Texas. I mean the man doesn't even know the difference between East Texas and Deep East Texas. Tyler and Nacogdoches have completely different accents.
      Corpus *is* South Texas, btw.

    • @ninadreams127
      @ninadreams127 Před 15 dny

      @@Jaster832 No one calls Corpus south lol It's apart of the Costal Bend region but if anything, it's southeast

    • @bethmendoza1847
      @bethmendoza1847 Před 12 dny

      I was so surprised to see Selena in this video. RIP

  • @ford4life069
    @ford4life069 Před měsícem +1

    1) the guy at the beginning in the titleist hat - he's an actor on Young Sheldon if I'm not mistaken.
    2) Teeter is an actress. You can't judge Texans by the accent actors and actresses put on television.
    3) I'm from west Texas/panhandle plains region - the 806 y'all - and my accent changes depending on who I am speaking with. It will change if I'm sleepy, excited, or speaking to an elder vs speaking to one of my kids. Speaking to a business professional vs speaking to a church lady. My family came west via Tennessee, Arkansas, Oklahoma and finally Texas during the dust bowl with a little bit of Bama thrown in back in the Tennessee days for good measure. We all have shades and inflections that have traveled along with us. Throw in the relatively recent - early 1900's - from England and Scotland on my paternal side and my sister and I are a mishmash of Granny's English and Gramma's Okie/Arkansas dialects. I lived with her during college so I picked up quite a bit more of it then. And yes, it gets stronger when we're angry, defensive, or being questioned kindly about it. Met a cpl gentlemen from Greece I believe, when we traveled to Jamaica. I was just talking to my husband and inlaws, all Texans also, and they asked me if we were from Texas. Yes'ir. And with that one word, any doubt was vanquished. Lol.

  • @kkrider4501
    @kkrider4501 Před měsícem +3

    My wife and I went to Australia and every time we went to a restaurant people would hear us talking with our Texas accent and would come over and tell us how much they loved to here us talk. We got several free meals yee haw y’all.

  • @jenniferwilson9579
    @jenniferwilson9579 Před měsícem +11

    We are going to Texas next week to visit our son. We are from the mid-Atlantic, this is gonna be fun!

    • @lisasdfwhightechworld9946
      @lisasdfwhightechworld9946 Před měsícem

      You won't hear these accents in the big cities. You have to go to the rural towns and visit the feed store. I am the only person left in DFW with a Texan accent.😳

    • @MadTracker
      @MadTracker Před měsícem

      I moved to Texas from the east coast many many years ago. I disagree, you’ll definitely hear accents. They may be less prevalent in larger cities but you’ll hear them. I genuinely thought I had an undetectable accent, other than sounding as though I’m from the US. While in British Columbia Canada I was repeatedly asked what area of Texas I’m from -without volunteering what state I am from. People often don’t realize how distinct their accent may sound to others.

    • @locknload4691
      @locknload4691 Před 9 dny

      @lisasdfwhightechworld9946 When I was stationed at Carswell AFB back in the early-mid1980s, the locals were none too happy about the monthly influx of transplants especially from the North East. I remember regularly seeing while driving, especially on loop 820, numerous bumper stickers with the phrase, "You love NY? Well, take I-35N!" or something to that effect😁

    • @lisasdfwhightechworld9946
      @lisasdfwhightechworld9946 Před 9 dny

      @@locknload4691 Many many transplants now.

  • @katjaanderson769
    @katjaanderson769 Před měsícem +10

    You hear 'Sundee' and 'Tuesdee' in Nebraska, too. (My grandmother was brought up in the country.) And I sound rather like you! (Not brought up in rural Nebraska.)

  • @billievillarreal9547
    @billievillarreal9547 Před 14 dny +1

    Im from the Rio Grande Valley, my ears always perk up when I hear the local accent when I'm browsing you tube!

  • @SSBailey77845
    @SSBailey77845 Před 8 hodinami

    Nice video! I’ve lived in Texas my entire life. I was raised in Fort Worth, went to college in Lubbock and then went into the Marine Corps. I was stationed on the east coast. I told one of my Marine buddies that I didn’t think I had a very strong Texas accent. The dude was from Duluth Minnesota. He laughed out loud! After that I worked I the airplane business for 30+ years with people from all over the USA and the world. I have always thought that then Texas accent, all of them, were fascinating.