Your Favorite Southern Sayings
I just love all of our SouthernSayings and talking about them never seems to get old. A few times now I’ve asked people to tell me their favorites on our Facebook page and that page lights up with hundreds of contributions, everyone tickled to get to talk about them and see what quirky sayings others have to contribute as we all walk down memory lane. So today I want to start that conversation on this post as a fun way of celebrating our silly Southern sayings and learning a few new ones we might want to work into our vocabulary.
Katy Rose’s shirt in that photo is from Sweet Tea T Shirts and demonstrates wearing one of their shirts, that demonstrates the Southern pronunciation of “Cat”. Isn’t it precious? ~giggles~
They’ve got a whole passel of t shirts with different sayings such as “Ah’m bout to burn up!” or another one of my favorites “Who’s pluckin’ this chicken, you or me?”.
So I’m gonna step aside here and let y’all have at it. Leave your favorite Southern Saying below and if’n ya see one that don’t make no sense feel fre to ask what it means by replying to it. This hyar is gonna end up being a Southernisms 101 of sorts and we’re all gonna have fun with it! I can’t wait to see what you have to offer!
I want to start by saying YES, Bless your heart CAN be a good thing. In fact, I’ve heard it used more often than not in situations where it really is a good thing. If someone is going through a rough time or suffers a loss, you’d hug them and say “Bless your heart” as a show of compassion.
Another catch-all phrase you are likely to hear before too long in the South is ‘Lord have mercy’ in any of many different enunciations; it’s a hugely versatile term that can mean nearly anything if you give it the right inflection. ‘Butter my biscuit’ is a close runner up; although it is generally used to impart surprise, you can get a lot of mileage out of it for other purposes as well.
Besides that, you guys have laid down a proper fusilade of responses, enough to warm any Southerner’s heart. It’s people like you that make me proud to live past the Mason-Dixon line, and I hope that you stay that way for good and always.
I’ve been trawling through some of the responses here and there’s turns of phrase that I thought had been forgotten; shucks, there’s even some I didn’t know myself. Let’s see what kind of Southern culture you folks wanted to bring to the world!
Ain’t nothing more Southern than a good old stick-shift pickup, so I think that I’ll give you a few automotive selections before anything else. For instance, that thing you push to get the gas going is called a footfeed, and the dimwit that just passed you illegally is riding a hawg or Harley, not a motorcycle.
You may have seen people doing some foolish things on Southern country roads – that;s fine, they can stick their arm out the car window as long as they don’t cry when it gets knocked off. If they do, then to heck with them and the horse they rode in on.
It takes someone dumb as the turnip truck they fell off of not to know that Southerners are farmers by breeding, training, and choice, and that means that you’re going to see a ton of agricultural terms thrown around in Southern slang. Someone might be stubborn as a mule, working like a horse, or plain old dog-tired after a long day.
If you need to work out a deal, it might be time to squat down on the horse blankets and hammer out all the bits that are finer than a frog’s hair; if you’ve got an idea of how to do something, you’ll probably have a bee in your bonnet about it. A little birdie might ell you something you would otherwise not know, and if you’re doing something you’re good at, you’re either holding back or going hog wild.
Speaking of farming, you’ll need some soil to plow, and real Southern parlance knows just wher to come by it – it’s not uncommon to hear that if dumb were dirt, a particularly dull individual would be an acre or two. Feel free to adjust the size of the field to suit the individual in question; some people need more than just an acre to really get your point.
Not for nothing is the South called the Bible Belt; hang out there long enough and you are almost ertain to hear a fair amount of religious terminology. You’ve already met ‘bless your heart’ and ‘lord have mercy’; other common themes include ‘on God’ to indicate commitment, ‘Good lord willing and the creek don’t rise’ to limit that commitment, and ‘from your mouth to God’s ears’ to say you hope you will be able to fulfil that commitment nonetheless.
When people get angry, some of them throw a ‘hissy fit’; others will simply mutter ‘fiddlesticks’ and move on. If you’ve really offended someone, chances are they’re fit to be tied; if so, just telling them not to get their britches in a wad is probably not going to cut it.
Someone who is crazy can be said to have gone off their rocker, or possibly have gone around the bend; no telling what they’re fixing to do. You might need to call the law on them if they get too rowdy; don’t be afraid to give the station boys a ring, even if the miscreant is only knee high to a grasshopper.
There’s plenty of Southern folks who think they’re tough, and lots of northern types that say some mighty hurtful things about their countrymen. The best advice the South has for either one tends to be that i you’re going to be stupid, you’d better be tough as well.
Of course, we wouldn’t be doing justice to the South if we didn’t mention it’s unique cuisine – the Southern kitchen is so important to its culture that some things have made their way from the kitchen range into normal conversations. If someone is starving to death in the dining room, you might want to brew them up something hot or give them a little something to tide them over.
If it’s hot out, don’t forget to offer them some coke – that’s any fizzy drink, not just the brand-name Coca-Cola. If you’re out in the fridge, remember to check in your cellar before heading off to buy more.
Family is important in the South too; as they say, Southern blood runs deep. You’ll be hard put to find even a single Southerner who can’t recall their grandparents asking for ‘some sugar’ – that’s a kiss, for you northern folks – and there’s plenty of effort that goes into making sure that kids get brought up right.
People don’t go broke much in the South – they get skint instead. Most likely they let themselves get talked into doing things for a Yankee dime – that’s also a kiss, just by the by, and don’t let anyone tell you different.
You can’t very well end a piece about Southern talk without mentioning what has become, arguably, the most iconic piece of Bible Belt parlance – y’all. In the same way, many other contractions and accents have become part and parcel of the way the South speaks, and if that ain’t true, then grits ain’t groceries and eggs ain’t poultry.
That’s just a small selection of all the great Southern idioms that you guys have poured into this page. If y’all think I missed something, feel free to put into the comments section; if you see a term there that no one seems to understand, please, share your Southern pride and define it for us. Catch you later, hun – bye now!
“You think I don’t have culture just because I’m from down in Georgia. Believe me, we’ve got culture there. We’ve always had sushi. We just called it bait.”
~Ben “Cooter” Jones
Jumpier than a long tail cat in a room full of rockers!
How are you feeling today? “Well. I’m finer than frogs hair”
A man at our deer camp used to say( about his own son) He’d rather climb to the top af a tree to tell you a lie, than stand flat on the ground and tell you the truth. They both were qiite the story tellers.
Will Oklahoma sayings be allowed? “Fix” seems to be used differently where I come from. I ask my hubby to please fix me a glass of water since he’s in the kitchen anyway and he’ll say, “Did you break it?” Also, I’m always”…fixin’ to go to town, do you need anything?” My grandma would catch me whistling when I was a little girl and tell me, “A whistling woman and a crowing hen always come to some bad end.” Of course there’s “easy as falling off a log”
Also, back in my old “stomping ground” you can either go “whole hog” or “sit there like a bump on a log” because you need to “fish or cut bait”. Just don’t “go off half cocked” and “fly off the handle” or “get your feathers ruffled” because a good friend is a “scarce as hen’s teeth”. Don’t let your alligator mouth over load hour hummingbird behind” in other words, don’t get “too big for your britches”.
I’ll be outta here in “two shakes of a lambs tail”, I’d be “much obliged” if you’d “hold your horses” and I’ll quit “piddling around” and give you one more piece of advise. “Good fences make good neighbors” so remember to make those fences “horse high, bull strong and hog tight.” I “reckon” I’ll be goin’ now because we “go to bed with the chickens” around here.
@Pat–them ain’t just Okie sayin’s. We sed ’em in southern Indiana, too. I have lived on the Sunnyside of Louisville, KY (aka Lullvull) mosta muh life an’ we had all those Kaintukians movin up here, pollutin are language. We sed evry one of ’em. So ya see, we’s all now a bunch a hillbillies. Only differnse iz I grew up ‘n learned better. Now I kin talk lack a normal American–whatever that iz.
I’m from a tiny town in Northeast GA called Lula. (Pronounced Lu-Lur by many of the elders, lol) I have a TON of sayings but I will try to keep them to a minimum.
Some sayings from my Pa-Paw:
“I’m gonna plow the garden tomorrow good Lord willin’ and the creek don’t rise.” (really I should have left plow the garden as a fill in the blank. haha)
“I’m goin’ to town tomorrow, if I live.”
“Get you a poke to put some maters in.” (poke aka paper bag that was folded ready for reuses)
“No hun, I don’t recollect (Reck-co-leck)”
Sweet memories! I love and miss him dearly and I can hear him say all these things just thinking about it.
My Granny Carlyn was born in Texas and lived her life in Fulton County GA. Granny was always “fixin to” do this or that. Goin over “yonder.” My Grandpa refferred to our life in VA as, “That ain’t hardly south!” When I or one of my 8 cousins got in trouble Granny would say, “Go outside and get me a switch. I’m gonna tan your hide.” As soon as we left, Granny would run and hide so she wouldn’t have to spank us!! Granny made clothes and amazing food for all of us. We still wear our Granny aprons on Thanksgiving while we make her sweet potato soufle, corn bread stuffing and sour dough biscuits. Granny made the best food I have ever eaten.
My grandparents would say, “Hit come up a cloud”, meaning it started to rain. Another expression often heard in the South, when someone is embarrassed, is, “I like to died!” One time a reporter quoted Miss Lillian Carter in the newspaper as saying, “I like to die”. You know the report was not from around here, and people from up yonder were wondering what in the world she meant!
We had quite a bit of rain this year so I came up with this Georgia saying;
“Hey, it rained so much this year that my duck forgot how to walk.”