Interviewer: Very very bad day, you might come home and you'd say I am just 079: #1 worn out. # Interviewer: #2 so? # And if are there degrees of being tired? 079: Yes. Interviewer: Would you change a term for using it? 079: You might {NW} a slang-ish phrase you use I am just whipped out. {NW} Interviewer: #1 Oh really? {C: laughing} # 079: #2 {NW} # And uh but I'm just worn out I'm early worn out. {NW} Interviewer: Well if you're just normal? 079: I'm just tired. Interviewer: Alright. When someone becomes ill, you would say she? 079: I'd say she's sick. Interviewer: And how, she? 079: Got sick. Interviewer: {D: Because she?} 079: She got sick yesterday, I'd say get sick rather than became mm-hmm. Interviewer: And how about a cold? He? 079: Caught cold. {NW} Interviewer: Every time we get to that point I start 079: #1 {D: Yeah you can't just cough through it no} # Interviewer: #2 {D: worrying} # Mm. What I just did was a? 079: Cough. {NS} Interviewer: Maybe that was it, 079: #1 Mm-hmm. # Interviewer: #2 {D:five suggestion.} # If you have a cold, sometimes you can't talk very well, you have a raspy sound, you are?` 079: Hoarse. Interviewer: We're talking about the word take. I don't like to 079: #1 {D: take} # Interviewer: #2 medicine # 079: You want me to say take took take is that what you want? {C: laughing} Interviewer: #1 {X} # 079: #2 {NW} # Interviewer: I'll just give you the word 079: #1 {NW} # Interviewer: #2 {D: you can use} # A person who doesn't hear very well is? 079: Deaf. Interviewer: Another word for a perspiration is? 079: Sweat. {C: laughing} Interviewer: Alright. Which would you use more 079: #1 Perspiration. # Interviewer: #2 often? # A kind of um 079: #1 Now # Interviewer: #2 sore # 079: who you listen if you hear uh car people come and ring the doorbell, it sounds for it and the doorbell rings way back in the back and we may not hear it. Maybe I ought to just {D: look out again.} {X} Interviewer: Again. Uh a kind of sore that's Very very painful. {C: distorted} It's very painful is a 079: Boil. {C: distorted} Interviewer: Mm-hmm. Now would you tell me what how you think of this as looking? 079: Red and inflamed and swollen and sometimes with puss in it. We say it has a core, sometimes a carbuncle has a core. Interviewer: Is it different from a carbuncle? 079: Yes, a carbuncle is in my explanation is a more serious uh infection than a boil It's more stubborn and harder to get rid of. Interviewer: Are there any other synonyms you'd use for boil? 079: Some people say a rising but we never did say that, but that's common in this area. Used to be years ago, people don't have boils like they used to. Interviewer: They don't. 079: They don't now do they? I bet you a little boy wouldn't know what you meant. Interviewer: No. He'd think of the water. 079: Mm-hmm yeah. {D: I don't work of how that is if we eat} more sensibly or something, I don't know what it might be. But uh I don't know when I've ever heard of anybody having a regular, old fashioned boil. Interviewer: #1 Thank you. # 079: #2 I've got # scars on my knees where I had them as a child. Interviewer: Is that right? 079: Uh-huh. Interviewer: Did you have 'em? 079: Mm-hmm we've had 'em every once in a while, and uh I mean once or twice a year or more than that you'd have a boil. Interviewer: #1 My goodness. # 079: #2 {NW} # Uh-huh. Interviewer: And now you have bumps on 079: #1 Yeah. # Interviewer: #2 your knee. # 079: But this was a rather big it was a rising. {NW} Interviewer: The yellowish liquid there he is 079: #1 Alright. # Interviewer: #2 right now # 079: #1 # Interviewer: #2 # 079: When you're going back there. Auxilary: Alright. Interviewer: {NS} Uh the yellowish white liquid inside a boil is? 079: Pus. {C: distorted} {D: A macking.} Sometimes you call it matter. Interviewer: Oh yeah? {C: distorted} 079: Uh-huh. {C: distorted} Sometimes you call it matter. Interviewer: Oh really? {C: distorted} 079: Mm-hmm. {C: distorted} Interviewer: We're talking about the word swell, speaking of an infection 079: #1 Mm-hmm. # Interviewer: #2 or # inflammation, uh after the wasp stings your hand will? 079: Will swell. Interviewer: #1 And? # 079: #2 It # swelled yesterday, and has swollen I guess is good form sounds a little funny. # 079: #1 But you know it wouldn't be bad. # Interviewer: #2 Would you # say swollen? 079: Yeah, I believe so. It had swollen considerably. You might say it has swelled considerably. I believe either one's acceptable that. Interviewer: To you. 079: Uh-huh, uh-huh. Interviewer: And a cut might be called an open 079: Um. Not abrasion. That's a kind of {D: scarce.} Scrape on your hand. Interviewer: Or you might think of someone might say I have a pain in my leg from an old war? 079: Uh wound? Mm-hmm. Interviewer: Uh have you ever heard the body referred to in a sort of a literary way and it gives you a sense of its being transient as in 079: #1 Oh. # Interviewer: #2 compared to the # soul? A kind of flesh. 079: {D: Her sure's happen out.} {NW} Interviewer: I'm thinking of it you speaking of of a certain kind of flesh? 079: Um. Mortal? No, I don't just what you're getting at now. Interviewer: Have you ever heard it called proud flesh? 079: Well yes, when something won't heal. Interviewer: #1 Oh? # 079: #2 Now that's proud flesh. # Interviewer: It is? 079: Uh-huh. If you have if you have an open Interviewer: #1 It is? {C: laughing} # 079: #2 sore # It is to me honey. If you have an open sore or something and it doesn't get well and sometimes it kinda I don't know, it's it's just funny looking and its proud flesh you call it. It's not good, healthy, smooth uh tissue. Now that's the term proud flesh Interviewer: #1 Learn # 079: #2 to me. # Interviewer: #1 something every day don't you? # 079: #2 Uh-huh uh-huh. # Now that may not be medical, but I believe it is I believe the doctor Interviewer: #1 Well its coming all to these medical terms # 079: #2 I believe the doctor calls it that. # Interviewer: #1 {D: that are sure.} # 079: #2 Mm-hmm. # I believe the doctor calls it that. Mm-hmm. Interviewer: {D: Well my goodness.} 079: Mm-hmm. Interviewer: Uh the red liquid that you would put on a cut, not mercurochrome but? 079: Iodem? Iodine or iodine {C: pronunciation} we'd call it both ways. I say iodine {C: pronunciation} I believe. Interviewer: Alright. The medicine given for malaria is? 079: Um quinine Interviewer: When someone is no longer living, you say he? 079: Died. Or he is dead. Interviewer: Alright, now if this would you consider died to be a neutral term? For it uh now uh let me 079: #1 Yeah. Mm-hmm. # Interviewer: #2 explain. # Would you ever use um a euphemism for died? Would you say to avoid 079: #1 You mean like passed on? # Interviewer: #2 saying # 079: Something like that. I wouldn't but a lot of people do. Interviewer: What what other terms do you think of? 079: There's something else. Well you speak of the person as deceased sometimes. Um I've heard people refer to their husband say he went away ten years ago or something I know sometimes that's used. Interviewer: What about are there any crude or joking terms you use about death? 