Interviewer: {NS} How how would you say that? {NS} 647: Aw I don't know just I'll say your coat which is your coat? Interviewer: uh-huh 647: Which one is your coat cuz everybody know their own things you see? Interviewer: mm-hmm And if there had been a party that you hadn't been able to go to and you were asking about what people had gone you'd say well? 647: What th- how the party went on or something I don't know some kind of thing like that. Interviewer: Or asking about the people you'd say well was at the party you'd say? 647: Who was at the party? Interviewer: uh-huh Would you ever say who all was at the party? 647: mm-hmm Ask who all was at the party. Interviewer: uh-huh Say if there was a group of children that obviously belong to more than one family. You'd ask about them children are they you'd say well? 647: Who all the children is for? Interviewer: huh? 647: Who all the children is for? Interviewer: uh-huh Would you ever say who all's children are they or who's children are they? 647: Who's children are they yeah. Interviewer: And if there had been a a speech that you hadn't been able to hear {NS} and you're asking about you know everything that the speaker said {NS} you'd ask well? Did he say? You'd say. 647: I don't know. {NS} Interviewer: Do you ever say what did he say or what all did he say? 647: I guess I would. {NS} Interviewer: How would you say that? 647: Well what did he spoke about? Interviewer: uh-huh 647: I don't do what I say what did he what did he spoke about? Interviewer: #1 And # 647: #2 What # was the speech that he said? Interviewer: uh-huh {NS} Talking about kinds of animals the kind of animal that barks? 647: Barks? Interviewer: uh-huh 647: I just know a dog barks me. Interviewer: uh-huh #1 Say if you- # 647: #2 The only # thing I know that barks is a dog. Interviewer: uh-huh If you wanted your dog to attack another dog what would you tell him? 647: I don't know. I don't get in dog fighting me. Well if you wanted your dog to attack a person what would you tell him? Tell him catch him. Interviewer: uh-huh {NS} 647: Them get him. Something like that. Interviewer: What would you call a mixed breed dog if you didn't know what kind he was? 647: mm-mm {X} I don't know what kind of dog I got back {D: that time. } Interviewer: uh-huh 647: Some of them tell me he's a poodle I don't know what he is. I know I had a collie. Interviewer: uh-huh 647: {NS} And a car killed it that sure was a good dog. Interviewer: {C: sighs} 647: I had a cow and you see when I turn loose that little dog Interviewer: uh-huh 647: he would take that dog he'd a hold that chain in his mouth and he'd walk that dog all over. If he's go over there with it he's go over bothering cattle and I tell him {D: and he'd be- I say Hexter go get my puppy.} Interviewer: uh-huh 647: {D: Go get him and bring him here Hexter.} {NS} He'd go and get that dog and bring him there by the chain. And he'd lay down and he'd put he'd hold that chain in his mouth and he'd put one foot on top of that chain {NS} and the puppy couldn't go he had to stay there. Interviewer: huh 647: And it went right from here it went behi- out back and a car killed my dog. Interviewer: {C: sighs} 647: And my daughter call me and tell me a car hit my dog. I was putting my coat on to go and see about my dog and she say he dead mama. I said well get the children to put him on the side 'til they come from school. And they push him on the side {X} and roll over. And when they came back my little grandson buried him back there. Interviewer: {NW} 647: My daughter gave me that little dog on mother's day. He was black and brown. It was a good dog that dog {D: sure do miss him} {NS} Interviewer: What uh what would you call those little r- 647: Oh lord! {C: Yawning} {X} {C: Yawning} Interviewer: huh? 647: Some little bitty dog? Interviewer: uh-huh 647: A chihuahua dog? Interviewer: uh-huh Do you ever hear of a feist? 647: A what? Interviewer: Feist. 647: mm-mm Interviewer: What about just a worthless dog who wasn't much good for anything? 647: He couldn't do anything? Interviewer: uh-huh 647: {D: Isn't a cayoudle like that? } Interviewer: Does what? 647: {D: They call him a cayoudle.} Interviewer: uh-huh What did they look like? 647: Common dog. Interviewer: uh-huh {NS} {D: What does a cayoudle look like?} 647: It's just like a dog but it's a rough dog or eat anything and run all over. Interviewer: uh-huh 647: mm-hmm Interviewer: Say if you had a real mean dog you might tell someone you'd better be careful that dog will? 647: Will bite you. Interviewer: You say yesterday the dog? 647: mm-hmm Interviewer: What somebody? Yesterday he? 647: Bite somebody got after somebody. Interviewer: uh-huh {NS} 647: mm-hmm {D: Yeah them dogs.