Home » Discussion Forum—A Way with Words, a fun radio show and podcast about language

Discussion Forum—A Way with Words, a fun radio show and podcast about language

A Way with Words, a radio show and podcast about language and linguistics.

Discussion Forum (Archived)

Please consider registering
Guest
Forum Scope


Match



Forum Options



Min search length: 3 characters / Max search length: 84 characters
The forums are currently locked and only available for read only access
sp_TopicIcon
How About a Game of Meehonkey? (minicast)
Grant Barrett
San Diego, California
1532 Posts
(Offline)
1
2009/02/16 - 6:20am

In what part of the country would you be likely to hear momicking, meehonkey, and quamish?

Listen here:

[mejsaudio src="http://feeds.waywordradio.org/~r/awwwpodcast/~5/ZZ_yuqwWbf4/090216-AWWW-how-about-a-game-of-meehonkey.mp3"]

Download the MP3 here (1.3 MB).

To be automatically notified when audio is available, subscribe to the podcast using iTunes or another podcatching program, or subscribe to the newsletter.

Time for another linguistic mystery. In what part of the country would you be likely to hear older folks using the following phrases?

"He sure was mommucking his little brother."

And: "Why, those kids used to play meehonkey every afternoon!"

And: "Ohhhhhhh, I was quamished in the stomach."

Give up? The place you're likely to hear the words mommucking, meehonkey, and quamished is called Ocracoke. It's just off the North Carolina coast -- one of the Outer Banks barrier islands.

Settled by the British in the early 1700s, Ocracoke's small, relatively isolated community developed its own distinctive dialect. One of the dialect's most striking features is its pronunciation. In the so-called "Ocracoke brogue," the expression "high tide" sounds more like "hoi toid."

On the island, you'll also hear some words that you won't find in many other places. Mommuck means to "harass" or "bother." Quamish means "queasy." And old-timers on Ocracoke remember playing the island's special version of hide-and-seek. They call it meehonkey.

You can hear some audio clips of Outer Banks English from the North Carolina State's Language and Linguistics Program.

And for a great introduction to the topic, check out Hoi Toide on the Outer Banks, by linguists Walt Wolfram and Natalie Schilling-Estes.

And here you'll find video of O'cokers, as they call themselves, in conversation.

What regional expressions have caught your ear lately? Email us at words@waywordradio.org.

Forum Timezone: UTC -7
Show Stats
Administrators:
Martha Barnette
Grant Barrett
Moderators:
Grant Barrett
Top Posters:
Newest Members:
A Conversation with Dr Astein Osei
Forum Stats:
Groups: 1
Forums: 1
Topics: 3647
Posts: 18912

 

Member Stats:
Guest Posters: 618
Members: 1268
Moderators: 1
Admins: 2
Most Users Ever Online: 1147
Currently Online:
Guest(s) 83
Currently Browsing this Page:
1 Guest(s)

Recent posts