East Coast Slang?

Sarona-Nalia
East Coast Slang?

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Posted on:
Abr 20, 2008 - 10 39

My character is going to a boarding school. I haven't decided on an exact location yet, but it's definately somewhere in New England along the east coast. What slang words might the characters use? What words would they definately not use?
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ikemikerGlowing Halo
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Posted on:
Abr 20, 2008 - 11 12

The one that I always get flak for is calling a subway sandwhich a "grinder".

Another thing that I had no idea was only an east coast thing is DEVIL DOGS- they are junk food chocolate cakes with creamy filling, they are shaped like a hot dog bun.

Does everyone say "wicked good"?

:) Jen

ms.read
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Posted on:
Abr 27, 2008 - 18 35

we all say wicked good

Generally, if your from the boston/ new england area we don't pronounce our Rs

a pail is really a bucket

ImmortalMusic

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Posted on:
Abr 27, 2008 - 19 16

As a teenager that used to live up there, everything is "legit" and "super sketchy". And everything is "wicked" something... even if it's not "wicked good".

parisgrl23

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Posted on:
Mayo 16, 2008 - 15 37

Like ImmortalMusic said, "legit," "sketchy," and "wicked."

And also "sick" like if something is really cool, it's "sick"

LSL

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Posted on:
Mayo 21, 2008 - 05 52

Keep in mind that Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania has its own slang, and so much of it that it could be considered a dialect in itself.

Unfortunately, most of it is only native to Pittsburgh, and won't be heard/used through much of the East Coast, unless that character was a Pittsburgh resident for many years.

Google "Pittsburghese" and you're sure to find an interesting list of vocabulary and usage.

One thing that probably won't be mentioned in the Pittsburghese lists is the average Pittsburgher's tendency to drop the verb "to be". For example, they wouldn't say that "the lawn needs to be mowed", but rather "the lawn needs mowed."

"Yienz" and "Yunz" are the same word, sort of the Pittsburgh version of "Y'all", but depend on what part of the city or area outside the city you come from. I tend to find "yienz" used more in the southern areas of Pittsburgh and its counties, and "yunz" used more in northern Pittsburgh (but I could be totally wrong on this). Either one is fine to use, but "yienz" is more common overall.

Also, for the most part, only those who live in city itself use the all slang all the time. There is somewhat of a Pittsburgh accent, in which you pronounce "ee"'s like "i"'s (ex. "high heels" pronounced "high hills" or the football team the Steelers pronounced like "Stillers"). Another thing I have noticed is the tendency to prnounce the word "colors" like "kellers".

Those are the basics, as far as vocabulary, I again suggest googling Pittsburghese.

Please keep in mind that these words are very Pittsburgh-specific!!

Animus Wyrmis
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Posted on:
Mayo 21, 2008 - 12 32

Sketch! Chill. And wicked, of course. We eat grinders, not...whatever else you call them. The Sox refer to the Boston team, not the one in Chicago. Clam chowder is white (unless you're from Manhattan, where it's red, or Rhode Island, where you can get it clear).

Other random things..."the city" is usually New York. If the Yankees are playing the Red Sox, people will care. "The Cape" is Cape Cod. Um. No one likes New Jersey (for no real reason).

Also--and, please, take this from a girl who went to boarding school in New England--there's an awful lot of slang-mixing in boarding schools. I picked up y'all, eh, dude, and hella--and then we had our own slang, which was totally incomprehensible to most people outside of the school.

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Mozougly

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Posted on:
Mayo 21, 2008 - 14 59

i grew up in boston and i just want to say to all of you.. MEEEEMOOORIIIIIIESS!!!

man that was a fun time.. and i said all of the above words! CONSTANTLY !

michelle_candice

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Posted on:
Mayo 22, 2008 - 23 16

Ha, this really makes me think about how differently us New Englanders really talk. Course there's the whole dropping of 'R's". And if your goin into Boston, your goin 'in town'. WI agree with everythin else thats been said, but thought I might as well give you a basic run down too

all set - your good to go

bang - a very sharp turn. ie, you bang a left up here. alternative is hang and for less sharp turns

barrel - its a barrel, not a trash can

book it - get the hell outta there, or to run real fast. he booked it outta here when the cops came.

hiv lane - really the hov lane, but most people who work in town call it the hiv lane

bubbler - not a water fountain

bull, bullshit, bs - complete and utter crap. he told me he got a raise, bullshit. or as a verb meaning wicked angry. i was bullshit when i found out i got a ticket

the b's - the bruins

can't get - lovely example of the negative positive we use. ex. lets see if we cant get your car fixed

the cape - cape cod. but nobody who actually lives round here calls it that. its just 'im gin to the cape this weekend'

carriage - grocery cart

celler - basement of a house

regular coffee - coffee with cream and two sugars

cumbie's - cumberland farms a convientant store

decked - dress nicely ex. he looks pretty good all decked out for prom

diesel - wicked wicked good. ex thats some diesel bud

digga - to fall ex he took a digga in front of everybody

directional - the blinkin arrow in the car

dunkies - best coffee shop in the entire world. youll find at least 2 in every town

elastics - rubba bands

frappe - a milkshake or malt or whatever you call it. its ice cream, milk, and flavored syrup mixed together

frickin - the f-bomb when your not in company that you can actually say it

here ya go - what the waitress says when she gives you your food

hoodsie - small cup of ice cream origianlly half chocoate and half vanilla but now comes in otha flavors

hook - anotha word for a sharp turn ex you hook a right up here

hosie - to call dibs ex i hosie the front seat

hot box - a stolen car, or a car with stolen things inside of it

jimmies - chocolate sprinkles. sprinkles are the multicolored ones

kegga - beer party

killa - cool or funny ex did yah see that new movie? it was killa!