079: Uh well uh {D: there are some if I can think of 'em he} uh. I can't think right now what I'm trying to say. There are some. Kick the bucket. {C: laughing} That's very slang here. {C: laughing} {NW} I don't think of another one right off. Interviewer: Alright. I don't know what he died? 079: Of we'd say rather than from. Interviewer: And where you're buried is a? 079: Cemetery. Interviewer: Do you make any sort of distinction in terminology between a public, a church, and a private burying ground? 079: Um. Nothing other than that sometimes out in the country you go buy a little private cemetery that's you know just a family cemetery. Interviewer: #1 And # 079: #2 And # Interviewer: would you use any kind of different term? 079: Burying ground. Interviewer: #1 Would you use this what # 079: #2 Sometimes. # You might sometime speak of the cemetery around a church as a burying ground, you might. Interviewer: Would you use um the family one as burying ground do you think? 079: You might mm-hmm. Family. You might do that, mm-hmm. Look we'd say the old family cemetery is what I'd say. Interviewer: That's 079: Mm-hmm. Interviewer: what you would say. 079: Mm-hmm. Interviewer: Alright. When you are dead, you are put into a? 079: Coffin or a casket. Interviewer: Now do you make a difference there? 079: No, but I believe I believe we'd say coffin more often we would casket. Interviewer: Is there a difference in price do you think ever? 079: I don't know what any uh undertaker would tell you is a distinction if any between a coffin and a casket. Interviewer: You don't 079: I think casket sounds a little more expensive. Interviewer: {NW} But do you would you ordinarily think of this? 079: Uh no I think not. Interviewer: Would shape make a difference? 079: Well if you saw an old-fashioned coffin that was shaped kind of almost the shape of the not the shape of the body but it came up and went out sort of Interviewer: Mm-hmm. 079: that way, uh you would call that a coffin perhaps uh certainly and not a casket. If you saw a beautiful bronze casket, you'd probably call it that. Now whether that's right as a distinction or not I don't know. Interviewer: But now you would probably use them #1 interchangeably too. # 079: #2 Mm-hmm. Mm-hmm. # More or less interchangeably. Interviewer: Have you ever heard the word pinto used? 079: No. Interviewer: For 079: #1 Now what's that? # Interviewer: #2 {X} # 079: P-E-N Interviewer: Pinto. 079: #1 No. # Interviewer: #2 P-I-N-T-O. # In connection with casket. 079: No. Uh-uh. Never have. Interviewer: Uh the ceremony of burying where the minister speaks is called? 079: The funeral. Interviewer: And for a year, a man's wife may wear black to indicate that she is in? 079: A widow or that she is in mourning. But that's about gone out hasn't it? Interviewer: Mm I guess so. 079: Almost entirely, almost entirely. Interviewer: #1 They're either wearing older # 079: #2 I don't- # #1 I don't know when I've ever seen # Interviewer: #2 {X} # 079: anybody wear mourning lately. Within the last ten years around. Interviewer: Uh if someone asks you how are you, what do you normally say? 079: Fine. {NW} Interviewer: Is there anything else you would say? 079: Alright thank you, how are you? Interviewer: If you wanted to tell someone 079: #1 {NW} # Interviewer: #2 not # to be concerned, 079: #1 L-let # Interviewer: #2 you would say? # 079: me stop there #1 what did # Interviewer: #2 Okay. # #1 Yes. # 079: #2 it say a a vernacular word # some people'll say tolerable. {NW} Interviewer: Alright would you say that? 079: #1 No, I wouldn't say that. # Interviewer: #2 Somehow I don't see you saying that. # 079: I wouldn't say that. {NW} Interviewer: If you wanted to tell someone not to be concerned, you would say? 079: Don't worry. Interviewer: Uh a joint disease or a disease where you ache not arthritis 079: #1 but # Interviewer: #2 but # 079: rheumatism. Interviewer: Now we vaccinate children for smallpox, we also give them shots for disease that there's a three-prong shot called a DPT and the D would stand for? 079: Gosh I don't know Interviewer: #1 What disease? # 079: #2 what the D stands for. # Uh diphtheria? And um. Interviewer: A disease where your skin turns a yellow color is? 079: Jaundice. What does D-P-T stand for? Interviewer: I don't really know, one of them 079: Uh-huh. Interviewer: is um I don't know. 079: {D: I don't either.} Interviewer: But they give you it's a three 079: #1 Mm-hmm. # Interviewer: #2 in one shot. # 079: #1 Three things mm-hmm. # Interviewer: #2 One's diphtheria. # 079: #1 Mm-hmm. # Interviewer: #2 {D: I don't know what the other} # 079: Probably one's for measles or whooping cough or something, Interviewer: #1 I don't I don't really know. # 079: #2 but I don't know what PT is. # Uh-huh. Poliomyelitis maybe. Maybe one's for polio? Interviewer: {D: they give that in there.} 079: Mm-hmm I don't know whether that's a joint one or not. Interviewer: I don't know. 079: #1 Mm-hmm. # Interviewer: #2 Typhoid # is the T. 079: Diphtheria Typhoid and what would P be? Might be polio. Interviewer: {NW} 079: {NW} Interviewer: {D: Really vary in form.} 079: Mm-hmm. Interviewer: A disease that you have severe pain in your side? 079: Appendicitis. Interviewer: Alright, and do you know any old-fashioned names for this? 079: Well you used to say appendicitis. {C: pronunciation} Interviewer: Oh. 079: Appendicitis {C: pronunciation} you'd never be about to say that now but people used to sometimes. Instead of appendicitis, yes they did. Mm-hmm. Uh. Inflammation or something, I don't know what they called may have called it earlier than the name appendicitis. Mm-hmm. Interviewer: Alright. When you are nauseated you may? 079: Vomit. Interviewer: Now, is there um 079: #1 Vernacular term? # Interviewer: #2 a nice word? # 079: Throw up. Interviewer: Alright is this a nice word? Do you think of it as avoiding saying vomit. Would you say throw up? 079: {D: I'd as well you say one as the other, I don't like either one.} {NW} Interviewer: Do you are there any other words for this process that you think of? 079: The boys might say upchuck. Interviewer: #1 Oh. # 079: #2 {NW} # {NW} Interviewer: Uh he is sick stomach. 079: We'd say at his stomach not to his stomach but some people say to. And you notice how northerners say stomach {C: pronunciation} instead of stomach {C: pronunciation}. Interviewer: Hmm. 079: They say it like I-C-H I but I don't know why they do that, but almost invariably they do. You hear it over the TV. {D: All the time.} Yeah these things that are good for your stomach. {C: pronunciation} {NW} Interviewer: Now I want some terms for dating. When a boy and a girl are dating? 