ex. (adverb?) That boy is just eat up with stupid, bless his heart.
ex. (adverb?) She is eat up with meanness. She don't never say nothin' good about nobody.
Eat up is something you use when the person you are talking about is basically just inundated with whatever affliction you put after it. You can also get eat up with mosquitoes or ticks, but for the most part being eat up is how you diagnose someone elses shortcomings.
Monday, April 11, 2011
Wednesday, April 6, 2011
A rant about cooking and food and other slightly related things
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Food is just too easy. We have everything served to us as we ask for it nowadays. Fast food, television, music, nearly everything we used to have to go out and buy that took time and effort to prepare for is now ready for us to consume, throw out or toss aside. If my dad wanted music he had to go to a record store. Not only that but he had to go into town for it! If you want fried chicken KFC can have a bucket ready for you in minutes. No need to marinate, batter or fry your own.
Labels:
cooking,
from the author,
random,
rant
Monday, April 4, 2011
Southern Word of the Week - Hissy Fit
Hissy fit: a temper tantrum.
(n.) Nadene is gonna throw a hissy fit when she finds out you got bleach spots on her new dress
(n.) That kid laid down in the floor of the T G & Y and had a hissy fit like you've never seen!
Kids often throw hissy fits, and often it applies to adults that become unreasonable when faced with a certain set of facts. There is a time and a place for hissy fits, but they occur far more frequently than they should. You can also just have a hissy, which is practically the same.
(n.) Nadene is gonna throw a hissy fit when she finds out you got bleach spots on her new dress
(n.) That kid laid down in the floor of the T G & Y and had a hissy fit like you've never seen!
Kids often throw hissy fits, and often it applies to adults that become unreasonable when faced with a certain set of facts. There is a time and a place for hissy fits, but they occur far more frequently than they should. You can also just have a hissy, which is practically the same.
Labels:
word
Friday, April 1, 2011
Southern Word of the Week - Tag
The registration plate for your automobile
(n.) Did you go to the courthouse to get your tags yet?
I asked one guy from New Jersey about his tags once. He didn't know if I was talking about something you wear (i.e. credentials, press pass, etc.), or what. Then I said, "No, a car tag." He still had no idea. He thought he was supposed to put something in the rental car. I explained that it went on the back of a car and he said, "Oh, you mean my plates." I honestly had no idea that anyone would not know what I was talking about when I mentioned a car tag. Just another reminder of how wonderfully different the language is in different regions of the United States.
(n.) Did you go to the courthouse to get your tags yet?
I asked one guy from New Jersey about his tags once. He didn't know if I was talking about something you wear (i.e. credentials, press pass, etc.), or what. Then I said, "No, a car tag." He still had no idea. He thought he was supposed to put something in the rental car. I explained that it went on the back of a car and he said, "Oh, you mean my plates." I honestly had no idea that anyone would not know what I was talking about when I mentioned a car tag. Just another reminder of how wonderfully different the language is in different regions of the United States.
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