Committed to his colloquialisms

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  • čas přidán 27. 08. 2024
  • (Boston Globe) Reporter Billy Baker tests his dad's knowledge of a disappearing local lingo. Produced by Scott LaPierre

Komentáře • 71

  • @loulouy2946
    @loulouy2946 Před 11 lety +6

    That is a great piece! Really personal and very engaging. I think you've captured a generation's sounds that will soon be lost entirely. What a great use of your chosen career!

  • @kyletae
    @kyletae Před 9 lety +3

    I love this. It reminds me of all the things my folks and my grandparents would say.

  • @MrCoolcal20
    @MrCoolcal20 Před 9 lety +11

    I didn't realize all of these terms were exclusive to new england. My grandfather, who's from gloucester, still uses pretty much all of them on a regular basis, I never realized how much of a new englander he is...

  • @KristineNicholas
    @KristineNicholas Před 10 lety +16

    I'm 49 and regularly use ALL of these with the exception of "spuckie."

    • @LostCause36
      @LostCause36 Před 4 lety

      Kristine Nicholas well that Spuckie looked pretty good!

  • @dinacox1971
    @dinacox1971 Před 2 měsíci

    This could be my dad!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! So much alike. Dad is 87 and still plays golf. He is a little slow and his game is not great but he has friends that insist that he still come out to play. Sadly he has lost all of his playing buddies that were his age.

  • @tonyshannon725
    @tonyshannon725 Před 10 lety +16

    I still use most of these terms and I'm only 44

  • @Ricochet752
    @Ricochet752 Před 5 lety +1

    And the Friendly's ice cream in the freezer too! Thanks for putting up these vids.

  • @christophermoriarty7843

    Can’t stop watching this

  • @vanzarockin
    @vanzarockin Před 4 lety +2

    Got them all and find it sad they have become a thing of the past. These colloquialisms were a part of what made Boston unique, authentic, vibrant and singular.

  • @jennifermenard8573
    @jennifermenard8573 Před 4 dny

    I use all these terms. Born in Brockton 1970.

  • @Paxtecum18
    @Paxtecum18 Před 10 lety +7

    this guy is a riot

  • @marvack1852
    @marvack1852 Před 9 lety +9

    So sad that the son doesn't have a decent Boston accent like his dad.

  • @scituguy2538
    @scituguy2538 Před 8 lety +8

    Father cracked me up when he talked about another definition of a hoodsie as being a young lady. Often they were a young hottie and her friends who may or may not have gotten around a bit or young girls who loved hangin around the older boys. Totally remember using that term with the guys back in the 80's. "Bunch of hoodsies were hangin at the pahk last night"

  • @brez9091
    @brez9091 Před 10 lety +34

    This Dad, is the real McCoy. Boston all the way. And his son, I'm sad to say, is just another sheep from his cookie-cutter generation.

    • @thegoodlydragon7452
      @thegoodlydragon7452 Před 5 lety

      Language changes. Get over it. As telecommunications advances dialects tend to level out.

    • @preston448
      @preston448 Před 5 lety

      fucking get over it.

  • @reptarhouse
    @reptarhouse Před 6 lety +3

    Spucky is the only one I've never heard.

  • @nikhiljoshiPi
    @nikhiljoshiPi Před 3 lety +2

    Okay this is extremely helpful for someone who is visiting friends in Boston and want to sound local

  • @sr.marycatharineperry547

    I grew up in Central Mass and I know all these words. Didn't use them all but they were common. My mom said tonic! You forgot Bulkie!

  • @rofflesufunny
    @rofflesufunny Před 5 lety +2

    also fridgerator was said :)

  • @jimeb2jim256
    @jimeb2jim256 Před 4 lety +1

    I have no one to speak these words with but in my head these are the mother tongue. I still use them. And I still don't read the Globe.

  • @ihittabusta
    @ihittabusta Před rokem

    His old man ain't lying.

  • @ChrisRubeo
    @ChrisRubeo Před 4 lety

    Your father is a National Treasure.