079: Well if they go together all the time, you'd say going steady. And um boyfriend and girlfriend. Can't think. Interviewer: As if they first start out, and maybe they have two dates, you'd say they're what? 079: #1 Going together? # Interviewer: #2 Uh # Well its gonna really I was just asking you to kind of make a distinction 079: Mm-hmm. Interviewer: if go is going together when they have been are going more regular? 079: I believe so. Used to say that people that that were going together then you say they're steady. They they go steady. That that's a term that's come in well the last fifteen, twenty years. Maybe maybe more recently than that. Interviewer: #1 Can you think of any other terms? # 079: #2 Going steady. # Interviewer: #1 # 079: #2 # Interviewer: How about courting? 079: That's old-fashioned. Interviewer: It is? 079: Yeah. You wouldn't say that no no teenager would say that today I'm sure. Interviewer: No. {NW} 079: Don't believe my boys would. {NW} Interviewer: #1 Oh. # 079: #2 {NW} # Interviewer: Are your boys old enough to date? 079: Oh yes. Interviewer: Oh they are? 079: Uh-huh. See some of 'em eighteen. Interviewer: Oh they are? 079: They're from I teach the juniors and seniors seeing lots of them seventeen and eighteen. Interviewer: Oh oh I was thinking of this being more a sophomore. 079: No, it's nine, ten, eleven, and twelve and I do have one tenth grade class. But a lot of them are seniors. So the majority of the boys I teach are s- seventeen, some of 'em eighteen. Interviewer: Oh. 079: One boy that I can't get to study called his folks up the other night told 'em I wished they could get him to study, I just can't make him do it. They said we haven't been able to for eighteen years. {NW} They'd been trying. {C: laughing} {NW} Interviewer: {NW} Does he live at the school? 079: No, he's a day student. Interviewer: What is a term for refusing to marry someone? 079: Uh uh comma uh no now jilting wouldn't be refusing to marry, that's a sort of a sl- not a slang expression exactly but part so refusing a marriage letter rejecting a proposal? Refusing well you said refusing. What term do you have any term in Interviewer: #1 Not any in particular. # 079: #2 mind? Mm-hmm. Mm-hmm. # Interviewer: But what about sudden? Would that be jilt do you think? 079: Well maybe. Mm-hmm. Interviewer: Uh what about a dramatic word, do you think of any dramatic word #1 for # 079: #2 Uh # for for refusing to marry? Interviewer: Mm-hmm. 079: I can't think of one. {D: Well there} Interviewer: #1 Uh what about a joking # 079: #2 {D: might be one.} # Interviewer: expression? Think of any joking expressions? 079: She turned him down? Nothing like that. Interviewer: Alright. 079: Might use that. Interviewer: When two people are engaged eventually they are? 079: Married. Interviewer: A female attendant at a wedding is? 079: Maid of honor. Bridesmaid. Matron of honor. Interviewer: Um Do you know a a word for a noisy serenade that may take place after a 079: #1 Chivaree. # Interviewer: #2 wedding? # 079: #1 # Interviewer: #2 # Do you can you describe one of those? 079: Only from things I've read I never heard one but its noisy singing and maybe it was different kinds of uh well maybe uh {NW} cymbals or guitar or banjo or something to make a lot of noise. Interviewer: I don't guess you've heard of this being done? 079: #1 No mm-hmm. # Interviewer: #2 {D: Like?} # 079: In fact I've never known it to be done where I was. Where I knew of its just been in stories or plays or magazines or something. Interviewer: Alright. Now I'm looking for a preposition for the location here. 079: Mm-hmm. Interviewer: He lives the brown place. 079: He lives in the brown place. I would say. Not at. For that. Mm-hmm. Interviewer: Um would you ever say over at? Do you think? 079: I might say she's over at Mary's if I was saying somebody was over at there was somebody was at somebody else's house and I won't tell you where she was. I I might say she's over at Lucy's. Mm-hmm. Interviewer: Alright. He went to Atlanta yesterday. 079: Well now what do you want me to s- Interviewer: #1 Uh a direction # 079: #2 {NW} # Interviewer: sort of. How would you say this? Would you put would you say he went to Atlanta or would you say would you put something else in there? 079: No I think I'd just say he went go to went down to Atlanta. You think means something like that? Interviewer: That's what I'm thinking. 079: #1 Up and down we # Interviewer: #2 {D: Because like} # 079: sh- we use up and down for north and south. Don't we? And you go down to Atlanta and up to Chattanooga. Interviewer: What about over? How would you? Would you? 079: Over to Gadsden if that's east or west. Interviewer: I see. 079: Mm-hmm. Is the way I'd do it. Mm-hmm. Interviewer: Alright. Instead of saying the wh- the entire crowd, you might say 079: Say the whole crowd. Interviewer: Now is there a derogatory expression for groups of people together? 079: Mm like gang? Or mob?` Hmm. Can't think of any other than that. Interviewer: Alright it uh a prom is a school? 079: Dance. Interviewer: Can do you know of any terms used for parties that involve dancing? Any special words? 079: Mm um. Let's see s hop. Interviewer: #1 {NW} # 079: #2 {NW} # Interviewer: #1 I love that there. # 079: #2 Mm-hmm. # Have a sock-hop you know? Something like that? Interviewer: Does your school have dances? 079: Uh-huh. Yeah whole Interviewer: Where do they get the girls? From 079: Oh they import 'em from town and from out of town everywhere. Interviewer: #1 {NW} # 079: #2 Sometimes # I get 'em dates if I have some cute little girl I want to help Interviewer: Ho ho. 079: date somebody that's cute {NW} Interviewer: You're a #1 matchmaker. # 079: #2 {NW} # Oh yeah. {C: laughing} {NW} Interviewer: Now you this ought to be right up your alley. 079: Mm-hmm. Interviewer: When you're te- saying that a boy didn't attend class, he class. 079: He cut class. Interviewer: Alright now would you say this for one class or would you change terms if he didn't come all day? 079: No he cut his classes all day. Interviewer: You wouldn't say it's something preferred the whole day? 079: No uh he laid out. {NW} That's a slang expression but that's what we use. {C: laughing} Its it {D: I ask her if sometimes he stayed out on purpose} so that we'd say he laid out. {NW} Interviewer: Uh at a school at school you sit at a uh 079: Desk. Interviewer: And more than one of these is are? 079: Desks. {NW} Interviewer: Its very important for a young man today to get a good? 079: Education. Interviewer: And this usually involves after high school going on 079: #1 to college. # Interviewer: #2 to? # Now when you are mailing something and you want it to go at the highest postage rate not air mail but so that it gets there speedily you would mail it? 079: First class. Interviewer: Now in using this to refer to education how do you think of do you think of it as saying a first class education how how 079: #1 Uh. # Interviewer: #2 what would you think of? # 079: Can't think of what one term I'd use. Uh if you're speaking of the school he went to we'd say attended and graduated from a standard college. And it met all of the requirements and accredited. Interviewer: If someone said um he has a first class education, what would you interpret that as meaning? 