It's time for this month's Appalachian Vocabulary Test-take it and see how you do.
- Acrost
- Abide
- Age
- Alkyhol
- Arrowy
- Acrost: across. "He lives just acrost the bridge below Clay's."
- Abide: to endure; to put up with. "I will not abide with anyone acting like that in my house, I don't care who they are!"
- Age: be or become old. "Mrs. Beavers fell and broke her ankle. I'm afraid since she's up in age it'll be hard for her to get over it."
- Alkyhol: alcohol. "Once he started drinking that ole alkyhol he just went plum crazy. Weren't nobody could do nothing with him from then on."
- Arrowy: arrow. "They've got a arrowy painted on the road showing you were to turn off now. I reckeon they think people can't do nothing by themselves."
I hear 1-3 on a regular basis in my area of Appalachia, and I hear older folks-like Granny and Pap say #4-but not people my age or younger. The alkyhol usage will mostly likely be lost once Pap and Granny's generation are gone-that train of thought reminded me of #5.
Back in the day-before I ever laid eyes on The Deer Hunter, I went on a date with a boy from way down in the lower portion of Cherokee County. We went bowling. He was trying to explain the art of bowling to me-when he told me to watch for the 'arrowy'. I said "Watch for what?", he said "The arrowy." After a few times of that I finally figured out he was telling me to watch for the arrow. He sorta blushed and told me "All his family said arrowy for arrow." I told him not to worry my family talked funny too.
So how did you do on the test?
Tipper








Have heard and used all but #5...it's new to me.
Posted by: Luann | October 13, 2012 at 01:09 PM
I'm familiar with all of them except arrowy.
Posted by: susie swanson | October 11, 2012 at 12:44 PM
Knew all but #5; I rarely hear them anymore since we're getting to be the old folks.
Posted by: Charlotte | October 10, 2012 at 01:31 PM
Heard them all, except #5, but I've heard 'bow 'n R' a lot. Not so much #4, except in jest.More often, I've heard, 'He was awful bad t' get 'im a drank o'whiskey.'
Posted by: Charline | October 10, 2012 at 12:52 AM
Four out of five for me too Tipper.
Posted by: Bobby C | October 09, 2012 at 10:34 PM
Alkyhol is alive & well in my neck of the woods-everyone says it, so hopefully it will live on. I've always said "air" for arrow, as in bow & air. Don't ask why, don't know.
Posted by: Suzi Phillips | October 09, 2012 at 10:21 PM
Know and have used all but #5, Can understand it as an adjective, but how does it get to be a noun? Pronounced arry?
Posted by: Judy Mincey | October 09, 2012 at 09:42 PM
I grew up in WV, moved away, and returned 30 years later. I've lost most of my WV accent. I plead guilty to saying across with a t, and my sister uses the expression "getting up in age". What's even worse is that I just now realized that I put the t on across!!
Posted by: Wind Dance | October 09, 2012 at 08:30 PM
I seen one of them arrowy things on a sign in the middle of the 4-lane. It wasn't a straight arrowy, it kinda curved all the way arround and pointed back the other way. I thought it meant refresh like up at the top of this tv thingy here, so I shut off the truck and got out and refreshed myself. MISTAKE!! Two carloads of Police showed up and put me in cuffs. I think the magistrate couldn't put me in jail cause he couldn't quit laughing.
Posted by: A R Rowe | October 09, 2012 at 07:45 PM
Tipper,
I've heard and used them all but
arrowy. That one I ain't ever
heard. You know, the Good Lord
watches over youngin's, cause when
my brother and I was little, we
played Cowboys and Indians. One day I got a double holster cap gun
and loaded with caps. I practiced
my draw a lot and my brother jumped out from behind some rocks
and I let him have it...both of
'em. Only trouble is as he was
fallin' he got off his arrow and
it hit me right between the eyes.
...Ken
Posted by: Ken | October 09, 2012 at 04:53 PM
I don't remember ever hearing "arrowy", but I knew all the others well.
Posted by: Mike McLain | October 09, 2012 at 04:49 PM
Lonnie-You might want to stay away from the lower end of the county too. There might be somebody down that way that can read.
Posted by: R U Reddy | October 09, 2012 at 04:03 PM
Arrowy got me. The rest, I'm real comfortable with.
Posted by: Carol Isler | October 09, 2012 at 03:34 PM
All of them but "arrowy. You can run into all kinds of strange things in the lower end of the county! I'm glad you didn't hang around down there too long.
Posted by: Lonnie Dockery | October 09, 2012 at 02:57 PM
OK now I am really peed off. I just googled acrost and it is actually a word but some say it is not. They might want to refer to my second husband who said he fell in love with me because I spoke the Kings English. He by the way was English.
Posted by: Sandy | October 09, 2012 at 12:40 PM
Have sometimes heard "acrost" shortened to "'crost", as in, "The old cow's 'crost the crick".