  • @swissnorvanzyl3734
    @swissnorvanzyl3734 Před 4 lety +1

    I am from Europe and we use the world supper all the time.

  • @FiskeMi12
    @FiskeMi12 Před 4 lety +1

    Lmao my parents raised me saying supper so I'm used to saying that and everytime I say it people look so confused 😅

  • @ABALLAM3
    @ABALLAM3 Před 5 lety +3

    "Clicker" is a Boston term? We use that term in my household and I am from Vancouver (Canada).

    • @BrettLeMans
      @BrettLeMans Před 5 lety

      I'm in Hamilton, in our house we said "Converter" for the remote control.

  • @heidimsw
    @heidimsw Před 7 lety +6

    OMG. I totally forgot about the "pah-luh" (parlor). That's an oldie and very Boston.

  • @healyfamily1323
    @healyfamily1323 Před 2 lety

    My Dad lived by Thomas Park in Southie. Your Dad sounds like home to me. Now let’s go have some suppa.

  • @graelent9
    @graelent9 Před rokem

    that last line was Golden .... he is a wickid Masshole fathah!

  • @ShyVioletIsShy
    @ShyVioletIsShy Před 10 lety +2

    I really miss Hoodsies.

  • @jimeb2jim256
    @jimeb2jim256 Před 7 lety +1

    Still use all of those, at least in my head. Spuckie is more the roll than that sandwich - that is a sub.

    • @heidimsw
      @heidimsw Před 7 lety

      I'm in CT and we always say "grinder".

    • @ruthannon7272
      @ruthannon7272 Před 6 lety

      Yep, in RI we say grinder.

  • @balsosnell2064
    @balsosnell2064 Před 3 lety +1

    Must be embarrassing and sad for the old man to have such a, metropolitan, son.

  • @someyoutuber1062
    @someyoutuber1062 Před 10 měsíci

    I love this Accent and his Era 😢 sadly it's almost 2024 now

  • @rsox26
    @rsox26 Před měsícem

    Hey Bill….oh man we need to get in touch as I was trying to call you on both cell and house number and neither were available

  • @AndeePandCompany
    @AndeePandCompany Před 8 lety +6

    The Boston accent will NEVA die! Maybe some of the words or phrases used, but the accent overall is going nowhere. Perhaps a better title would've been 'Fading Words and Phrases of Boston!' My Mother still says "pala" aka parlor and even pronounces the words half and can't funny...whenever she says Can't for a split second I think she's saying a profanity! You know the one...a derogatory term for a female who's being a b*tch, I make fun of her every time she says it! #BostonProud

    • @heidimsw
      @heidimsw Před 7 lety +1

      When a Bostonian prounounces the words "cahhn't" and "bahhth-rm" - with the exaggerated "ahh" sound that's almost British-like, it is most likely said by a Bostonian who was born in the 1950s or earlier. That accent has died out for sure.

    • @sheilahalper7428
      @sheilahalper7428 Před rokem +1

      It has not! My husband say bahthroom and occasionally cahn't. I say Hahf pahst. This "broad a" is typical of a southern English accent and still sticks on in several words.

  • @utube9000
    @utube9000 Před 10 lety +1

    So the rest of the country DOESN'T use the word supper? Is that true?

    • @thekidjfh
      @thekidjfh Před 9 lety +3

      That is pretty much true, yes.

    • @utube9000
      @utube9000 Před 9 lety +4

      James Harrington Wow, that is surprising. I grew up with the word "supper" - I can still hear my mother telling us kids to "be home in time for supper." Interesting enough, I don't think even New Englanders use the word as much any more. In fact, I think even my mother would now say "be home in time for dinner." I suspect that years of sharing a national mass media experience may be homogenizing the nation's language.

    • @ryankennedy9268
      @ryankennedy9268 Před 9 lety +1

      I'm from western Canada, 34 years old. I always say supper. I'm pretty sure everyone else around here does too.

    • @edwardmiessner6502
      @edwardmiessner6502 Před 5 lety +2

      When I moved down here to New Orleans, I found out the locals called lunch, dinner, and dinner, supper.