079: Well I today you'd think it meant a college education because many more people go to college today than did a generation or two ago. But if you thought of really a first class education it would be high school and college. Interviewer: Would it have anything to do with the kind of school you went to? 079: Yes uh you might say that the small high schools in some towns are not well enough manned and equipped to get a first class education. Interviewer: {D: I see.} Well how else would you use the terms first class other than the ways we've talked about? 079: Going first class on the ship. Interviewer: #1 You don't think about that. # 079: #2 {NW} # Interviewer: #1 You know that. # 079: #2 {NW} # Interviewer: The building where you go to check out books is the? 079: Library. Interviewer: Where you go to mail letters is 079: #1 Post office. # Interviewer: #2 the? # If you wanna stay overnight in a strange town you'd stay at a? 079: Hotel. Motel. {NW} Interviewer: Alright if you go to see a play you go to the? 079: Theater. Interviewer: If you're very sick you go to the? 079: Hospital. Interviewer: At a hospital there is a lady in a white dress. 079: And she is a nurse. Interviewer: {NW} You want to catch a train you go? 079: To the station. But you won't get one cause there aren't any more. {D: You hear all?} You can't get a train in or out of Rome. Not a Interviewer: #1 Not one? # 079: #2 passenger train. # Not a passenger train Interviewer: #1 If you wanted to catch a train # 079: #2 comes through Rome. # Interviewer: you'd have to go to 079: #1 You have to go with uh # Interviewer: #2 Atlanta? # 079: #1 there's nothing going through Cedartown anymore # Interviewer: #2 {D: There's one that was} # 079: there's the uh Silver Comet used to go from New Orleans to New York you know and went through Cedartown we just had to go about twenty miles to get it. But its taken off. Oh there just aren't many trains anymore. Now of course they still go through Atlanta. Some trains still Interviewer: #1 Well all # 079: #2 running. # Interviewer: the stations in Atlanta's 079: #1 Yeah. # Interviewer: #2 closed. # 079: Oh it's just all {D: Vern} I think's gonna close the terminal to passenger traffic I don't think there are any more passenger trains coming at the terminal. Think they all go to Brookwood. Mm. I believe I'm right about that. Interviewer: I don't know 079: #1 I think somebody I think well I think # Interviewer: #2 {D: I'm don't I'm not a train conductor} # 079: somebody told me that. Uh you just don't get train travel anymore very much. {NS} Interviewer: You might tell a bus driver I want at the next stop? 079: I want off. Or I want to get off. At the next stop. Interviewer: {D: The Floyd is the} 079: What now? Interviewer: Uh {NW} Rome is the city 079: #1 Uh where # Interviewer: #2 where Floyd is the # 079: county. Interviewer: And the the center of county government the town is called? 079: The county seat. Interviewer: Uh the war between the north and the south is the? 079: Uh well supposedly if you're a loyal southerner you call it the War Between the States, if you're a northerner you call it the Civil War but I call it the Civil War. {NW} Interviewer: D It do you 079: #1 Mm-hmm. # Interviewer: #2 think they make this # 079: #1 There is a distinction. # Interviewer: #2 distinction? # 079: {NW} {D: Their rabid} {D: confederism} {NW} was because it was the war between the states. {C: laughing} Mm-hmm. Interviewer: Is there anything uh oh any old fashioned ways of referring to this? 079: To the Civil War? Interviewer: Mm-hmm. 079: Rebellion. Sometimes its called a rebellion, the War of the Rebellion. Uh. The War of Secession I can't think of anything else. What now Interviewer: #1 {X} # 079: #2 you had any in mind? # Interviewer: #1 {X} # 079: #2 Its just the question # ask uh-huh. Interviewer: Washington is the seat of our federal? 079: Government. Interviewer: One of the big issues in the last campaign wasn't uh people who were thinking about crowding the streets and there was a cry for more? 079: Oh. Interviewer: Something and something. Its a catchphrase now. 079: Oh I can't think against violence and and so on. Interviewer: What we need is more? 079: Well I can't think of what you want me to say and I guess I've heard it again and again. Interviewer: Law? 079: Law and order. Yeah. {NW} Interviewer: Now I'm gonna give you some I'm giving you a test. 079: #1 Alright. # Interviewer: #2 {NW} # #1 Cause since you're a teacher. # 079: #2 I'll probably fail. # Interviewer: I doubt that. So I'm gonna give you the names of some cities 079: Mm-hmm. Interviewer: and I want you to tell me the states 079: #1 Okay. # Interviewer: #2 that they're in. # 079: We can go to town on that. Interviewer: Ah I thought so 079: {NW} Interviewer: You oughta be 079: {NW} Interviewer: Alright. Baltimore. 079: Maryland. Interviewer: Roanoke. 079: Virginia. Interviewer: Charleston. 079: South Carolina or West Virginia. Interviewer: Oh well I get two states for the price of one. {C: laughing} 079: Yeah yeah yeah. Interviewer: Winston-Salem. 079: Massachu- Winston-Salem North Carolina. Interviewer: Uh Albany. #1 Not Georgia. # 079: #2 New York or Georgia. # Interviewer: I knew you were gonna do that too. Uh Atlanta. 079: Georgia. Interviewer: Tallahassee. 079: Florida. Interviewer: Birmingham. 079: Alabama. Interviewer: New Orleans. 079: Louisiana. Interviewer: Lexington. 079: Kentucky. Or uh Massachusetts there's a Lexington Massachusetts you know where Interviewer: Oh. 079: the revolution started. Interviewer: Uh. 079: On the green at Lexington, don't ya know? {NW} Where the first fighting Interviewer: #1 Oh yes, # 079: #2 occurred? # #1 {NW} # Interviewer: #2 of course # Yeah oh the Battle of Lexington. 079: Uh-huh. Lexington and Concord. Interviewer: #1 That's right. # 079: #2 Mm-hmm. # Interviewer: Nashville. 079: Tennessee. Interviewer: St. Louis. 079: Missouri. Interviewer: Little Rock. 079: Arkansas. Interviewer: Biloxi. 079: Mississippi. Interviewer: And Austin. 079: Texas. Interviewer: Alright. Now we're gonna do it in reverse 079: #1 Yeah good good. # Interviewer: #2 and I'm gonna name some states and you name me some # 079: #1 Cities. Alright. # Interviewer: #2 cities, okay? # I'll stop you when I get the one when I've got all I want. 079: Alright. Alright. Interviewer: Alright, Maryland. 079: Well Baltimore, Annapolis. Interviewer: You can stop. District of Columbia. 079: Well of course there's Washington DC, {D: you know the city.