• @[email protected]
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    214 months ago

    Very true. A sentence is not perfect when there is nothing more to add, but when there is nothing more to take away.

  • @[email protected]
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    4 months ago

    In the American South, it’s the same.

    There’s a comedian, Jeff Foxworthy who does a bit about it.

    A: Djeet chet?

    B: Naw

    A: Y’ont to?

    • @[email protected]
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      84 months ago

      Love that routine.

      Hey’d yeet chet?

      Nawd ju?

      Y’awnt to?

      Aight

      I still use “Sinch y’is” like “sinchyiz up, get me a beer?” (Since you is)

      • @[email protected]
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        24 months ago

        That was my first inclination as well.

        I do think it’s interesting the similarities between the American South accents and the former British colony accents. I saw a documentary once that said there’s an accent from some island in Virginia (or maybe the Carolinas) that is virtually unchanged from the British accent, as was spoken in the 1700s

    • Zagorath
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      4 months ago

      A slightly more recognisable way of writing it would be “d’ya eat yet?” But “d’ya eat” becomes elided even further down to “dyeat”, which can be reanalysed as “jeet”. I’m not really sure what the phonotactics are behind “yet” becoming “chet”, but in this sentence…yeah, it just kinda does.

      edit: wait no I worked out why “chet”. It’s the /t/ at the end of “jeet”. /tj/ becoming /tʃ/ is very common across English.

      edit 2: to be more precise, dy (/dj/) becoming j (/dʒ/) is also yod coalescence. So it’s all about yod coalescence + allision.

    • @SkyezOpen
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      4 months ago

      Did you eat yet

      Didja eatchet

      Jeet chet

  • clif
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    4 months ago

    Similar in the US deep south:

    “Jeet yet?” (Did you eat yet?)

    No

    “Yontoo?” (Do you want to?)

      • clif
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        24 months ago

        Ooo, I forgot about that one.

  • @[email protected]
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    24 months ago

    In England you say “alright” and they say “alright” back, regardless of what’s going on in their life. Nothing more is needed.

  • @Zekas
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    24 months ago

    Can I have an etymology for this though?

    • @SkyezOpen
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      4 months ago

      Did you eat yet

      Didja eatchet

      Jeet chet

  • @TK420
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    24 months ago

    Same in Baltimore

  • teft
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    24 months ago

    In Maine we say Chuptah? instead of “what are you up to?” Truly the language of love.

  • @[email protected]
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    04 months ago

    Are we doing the redditor thing where we pretend every Australian speaks like an eastern states bogan?