milkshake - milk with flavored syrup but no ice cream

na-ah - pronounced nuh-ah, means no way (usually followed by a yeah-huh by whoever your talking to)

nah - no

p-town - the town at the end of the cape. fun place to visit. but stay open minded when yah do.

the packie - package store, booze store ex hold on, i gotta go to the packie for some more coors.

packie run - having to o to the packie. ex be right back, gotta go for a packie run

queer - stupid. also retarded or gay. ex that is so fuckin queer/gay/retarded

raw out - means very cold ex its very raw out today, must be in the teens

the fridge - refrigerator

rotary - a traffic circle. roundabouts are smalls rotaries. the people inside are the ones with the right of way

scoop- to pick someone up ex hey, when the hell you gunna scoop me? ive been waitin for fifteen minutes. or hey, wanna come scoop me, im boored.

so dont i - notha exmple of a negative positive. ex. i love teh sox! so dont i!

suppa - dinner

uey - teh favotire turn of most new englanders, a u turn

wanna go? - askin someone if they wanna fight ex well if thats how it is, wanna go? cmon, lets settle it and take it outside

thats bout it really

a new one thats been poppin up is grime

it means well i dont know how to exaplain it really, but if somebody ahd been all cool with you and then started sayin shit to people behind your back, he'd be grime ex man, you see that kid? he's mad grime. or thats grimee

mad has also been gettin popula. used instead of wicked ex im mad tired

ill is being used as wicked or cool. ex that show last night as ill

okay im really done this time

AKA_the_Centimetre
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Posted on:
Mayo 23, 2008 - 03 22

If you want to write in vernacular, the heavy Boston accent removes all Rs - so Harvard Square would be pronouned "Hahvahd Squayah." Try listening to some CarTalk if you want more accent stuff!

As for slang, Boston is "Beantown", Cape Cod is always "The Cape." And we do say "wicked" a lot. If you are in Boston, insult the NY Yankees a lot. :)

Also, if you're going for Maine, they have a slightly softer accent, but it still removes most of the Rs... and older people use the term "a-yuh" a lot - it's a sort of local way of dragging out the word "yes" or "yup."

Les.Oiseaux.Bleus
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Posted on:
Mayo 24, 2008 - 14 14

Well I'm from the East Coast and at my school we have suddenly picked acronyms and abbreviated words and turned them into words.

Like "obv" means "obviously."
Also, "B T Dubs" which is abbreviated from "B T W" which means "by the way."
As a joke we often say "ROFLed on the floor." which actually means "Rolled On the Floor Laughing on the floor."

Also, here on Long Island, we pronounce all of our Rs. Although most people say "oh my gawd" instead of oh my god. And it's usually one long word. Omigawd.

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nekokuroban

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Posted on:
Mayo 25, 2008 - 00 41

I'm about more southern than you'd like; I'm from the Baltimore/Washington D.C./Annapolis suburban area. I'd like to second "sketchy," (though it's sometimes "sketch," as in, "I had to edit that article to make the chick sound less sketchy, when really that whole exchange was the most sketch thing ever.") as well as "obvi."

Yoshik
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Posted on:
Mayo 25, 2008 - 07 58

Yes, drop the Rs, ALL THE TIME. In Rhode Island, you get "bubbla" (bubbler, which sometimes refers to a water fountain, but we teens nowadays use "water fountain"), we have "mad" instead of "wicked" or "very", and people say "OMG" instead of "Oh my god". To describe someone as being good at something, some people say, "He's a beast!", or if someone's doing something well, "He's beasting!" (It can also be used for a girl, of course). Those are mostly from the rougher crowd at my school, though. There's also, "I'm souped" which is psyched, ready, excited, but I haven't heard it often.

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jadedragon

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Posted on:
Jul 2, 2008 - 19 03

Thanks Michelle! With your list especially, I can now have one of my secondary characters relocate from "The Cape" area. He can complain about the south for not having "hoodsies" and cumbies and dunkies and he can really say we don't use our directionals (car blinkers) down here. He will be so surprised to find out we can't have cellars because they will fill with water! I needed these words for my character!

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teenwriterNJ

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Posted on:
Jul 2, 2008 - 19 27

Yoshik wrote:
Yes, drop the Rs, ALL THE TIME. In Rhode Island, you get "bubbla" (bubbler, which sometimes refers to a water fountain, but we teens nowadays use "water fountain"), we have "mad" instead of "wicked" or "very", and people say "OMG" instead of "Oh my god". To describe someone as being good at something, some people say, "He's a beast!", or if someone's doing something well, "He's beasting!" (It can also be used for a girl, of course). Those are mostly from the rougher crowd at my school, though. There's also, "I'm souped" which is psyched, ready, excited, but I haven't heard it often.

haha I'm from NJ and we use a lot of those words like OMG, beast, souped, madd--i used that a lot
theres a couple of others that are really common, too

imuneekru

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Posted on:
Jul 3, 2008 - 13 55

Some eastern Philadelphia / Mostly New Jersey - isms:

Dude
Freakin' (all-purpose adjective)
sweet (awesome, great)
skanky (lewd, immoral, and otherwise nasty)
shafted (ostracized or deliberately given the short stick)
busted (ugly)
butt (ugly, as in "whoa, that chick is butt!")
'Dem English (Pennsylvania motorists whose attention is elsewhere - actually an allusion to supposed Amish xenophobia)

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