OMG! I have had some fantastic meals in northern regions! Regional recipes may be different, but its all good IMO
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OMG! I have had some fantastic meals in northern regions! Regional recipes may be different, but its all good IMO
I take GREAT offense to the stereotype that Northerners "just can't cook"--Which is absolutely ridiculous. Holy cow! That is just sooooo wrong!![]()
I feel like saying--Have you ever eaten Up North?
Now--Don't get me wrong, The South is to die for as far as fried chicken and pies. I swear, I could NEVER get fried chicken to taste as good as I have had Down South. Can you see my mouth watering?![]()
But, us ignorant fools Up North have some awesome chow too!Cheese Steaks, halushki, beelines, FANTASTIC pizza and Chinese, don't forget our amazing sushi chefs and the Thai Food too. I could go on and on. Yum!
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More than enough, I have witnessed a DIS Southern Folk knock us as far as the food We eat. Hey--I admit--Ya'll have some great foods too! But give us a break![]()
I'm a yankee who moved south so I am what they call a damn yankee.
I have no problem being called a yankee (and believe it or not I have lived here for 32 years & am still referred to as a yankee.) As long as they leave off the "loud mouthed yankee", I'm OK with it. I do not want to be know as a loud mouthed anything.
I think what makes the difference is when people move North or South, are they happy? If so, it is all good--food, drivers, pace of life etc. If they are not happy, everything is wrong with the region.
And where I moved to 32 years ago was a small, rural area of east TN. If they did not like you, they burnt your house down. (Honest) If they wanted to scare you out of town, they'd tantalize you (poison your outdoor pets--mean things like that! Honest!) and if you crossed them or one of their 4th cousins removed, they'd slit your throat or shoot you with their shot gun--Honest, again!
And most of the time, they'd get away with it because nobody ratted each other out and if they did, they were next.
Luckily, we didn't make anybody mad.
Nowadays it is better but, if you go backwoods enough, it is still pretty rough.
Well doncha just learn something every single day on the DIS?!I never knew "Yankee" was a derisive term. Living here in my little southern enclave all my life, I've always heard and used (ocassionally) the term as a value-neutral word for people from the NorthEast. I always figured because of -for example -the existence of the New York Yankees baseball team that the word was not insulting. In my mind, the term "Yankee" would be analogous to "Southerner".
Oh... another thing I learned on this thread. Someone posted that "y'all" is a singular term (as opposed to the plural "all y'all"). In the vernacular of piedmont NC, the word y'all is both singular and plural.
For the record, as a lifelong southerner it just does not bother me when people move here from other regions or from other countries.I can't recall a time when it aggravates me to hear someone talk about how things were up North, out West, or back in Afghanistan. I just chalk it up to a bit of homesickness. The bottom line is NC is a fabulous place to live, and I totally get why people are flocking here. I say
... and I won't even call people Yankees anymore if they are sensitive about that term.
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People in the South are kinder. That is just the way it is, there is a "family" type feel, if you will, in the South.
I really have only been called a yankee from southerners and it is derogatory to me. So ya'll can stop calling me that any time now. Unless you want me to call you a Redneck.
Now the "bless your heart" thing is an insult which many southern women have perfected, but to honest, I don't hear it that much anymore either.
2007 World Champs![]()
Main Entry: red·neck
Pronunciation: 'red-"nek
Function: noun
1 sometimes disparaging : a white member of the Southern rural laboring class
2 often disparaging : a person whose behavior and opinions are similar to those attributed to rednecks
Now the "bless your heart" thing is an insult which many southern women have perfected, but to honest, I don't hear it that much anymore either.