} Interviewer: South Carolina. 079: Columbia, Charleston. Interviewer: Alright. Alabama. 079: {NW} Birmingham, Montgomery. Want some more? Gadsden, Anniston. Interviewer: #1 Some # 079: #2 Mo-Mobile # Interviewer: North Carolina. 079: Raleigh, Charlotte, Winston-Salem. Mm. Greensboro. Have you said the one you want yet? Interviewer: Haven't said the one I want yet. 079: North Carolina Charlotte, Raleigh, Greensboro, Winston-Salem, {D: North Carolina} {D: Um} {D: I know there are more but I can't think of any.} {D: Cause I don't know anybody who lives in} {X} What one you have in mind? Interviewer: Asheville. 079: Well why didn't I say it? Interviewer: Uh I'm not sure we're th 079: From North Carolina. Interviewer: Alright and um a city in North Carolina? 079: Mm-hmm. Oh alright. You want me to say 'em all over again? Interviewer: Uh no just a few. 079: Raleigh, Charlotte, Greensboro, Asheville. Interviewer: Okay. Tennessee. 079: Memphis, Nashville, Knoxville, Fra- uh no Franklin's Kentucky. Um. What'd I say, Memphis, Nashville, Knoxville are the three biggest ones. Interviewer: And another one just north 079: #1 Chattanooga. # Interviewer: #2 of # Uh Georgia? 079: Atlanta, Savannah, Macon, Augusta, Columbus Interviewer: {D: New uh-oh.} 079: Hmm yeah. {C: laughing} Interviewer: {NW} Oh I-Illinois. 079: Hurrying on through it. Um Chicago. Interviewer: Ohio. 079: Uh Columbus, Toledo, Cleveland, Cincinnati. Interviewer: Kentucky. 079: Frankfort, Louisville, Lexington. Interviewer: Okay. Missouri. 079: St. Louis, Jefferson City, Columbia. Interviewer: Louisiana. 079: New Orleans, Baton Rouge. Interviewer: Okay. Ten and now if you're talking about uh lengths of distance 079: Mm-hmm. Interviewer: Ten is as far as I could go that day. 079: Ten miles? {NW} I'd be dead if I had to walk ten miles. Interviewer: Well I hope not. 079: {NW} Interviewer: Uh you know I'm reading Thomas Hardy's novels now 079: #1 Oh. # Interviewer: #2 And these # people walk 079: #1 Mm-hmm. # Interviewer: #2 all the time # I'm exhausted by the time I read it 079: #1 {D: Well that is} # Interviewer: #2 They walk # from town to town #1 Twenty miles and just you know # 079: #2 {NW} # Interviewer: for a for a visit. 079: #1 Mm-hmm. Walking. # Interviewer: #2 They'd walk twenty miles. # 079: Imagine that. Interviewer: You take a ruler and you 079: #1 Measure. # Interviewer: #2 something? # I don't know I want to do that. 079: Whether. Interviewer: Um If someone offers you an apple but you would prefer an orange, you would say may I have an orange? 079: Instead. Or rather than an apple. Interviewer: Alright. Would you say instead of? 079: Yeah. Interviewer: Probably or instead. 079: Uh-huh. Interviewer: Why do you like him? I like him he's so funny. 079: Because. Interviewer: Where we go on Sunday is the? 079: Church? Interviewer: It seems he's always late. 079: It seems as if he is always late. Interviewer: Would you ever say seems like? 079: {X} {D: just carelessly.} Mm-hmm. Seems like we all knew this. Interviewer: Alright. Uh there is a saying um a biblical expression "What God hath together let no man" 079: "What God hath joined together let no man put asunder." Interviewer: Uh the minister's address in church is the? 079: Sermon. Interviewer: We call the supreme being? 079: God. Interviewer: Now do you know of any special ways that we would refer to him in a reverent way and in a profane way? 079: Well in a reverent way in prayer you'd say "Our Father." Um I don't know profane way say jus- just taking the name of God in vain just saying oh God I can't do that or something like that. Interviewer: Alright. Uh an organ gives us in our church gives us what? 079: Music. Interviewer: And you might come out of church saying my wasn't the music something today? 079: Beautiful or inspiring. Wonderful. Interviewer: The evil one in our religion is? 079: Satan or the devil. Interviewer: Alright are there any other words you'd use to refer to him? 079: I don't think of one right off. Interviewer: Alright. {NW} Another word for ghost is? 079: Ghost. Um. Oh I can't think of one. {NS} Uh apparition. {NS} Interviewer: W how would you refer to to ghosts? Would you refer to them as ghosts? 079: Yes I'd ask you if you'd ever seen a ghost. And you'd think of a ghost as a white filmy looking something scary. {C: laughing} Interviewer: Alright. And a house where ghosts are supposed to be? 079: Haunted. {NW} Interviewer: Alright. It would be a? 079: Haunted house. Interviewer: And if you're trying to say that its not terribly cold today but 079: A little chilly. Interviewer: uh you would say its? 079: #1 Is # Interviewer: #2 Cold # today. 079: It is chilly today. Interviewer: Its 079: And what'd you s-? Interviewer: Its how cold its? 079: Uh its Interviewer: Would you say its rather cold 079: #1 Uh I'd say # Interviewer: #2 {D: or?} # 079: I'd say its awfully chilly awfully cold. {C: laughing} Interviewer: If it wasn't that cold, would you say? 079: Quite cold. Sorta cold. Sorta we use that sort of and kind of a lot don't we? Interviewer: Alright. Would you say sort of or kind of? 079: Its sort of cold today. Interviewer: Alright. Um I'll do it if you insist, but I'd really not. 079: Rather not. Interviewer: When someone doesn't like to spend money you say they're? 079: Stingy or close or tight. Interviewer: {NW} And if you my husband says this to me 079: #1 Mm-hmm. # Interviewer: #2 frequently, # if you're trying to put something in a hole and it won't go and you push and push and push someone might say don't or you'll break it. 079: Well don't Interviewer: Don't try to? 079: Force it? That's what I'm thinking mm-hmm. Interviewer: {NW} What are some expressions of strong affirmation that you might use if you wanted if someone said um are you able to do that? You you really wanted to say it strongly you might not just say yes you might say? 079: Uh. Interviewer: Uh surely. 079: Sh- uh Interviewer: But would you say that? 079: Of course I can. As a matter of fact I wouldn't say sure. I might say surely. I can't that sounds a little. Interviewer: Would you say certainly? 079: {D: Certainly more rather than that I'd say certainly I can I might say that.} Mm-hmm. Interviewer: Alright. What about the terms yes sir and yes ma'am? Or no sir and no ma'am? 079: Well you we in my experience a child is taught to say that to any older person. Uh an older person might say it to somebody in authority. Somebody that um was um well for instance you might say yes sir to the man that's your boss. Uh if he asked you something. But you don't say it to your uh people your age and your associates. If you said something to me I wouldn't say yes ma'am, I'd say just yes. A clerk in a store would say yes ma'am we have some. Where she wouldn't say it just to her close friend or acquaintance. Interviewer: Do we ever use that um for emphasis? 