    • @BrettLeMans
      @BrettLeMans Před 5 lety

      @@ryankennedy9268 - I'm from Hamilton, jokes aside - if you were on the poor side, "Supper" - and rich "Dinner".

  • @genomic_
    @genomic_ Před 6 měsíci

    Overalls are dungarees outside the USA

  • @edwardmiessner6502
    @edwardmiessner6502 Před 5 lety

    Sad to see that both the accent and the dialect are dying out. It would be sad indeed if every place had the same vocabulary and manner of speaking: Standard American English.

  • @admiralflynn895
    @admiralflynn895 Před 10 lety

    Oh how I miss Hoodise Cups.

  • @milkman3797
    @milkman3797 Před 6 lety

    I know north carolinians use hamburger as ground beef as well

  • @JD-eq1gk
    @JD-eq1gk Před 3 lety

    Love Billy, Globe still sucks. Herald 100%

  • @timguillory6339
    @timguillory6339 Před 3 lety

    I’m only 39 and knew all of these and use most of them haha. He didn’t even get into regional bowling dialect, who knows what a half Worcester is?

  • @tc2334
    @tc2334 Před 5 lety

    I think referring to all soda as just “coke” is more a Georgia (perhaps parts of Alabama, Mississippi, or Tennessee too?) thing than it is a southern thing. The only people I know who call all soda coke are from Georgia and I was born and raised in the south.

    • @LostCause36
      @LostCause36 Před 4 lety

      Trent Campbell totally! I’m from Georgia and lived 13 years in Indiana, and many in the south refer to most sodas as “Coke”.
      My wife (who is from Indie) calls it all “pop”.
      My dad on the other hand, (who is born, bred Ga boy) calls it “sodie pop”.

  • @webwarren
    @webwarren Před 10 lety +1

    Been over 30 years since I lived in Cambridge. Except in the Boston area, "tonic" means "tonic water" or "quinine water", a bitter carbonated beverage used only for mixed drinks. As I recall, a proper frappe is much thicker than a milkshake, though not quite as thick (and a lot more "real") than a Wendy's Frosty.

    • @suemcgreevey8852
      @suemcgreevey8852 Před 10 lety +1

      In Boston a frappe is thicker than a milkshake, which is just and syrup whipped up until it's frothy. But what the rest of the country calls a milkshake -- milk, syrup and ice cream -- is called a frappe in Boston and other parts of eastern Mass.

    • @AintSkeerdNWO
      @AintSkeerdNWO Před 9 lety +2

      There's no ice cream in a milkshake from an old school RI or Mass luncheonette, also called a "spa" for some reason.

    • @chrisrobarge8034
      @chrisrobarge8034 Před 9 lety

      Yeah, a traditional New England frappe is thicker than a New England milkshake, but only in that a milkshake has no ice cream and is literally what it says: Milk and flavor syrup, shaken. A frappe is what most other places in the country would refer to as a milkshake, but while we have both in MA they're very different things.

  • @jhh162
    @jhh162 Před 8 lety

    Too funny

  • @noahgoyette467
    @noahgoyette467 Před 4 lety

    Hoodsies! Does he Tri-Sum though.

  • @judevenalian5008
    @judevenalian5008 Před 4 lety

    Nah brah if you ask for a tonic anywhere they will bring you tonic water. That's a soda, cola, pop, soda-pop, Pepsi.

  • @kevintoomey4527
    @kevintoomey4527 Před 10 lety

    Billy..ya shoulda asked your dad @goin down to joe &nemo's for"one dog allaround" or up maes for "a honeydipped".. or down the pbl for "a boila makah"

  • @georgethomas276
    @georgethomas276 Před rokem

    Shows how much so-called "experts" know. These have not disappeared. Many people in New England, especially eastern MA and RI, use these terms daily.

  • @kevintoomey4527
    @kevintoomey4527 Před 10 lety

    Billy..ya shoulda asked your dad @goin down to joe &nemo's for"one dog allaround" or up maes for "a honeydipped".. or down the pbl for "a boila makah"