Yankee or Dixie?

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oh Archie

Boy the way Glenn Miller played
Songs that made the hit parade
Guy like like us we had it made
Those were the days!

Hero, submarine, grinder make up yer freakin mind!

Hey ding-bat, Edith get me a "san-wich" will ya ha?
 
47% (Yankee). Barely into the Yankee category.

Hard to believe....and, y'know, I never got the whole "tennis shoe" thing!
 
78% Dixie, and no I ain't no chick!!!

Jon, y'all'd be welcome with open arms back here!!! And btw, I only knew the term fedder roads all the time I grew up in Houston. Umm, could be because the first freeway was built when I was a yungun, knee-high to a grasshopper.
 
37% Yankee. My three years down in Fort Lauderdale thankfully didn't effect my Yankeeness as Fort Lauderdale is a suburb of New York City anyway.
 
That explains everything

66% Dixie.

Well, Munich is in the South of Bavaria in the south of Germany...
Here's what other Germans (and Europeans) say about Bavaria, my "State" here in Germany:

It isn't the biggest but thinks it is.
It was once an independent country and still acts like it was.
The accent is a drawl 'cause the folks here are plum too lazy to speak properly.

And this is what the Bavarians tell the rest of Germany (and the world):
Our everything is the biggest.
We have the best culture.
Our universities are the best.
Our sport's teams are the best.
We always know better.
Our neighbors to the South are shiftless and lazy but good waiters.
Our politicians have twice thrown the constitution out of the window in the name of political expediency (after the war).
We were the last to write the death penalty out of the consitution...

Well, ah'll be...sure does sound famil'r, don' it?
 
Re: Yankee/Dixie

I'm 66% Dixie, I thought I would be higher. When I moved
from the rural area to the big city and went to college, I lost some of my bad slang. It would be interesting to hear from our friends from the UK and Australia where proper English is the rule.
 
John,

I hate to burst your bubble, but neither the Australians nor the folks in the UK speak English any better than the US-Americans do.

Having travelled extensively, I would venture to say that more folks in the US speak and write English well than do the vast majority of the English.

One thing is true of these other English speaking countries: They tend to prefer their elected leaders to be literate and able to use the language effectively. I have heard debates in Australia which were so well formulated one might almost believe the politicians actually meant what they were saying.
 

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