079: Yes. Uh yes ma'am I'll do it. {NW} Interviewer: Alright. Um How would you greet an intimate friend? Uh what are some expressions of greeting? 079: Well there are sort of the slang one but one we use a good bit is hi. Um. Or. Hello. How are you? Something like that. The the least formal one I guess would be hi. {NW} Interviewer: Alright and for a casual acquaintance? Would you say hi? 079: I'd come here saying hello to them I guess. Interviewer: What about when parting? What expressions might you use then? 079: Well we say goodbye. Uh We'd say We'll be seeing you {NW} Something like that. Interviewer: If someone comes to visit in your home and they're leaving what might you say to them? 079: Come again. Mm. Like that? Interviewer: Alright. On December the twenty-fifth or thereabouts you wish people? 079: A merry Christmas. Interviewer: Are there any synonyms for this? Any other way? 079: Uh {NW} {X} What people used to say in the south a good bit and I've heard someone say Christmas gift. You know on Christmas they'd say that rather than merry Christmas. Interviewer: Uh are there any special customs that you think of for Christmas? 079: Yes uh we could say a lot of different things the the food they have is traditional. The turkey and the fruitcake and the ambrosia and so on. And the Christmas tree and the children hanging up the stockings and the exchanging Christmas presents and singing carols and doing Christmas shopping and wrapping back the packages. Interviewer: Alright. Um around the first of the year you wish people? 079: Happy New Year. Interviewer: Are there any other ways you do this? 079: Yuletide, a happy Yuletide or something like that. Interviewer: Alright. What about special customs for New Years? 079: We don't have as many for that uh peas and hog jowl to have for good luck the rest of the year. And uh. Make good resolutions at least you're gonna do so-and-so in the new year. Interviewer: Alright. Do you know a word for something that's thrown in with a purchase or given you when the bill is paid? 079: Sometimes called a bonus or a {NW} What do you call anything? When they give you something I can't think of a word that I might use. There's something. Do you know of one? Interviewer: No, I 079: #1 Oh. # Interviewer: #2 {X} # 079: There's something I bonus is more w- what your boss would pay you ex extra that you weren't expecting. Uh I can't think particular. Sometimes free samples are put put in. Um. Interviewer: Have you ever heard of brawtus? 079: What now? Interviewer: Brawtus. 079: Uh-uh. How do you spell it? Interviewer: Oh B-R-A-W-T-U-S. 079: Never heard of it. Interviewer: What about pillon? P-I-L-L-O-N? 079: Uh-uh. No. Interviewer: What about um lagniappe? 079: Now that word means something what does it mean? I know about I've seen that word but its not in my vocabulary. What does it mean? I'd have to look it up. I really would, mm-hmm. Interviewer: Uh a building where you park your car is a? 079: Garage. Interviewer: What is a shellfish that is frequently put into um boiled form with a sauce and is referred to as some kind of cocktail? 079: Shrimp. Interviewer: A chocolate bar that's known by the name of its manufacturer? 079: Hershey. Interviewer: Uh a color of brown that is lighter than a tan and yet not quite a cream color is? 079: Beige? Interviewer: I think if if you're trying to say I think I'll have time but I'm not sure, is there any other way that you would say this? 079: I maybe have time. Interviewer: Do you ever use reckon? 079: Not uh no I don't that's slang kind of to me. People say I reckon she will I reckon I might be able to. No I don't use the word reckon myself. Interviewer: Alright. Speaking of making purchases, I had to do some down. 079: Shopping. Interviewer: And when you shop, someone puts paper around something he it up? 079: Wraps it up. Interviewer: Alright, in the past he? 079: Wrapped it up and he will wrap it up tomorrow, he has wrapped it in the past. {NW} Interviewer: So when you get home you? 079: Unwrap it. Interviewer: Alright. 079: And lose it. {NW} At the time. {C: laughing} A spool of thread is a. Interviewer: Uh he had to sell it at opposed to profit. At a? 079: At a discount? At what now? Interviewer: #1 Uh he # 079: #2 As opposed to buying at a loss. # Uh-huh. Interviewer: You don't buy something because its too expensive, you might say it too much. 079: It cost too much. Interviewer: At the end of the month, a bill is? 079: Sent to you? Rendered? Interviewer: #1 Uh and # 079: #2 Mm. # Interviewer: when its rendered it becomes? 079: Due. Interviewer: When you join an organization yearly you must pay your? 079: Dues. Interviewer: And to do this you might have to if you don't have enough money you might have to? 079: To borrow. Interviewer: Uh when money is you say money is tight, you really mean it is? 079: Well you mean that there doesn't seem to be as much in circulation people do not seem as ready to buy and to invest. And maybe if you borrowed money you'd have to pay higher interest. Interviewer: Well when you were referring I I'm really thinking more of anything that is not easy to come by, and you'll say that item is certainly? 079: Scarce. Interviewer: That's what I'm thinking of. Do you know a term for coasting down a hill on a sled? 079: Tobogganing or um just coasting. Um you can use the expression sledding. Interviewer: If you go down lying down does this? 079: That is uh {D: what do they call that, bad booster or something?} Is that what you {D: what can name the variance} {NW} I haven't had too much experience on sleds. Interviewer: If you dive into a swimming pool and land on your stomach in the water, you have done a? You've what? 079: Oh what do you call that? Uh. No, I can't think of what that is honey. Interviewer: Alright. Uh children frequently get down on the floor and turn? 079: Somersaults? Interviewer: If land is very rich and able to grow things 079: #1 Fertile. # Interviewer: #2 easy. # Uh if you're telling someone to be quiet you might say? 079: Hush. {NS} Interviewer: Now we're talking about a few more words. 079: Mm. Interviewer: We're talking about the word swim. 079: Swam swum. {NW} Interviewer: Uh dive? 079: I dive today I dived yesterday I have dived many times. Interviewer: Drown. 079: Drown? Today I was He was drowned yesterday uh many people have drowned in this lake. Interviewer: Alright. Uh something that you do in church especially, and there are frequently little benches in front 079: Kneel. Interviewer: Alright, you would say she? 079: Knelt. Interviewer: #1 Yesterday # 079: #2 Yesterday. # Interviewer: she 079: Knelt and she has knelt many times. Interviewer: Alright. {NW} I'm tired, I think I'll down for a while. 079: Sit down Interviewer: Or? If you wanna go 079: Lie down. Interviewer: {NW} He in bed all day. 079: He lay in bed all day. Interviewer: And referring to the little pictures that you have in your mind when you're asleep, I all night. 