} Interviewer: uh-huh You say that the person had to go to the doctor after he got? Got bite? Got bit. uh-huh 647: mm-hmm Interviewer: Do you ever say after he got dog bit? 647: Yeah You got to go get a shot when you get bite from a dog. Interviewer: uh-huh 647: If he didn't take no no uh no rabies shot. Interviewer: uh-huh And the kinds of animals that you plow with you call those? 647: You don't plow with no animal but a horse. Interviewer: uh-huh 647: That's all I see plow with. Interviewer: Well what about those animals that have the long ears? 647: What you talking about a mule? Interviewer: uh-huh 647: {NW} That's a mule. Interviewer: Say if you had two of those hitched together you'd call that a? 647: A mule. Interviewer: Or if you have two of them? 647: Two mules. Interviewer: You'd say you have a? 647: A pair of mules. Interviewer: uh-huh 647: It's a pair. Interviewer: And talking about the horses you'd say everyone around here likes to #1 what? # 647: #2 Rides # a horse. Interviewer: Because they like to what horses? 647: Ride horses? Interviewer: uh-huh You say yesterday he what his horse? 647: Rode his horse. Interviewer: You'd say but I have never 647: Rode a horse. Interviewer: And if you couldn't stay on you'd say you fell 647: mm-hmm I never got on a horse back then. Interviewer: uh-huh {NS} 647: Never ride no horse. {C: Vehicle} {NS} Interviewer: Well say somebody who couldn't stay on you'd say they fell? 647: Fell down fell off the horse. Interviewer: uh-huh Say if a child went to sleep in bed and woke up and found himself on the floor in the morning he'd say I guess I must've? 647: He fell out of the bed. Interviewer: And you know the things that um you put on the horses feet you call those the? 647: The shoe what you put on the horse? Interviewer: uh-huh 647: Leave it on the horse feet. Interviewer: uh-huh What about a game that you play with those? 647: I don't know nothing about no game there never did play no game with that. Interviewer: uh-huh 647: Which I never did play no kinda games me Interviewer: What part of the horses feet do you nail the shoe on to? 647: hmm I don't know. I don't know where they nail 'em in but I know they they put 'em on there with nails. Interviewer: uh-huh 647: What foot they nail them on I don't know somehow they help. Interviewer: uh-huh So before you put the shoes on you have to trim all of the horses? 647: Hoof. Interviewer: uh-huh 647: I never put the shoe. Interviewer: How many talking about this hoof how many does this horse have? 647: You have four four foots. Interviewer: And four? 647: Four shoes. Interviewer: There talking about this hoof he has four? 647: Four hoof {X} on each leg. Interviewer: uh-huh um The kind of animal that you milk you call that a? 647: A cow. Interviewer: What about the male? {NS} What do you call him? 647: A bull. Interviewer: uh-huh Was that word nice to use when you were growing up? 647: I don't know that they used to use they used to call them an ox. Interviewer: uh-huh 647: But their name is a bull. Interviewer: uh-huh 647: An ox is when you castrate him. Interviewer: uh-huh 647: That's what you call an ox and a bull when he not he not castrated you know. Interviewer: Then say you were gonna castrate him what how else would they say that? 647: That's the only way I know it. Interviewer: Do you ever hear prim him or mark him or cut him? 647: mm-mm You can mark a bu- mark ca- animal with uh with an iron with you initial in and you have to warm it an mark 'em with it Interviewer: uh-huh um The little cow when it's first born is called a? 647: A calf. Interviewer: And if it's a female it's a? 647: They call it a heifer. Interviewer: And if it's a male? 647: A bull. Interviewer: And if you had a cow that was expecting a calf you'd say she was going to? 647: Getting a calf is all Interviewer: uh-huh 647: Gonna get a calf. Interviewer: And a female horse is called a? 647: A mare. Interviewer: And a male? 647: A male that's a that's a a stallion. Interviewer: uh-huh 647: mm-hmm Interviewer: What about the male sheep? 647: Oh got me no I don't know nothing about that. Interviewer: Do you know about the female? 647: mm-mm Interviewer: #1 What if- # 647: #2 I never # did see no sheep. Interviewer: uh-huh What do people raise sheep for? 647: I don't know. They make clothes with the wool. