" (Tenny 1998-page 591) She also states that there is no prohibition on verbal passives for non-agentive psych verbs produced by universal grammar principles, but English verbal passives are more felicitous as the verb becomes more eventive.
By speaking in a more verbally passive style, Pittsburghers are quite distinct in their word usage. Pittsburghese includes words that may or may not be recognized in other locales or by people traveling to or through Pittsburgh. Words such as; gesundheit, a word used to express goodwill to a person who has sneezed, or gumband, another word for rubberband are examples of Pittsburghese.
Words that are included in Pittsburghese but are also used throughout the area surrounding Pittsburgh (eastern Ohio and northwest West Virginia) includes; berm, which is the shoulder of the road, and grinnie which is more commonly known as a chipmunk.
Many of the words used in Pittsburghese concern types of foods. Two examples are; golumpki, which are known in other areas as 'a pig in a blanket' (a hot dog wrapped in a biscuit) and butterbread, which is exactly as it sounds, bread that is buttered. Other examples of Pittsburghese as it pertains to foodstuffs are; dippy, which means any food that you can use to dip in (ie; coffee, gravy, eggs etc.) and cruds or crudded milk, which is cottage cheese.
Many of the Scot-Irish that immigrated to the Pittsburgh area not only brought their own unique pronunciation of the English language, but brought diverse and tasty foodstuffs with them as well. Pittsburghese reflects these foods and ties the food and language together and to the area. It is rumored that during the Depression era immigrants to the Pittsburgh area brought with them city chicken, which is scraps of pork or chicken fashioned into a make-shift drumstick. Other words for food found in Pittsburghese includes; chipped ham, very thinly sliced ham for sandwiches and a hoagie, a sandwich sometimes referred to as a sub-or a submarine sandwich. Interested individuals can also sample pierogies, a filled, and usually boiled dumpling, or a kolbassi, another word for sausage, or even jumbo, which is what Pittsburghers call bologna lunchmeat. One of the easiest ways that a person can tell if they are being talked to by a Pittsburgher is when they say "yinz" meaning, of course, you all, or all of you. Individuals from the south may say "yall" but Pittsburghers will not recognize it, since "yinz" is their correct way of saying it.
Other word usage common to Pittsburghese includes; nebby or neb-nosed, meaning that a person is nosy, or slippy which is another way of saying slippery. It is not only the words used that defines Pittsburghese, but the way common words are replaced as well. Oftentimes, Pittsburghers will use short phrases such as "n'at" which is sometimes used to say "you know what I mean, even without me saying it." or, they will reverse the meaning of 'leave, let'. An example of this would be 'leave me go now," or "let the flower vase on the table." Most dialects turn these two words around in their usage.
William Labov conducted a telephone survey that was published in 2006 by Mouton deGuyter that explained many of the idiosyncrasies of many dialects and in particular "Pittsburghese." The sounds of many of the words associated with Pittsburghese were explained by long-term residents of Pittsburgh during the survey. The study broke down the dialect primarily based on the / ay / vs. The / aw / sound and particularly the / ah / replacing the / ow/. An example of this is dahtahn replacing downtown.
Explaining how the Pittsburgh dialect retained its Scots-Irish originality but was accepted into modern day usage as well, Andrus suggests "that social and geographical mobility during the latter half of the twentieth century has played a crucial role in the process." (Andrus pg 79) Initially Pittsburghese was likely to be used to distinguish between social classes.
With the huge influx of immigrants at the turn of the 20th century and the general acceptance by the media of the dialect, it has morphed into something much more concrete and acceptable.
Other experts agree with Andrus, including Barbara Johnstown, a noted expert on Pittsburghese. She says that other sources that influence the way Pittsburghers talk includes the fact that Germans made up a large part of the earliest European population of western Pennsylvania and cites words such as 'gesundheit' and 'sauerkraut' as proof that many of those words still survive in Pittsburghese to this day.
Johnstown agrees with Andrus concerning the...
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