079: Dreamed. Interviewer: Alright. Speaking of coming out of sleep, I early this morning. 079: I waked up or I woke, but we wouldn't say I woke that's kinda poetic. I waked up. Interviewer: Uh if you do {NS} this on the floor you? 079: Stamp your foot. Interviewer: May and your offering to help someone to get to their house, you might say may I? 079: May I take you home? May I give you a ride? May I give you a lift? I wouldn't say lift, I'd say may I give you a ride. I'd just say I'll take you home. Interviewer: Now would you make a difference if you're going to just walk with someone or if you're gonna take them in a car? 079: Yes, you wouldn't you'd say take you home if you're gonna take 'em in a car. But if you was gonna just go with 'em you might say may I go with you? Or I'll go along with you, that might just be walking. Mm-hmm. Interviewer: What about walk you home? Do you ever use? 079: I wouldn't use that expression, people used to I think that's old fashioned kind of for a boy to walk a girl home from school or something. Interviewer: If you take ahold of a door handle that is stuck, and do this, you are? You? 079: Jerk it. Pull it. Interviewer: And the opposite would be? 079: Close it. Interviewer: To and so? 079: Push it to. Or close it. Interviewer: I a heavy suitcase up the stairs. 079: I carry the heavy suitcase. Interviewer: Alright is there anything else you might use there? 079: Some people might use the word tote, but I never used that word. {NW} Interviewer: Now would this have anything to do with the fact that it was heavy? 079: #1 {NW} # Interviewer: #2 That you would use # 079: #1 {NW} # Interviewer: #2 tote? # 079: I don't know whether it would or not. Cause I never did use that expression. A-Alright Collin you can come in now right. Uh you go use if you go use the vacuum in there let me see Collin have you have you done the porch and downstairs? Auxilary2: I did downstairs but not the porch. 079: Well do the porch and maybe we'll be nearly through then. Interviewer: We're three more pages. 079: Alright. Alright. Interviewer: Um if you had something very fragile on a table and a child was reaching for it, what would you might say? 079: You'd say {NW} don't touch it. Interviewer: Alright would you ever put a you in there and say don't you touch it? 079: You might. Don't you touch that. Especially if it were sort of emphatic. Interviewer: Mm-hmm. Uh if you wanted me to give you a knife out of the kitchen, how would you tell me to go to do 079: #1 Bring me a knife. # Interviewer: #2 it? # Would you ever say go bring? 079: You might say yes you might say go get that out of the go get the book on the table. Yes I might say that. Interviewer: Alright. Someone throws a ball and I? 079: Catch it. Interviewer: And who 079: #1 Threw. # Interviewer: #2 it? # 079: Who threw the ball? Interviewer: And who? 079: Has thrown it before? Interviewer: Well um who threw it and then 079: #1 Who caught it? # Interviewer: #2 who? # 079: Mm-hmm. Interviewer: If you are ready to go somewhere and someone else isn't, you might say? 079: #1 I'll wait for you. # Interviewer: #2 Uh. # 079: #1 # Interviewer: #2 # If you have done something badly the first time you might ask someone to give you a second? 079: Chance. Or opportunity, but you'd probably say chance. Interviewer: If someone's very happy and opposed to being feeling bad you'd say you're in a good? 079: Humor. Or a good mood. Interviewer: Alright. I want those bugs. And you're talking about completely exterminating them. 079: Oh you mean I want those bugs killed? Interviewer: #1 I want # 079: #2 {D: Should that be?} # Interviewer: blank those bugs. What do you want to do to 'em? Or what? As opposed to get to uh keeping them, you want? 079: Get rid of 'em. Interviewer: Would you use this 079: Exterminate if you wanted to use a big word. Interviewer: Would you say ever say get rid of bugs? 079: Yeah I'll get rid of the ants or whatever. Mm-hmm. Interviewer: Alright. If you came in and your pencil had been on your desk and it was gone and you wanted to accuse someone 079: {NW} Interviewer: of having taken it, you would say? 079: {D: I hope the children say that} Who stole my pencil? Interviewer: {NW} 079: But I'd say did anyone borrow Interviewer: #1 {NW} # 079: #2 my pencil? # {NW} Interviewer: Do you think um children would use stole more often? 079: Yeah, I know they would. Interviewer: #1 What about # 079: #2 Somebody stole my book. # Interviewer: #1 What about swiped? # 079: #2 That's all they # Interviewer: Do they use this now? 079: Not much, boys might use it just {D: slang-ish sort of.} Interviewer: But stole would 079: #1 Mm-hmm. Yeah they # Interviewer: #2 is their common. # 079: think everybody's stolen everything they've got. Interviewer: {NW} 079: I say its right where you left it yesterday. Interviewer: #1 {NW} # 079: #2 {NW} # Interviewer: You must be great 079: #1 {NW} # Interviewer: #2 with those boys. # 079: Yeah they're the best class. Interviewer: Um the word write. Would you like to tell me about the word 079: #1 Like I write # Interviewer: #2 write? # 079: letters Interviewer: #1 Yeah. # 079: #2 today # I wrote it yesterday, I've written it many times. Interviewer: {NW} 079: {NW} Interviewer: And now that I have written him I expect? 079: An answer. Him to reply. Expect him to answer. Interviewer: Alright. When you open when you put the letter in the envelope, then you? 079: Uh may I seal it. Interviewer: #1 And then # 079: #2 And maybe # Interviewer: #1 {D: you will?} # 079: #2 {D: stop it.} # Interviewer: When you write on the front you 079: #1 You put the address. # Interviewer: #2 are? # Alright. Uh is there any other synonym that you know of for address? A letter? 079: To address a letter? Directed I guess you could say I direct this letter. But more of it I don't think of anything else. Interviewer: Alright. If one of your students comes in and gives you some fantastic uh answer that you really haven't expected, you might say who on earth you that? 079: Who on earth told you that? Or? {NW} Just kinda what? Interviewer: Did you ever use taught? 079: #1 Talked? # Interviewer: #2 Who # Taught. 079: Might, yes, mm-hmm. Interviewer: What is a child's nickname for a person who tattles or tells 079: #1 Tattletale. # Interviewer: #2 tales? # I'm sorry? 079: Tattletale. Interviewer: The sweet smelling parts of plants are the? 079: Is it the stainings or something had the sweet? Interviewer: #1 Well in a more general? # 079: #2 {NW} # Interviewer: Daisies and roses are both? 079: Uh fragrant? You thinking of words to describe 'em? Interviewer: #1 I'm looking, # 079: #2 {X} # Interviewer: just a general term for daisies, roses, peonies, these are all? 079: I don't Can't think what you mean other than you said i-if they had a good smell? Interviewer: #1 Well I'm thinking of the # 079: #2 {D: You make sure of that?