Posted by: Bob Aufdemberge | October 09, 2012 at 11:55 AM
I have never heard arrowy used here in the northern foothills, but my self-proclaimed Pennsylvania Hillbilly grandmother used to say area as "arie" and my neighbor lady and I (we address each other as, "You ignernt old hillbilly you!") do 'borry' (borrow) things back and forth.
Posted by: Ethel | October 09, 2012 at 11:22 AM
I have heard all but # 5.
Posted by: Ron Banks | October 09, 2012 at 11:16 AM
Tipper,
Arrowy..not so much...but Sandys reference by Milton, "Sharp sleet of arrowy showers", flat explains the term and where our ancestors come by it...Just sounds like the right place for the word "arrowy"..
I know. like a lot of the rest of the commentors arrow as R...a'liken to bow and R..
Albeit, I don't hunt with a bow and R...mainly field glasses...speaking of which...
I got my first glimpse of a Rose breasted Grossbeak on the our bird feeder. He stayed around a while chowing down on Sunflower seeds...I know I was tickled rose, uhhh, pink!..
Thanks Tipper wonderful post as always, I learnt somethin' new!
Posted by: B. ruth | October 09, 2012 at 09:24 AM
I knew of all of them, didn't know that 2 & 3 were anything out of the norm though.
Posted by: Lanny | October 09, 2012 at 09:16 AM
I've never heard arrowy. I bet Mom would have pronounced it that way as she loved to add ie and y on the end of words. We made our own bow and r o when we played cowboys and Indians.
Posted by: Shirla | October 09, 2012 at 09:16 AM
I too have heard and used all but #5, must be a Culberson thang. I was amused when I read your comment that the use of alkyhol would stop when Granny & Pap's generation are gone. It kind of startled me until I realized you were referring to the word and not the Corn Squeezings.
Posted by: Bill Burnett | October 09, 2012 at 09:07 AM
I think in Appalachia we have our own way of pronouncing words, probably from our Anglo-Saxon English roots. So far as "arrowy" is concerned, we used it to mean somewhat flighty and undependable, as "Her actions were plumb arrowy; you just can't depend on what she's going to do!"
So far as hearing "arrowy" to indicate "arrows"--I did not hear that in the section of N. Ga. where I grew up.
Posted by: Ethelene Jones | October 09, 2012 at 09:04 AM
WE use all of them but 5. Never heard that one. Barbara Gantt
Posted by: barbara Gantt | October 09, 2012 at 08:49 AM
Being a city girl, I don't remember hearing those words pronounced as such, but I was able to figure them out as I looked at them. Again, sometimes words just are where you live and grow up. This was good learning! Thanks!
Posted by: dolores barton | October 09, 2012 at 08:43 AM
Tipper, I've heard all those words but number 5. I don't ever recall hearing Arrowy. If these words I use abide the most.
I can't help but notice we are back at the beginning with the A's. It feels like another milestone for the Blind Pig! It feels really good.
Posted by: Miss Cindy | October 09, 2012 at 08:41 AM
never heard number five in my world ---- have a great day.
Posted by: Teresa | October 09, 2012 at 08:34 AM
Have heard of all of them but only use 1 & 4.
Posted by: kat | October 09, 2012 at 07:50 AM
All of them were very familiar except for arrowy.
Posted by: Janet Smart | October 09, 2012 at 07:39 AM
I am familiar with the first 4. Like Sandy, #5 we used to call it a bow n R. As a little kid I pronounced it as one word. bownar. I still pronounce it "Aira." It takes too long to say the it accepted way.
Posted by: Ed Ammons | October 09, 2012 at 07:34 AM
Tipper--I'm intimately familiar with all the usages except arrowy. I never heard it, read it, or encountered it until this quiz. Reckon that makes me linguistically ignorant?
Jim Casada
www.jimcasadaoutdoors.com
Posted by: Jim Casada | October 09, 2012 at 07:25 AM
I have heard of all except arrowy. That is a new term. I am having trouble with your site on my tablet and on my daughter's I-pad. At the bottom of the screen a gray line comes up and will not move.
Posted by: Carol | October 09, 2012 at 07:22 AM
I've heard them all too except arrowy,,, and still hear them when I go back honme to Arkansas.
Keep 'em coming Tipper! :)
Posted by: Tom Jones | October 09, 2012 at 07:21 AM
Ar´row`y
a. 1. Consisting of arrows.
How quick they wheeled, and flying, behind them shot
Sharp sleet of arrowy showers.
- Milton.
2. Formed or moving like, or in any respect resembling, an arrow; swift; darting; piercing.
By the blue rushing of the arrowy Rhone.
I LOVE GOOGLE
Posted by: sandy | October 09, 2012 at 07:16 AM
I use 1-3 a lot, 4 is easy to figure out, but 5 was a stumper.
Posted by: Sheryl Paul | October 09, 2012 at 06:48 AM