} # Interviewer: smelly part 079: Uh-huh. Interviewer: #1 that's really not not at one # 079: #2 Uh-huh. # Interviewer: #1 of the technical part. # 079: #2 Uh-huh. # Interviewer: Uh you might have a vase of cut? 079: Flowers. Interviewer: #1 That's what I was thinking of. {C: laughing} # 079: #2 Mm oh I see. Mm-hmm. # Interviewer: And in order to take these flowers from the bush you say you're going to? 079: Pick some flowers. Interviewer: A name for a child's plaything? 079: Well I heard toy. Mm-hmm. Interviewer: If someone tells you something that you had suspicion all along, you can say I all along. 079: I'd say I suspected that all along. Interviewer: Mm or if you're if you were a little more certain? I? 079: I knew that all along, I Interviewer: That's what I was thinking of. 079: Mm-hmm. Interviewer: How else would you use knew? Are there any other? 079: Uh. {NW} You might you might be just in connection with a question I knew the answer. And another way might be I knew her for many years. Could mean associated with I she was a friend of mine yes its are two distinct feelings, aren't they? In a way. Hmm hmm. {NW} Interviewer: Alright would you like to tell me about the word give? 079: Give? Ga- give it today, gave it yesterday, and had given it many times. Interviewer: Alright. {C: laughing} 079: {NW} Interviewer: The word begin. 079: Begin. Begin began begun. Interviewer: The word come. 079: I come today, I came yesterday, I have come many times. Interviewer: The word see with the eyes. 079: See saw seen. Interviewer: {NW} If you're going over a road where perhaps there's been construction work and there are big potholes and its in pretty bad condition, you might say that road was all? 079: {NW} {NW} It had ruts. It was bumpy, it was rough. I don't just. Interviewer: Would you ever use torn up? 079: Might mm-hmm yes the road is torn up yes I would. Interviewer: Okay. You give her a bracelet and then you tell her to go ahead and? 079: Wear it? Put it on? Interviewer: We're talking about the word do. Alright would you like to tell me a? 079: Do, did, and done. Interviewer: And in the present? He his homework every night. 079: He does his homework every night. Interviewer: Mm-hmm. Alright. {C: laughing} 079: {NW} Interviewer: You open a box and its empty. There's inside. 079: Nothing inside. Interviewer: The opposite of nothing is? 079: Something. Interviewer: It is a good one, I'm sorry we lost it. 079: Well now wait I don't get just what you're getting. Interviewer: Um. If you're trying to say? 079: Good {D: game?} No? Interviewer: {D: Is.} 079: {NW} Interviewer: Well I don't know how to do it. Would you ever say its such a good one, I'm sorry we lost it? 079: Yes. Yes we use such that way a lot. Interviewer: Would you? Would you be likely to say that? Or would you say something else? 079: Well now I could I use such in that connection like I'd say that's such a little thing, I wouldn't get upset over it. Something like that. Interviewer: I see. 079: Mm-hmm. Interviewer: Alright. There is a song that says I'll be loving you? 079: Always. Interviewer: If we're talking about a length of time, we might say we've been doing this interview four o'clock. 079: Since four o'clock. Mm-hmm. Interviewer: That was no accident, he did that? 079: On purpose. Interviewer: Alright. I am going to him the question. 079: I am going to ask him the question? Interviewer: Yesterday I? 079: Asked. And have asked many times. Interviewer: {NW} 079: A lot of people don't put the E-D {D: on it.} Interviewer: #1 {NW} # 079: #2 {X} # Mm. Interviewer: We're talking about the word fight. 079: Mm-hmm. Fight today, fought yesterday, have fought many times. Interviewer: Alright. He stuck a knife in the pig and then he it out. 079: Pulled it out? Interviewer: Alright. Now would you count to twenty rapidly for me? 079: One two three four five six seven eight nine ten eleven twelve thirteen fourteen fifteen sixteen seventeen eighteen nineteen twenty. Interviewer: Alright. And twenty plus five plus two is? 079: Twenty-seven. Interviewer: Can you count to twenty as if you were playing hide and seek? 079: Five ten fifteen twenty twenty-five thirty. Interviewer: Would there be a a intimate I think your phone's ringing. Bet you better. 079: Mm-hmm. Interviewer: Uh Did you did you ever make a kind of a a pattern out singing it did you ever go five ten fifteen twenty? {C: singing} 079: We might no I don't know that we did, {D: but I can sing it in my head.} Interviewer: But but you didn't 079: #1 Mm-hmm. # Interviewer: #2 {X} # 079: We did that naming the books of the Bible. A little song Mark Matthew {D: Mark} Luke and John. Interviewer: #1 Oh did you? # 079: #2 {NW} # Uh-huh. Interviewer: Oh I didn't know that. Twenty plus ten is? 079: Thirty. Interviewer: Twenty plus twenty is? 079: Forty. Interviewer: Forty plus thirty is? 079: Seventy. Interviewer: This is really up your your 079: Very cute yes. Interviewer: {NW} Fifty plus fifty is? 079: This is a hundred. {NW} Interviewer: And nine hundred plus a hundred? 079: Is a thousand. Interviewer: And if you're going counting upward by large numbers you would go from a thousand maybe to a hundred thousand to? 079: To a million. To a billion to a quadrillion. Interviewer: You can stop. 079: Oh. Interviewer: {NW} There are eleven men in a line the one in front of the eleventh man is the? 079: The one in front of the eleventh man's the tenth man. Interviewer: Mm and in front of him? 079: The ninth. Eight seven six five four three two one. Interviewer: Hold it. You went too fast for me. The ninth, who's in front of the ninth? 079: {NW} The one in front of the ninth is the eighth. {C: laughing} Interviewer: Okay. You you were going five four three two one 079: #1 {NW} # Interviewer: #2 there at the end you're sneaky. # Okay. The one in front of the eighth? 079: The seventh. Interviewer: #1 {X} # 079: #2 And the sixth # And the fifth. And the fourth. And the third. And the second. And the first. {NW} Interviewer: Now. You can't sneak that by me. 079: No. Interviewer: Um. How else would you say all at once? 079: Right now. Or immediately. Or quickly. Interviewer: If something happened all at once it happened how? 079: Suddenly. Um. Instantaneously. Interviewer: Would you ever use all of the sudden? 079: Yes sort of this is uh uh not exactly slang but all of the sudden she decided to do so-and-so. Uh-huh. Interviewer: Would this be exactly the same as suddenly only just a different way of saying it? 079: Yes. If she decided very quickly. All of a sudden. {C: laughing} {NW} Interviewer: If you wanna say something is two times as good as something else? 079: Twice as good. Interviewer: Twelve months of the year. Would you name them? 079: January, February, March, April, May, June, July, August, September, October, November, December. Interviewer: Alright. {C: There is no more speech after 47m25s}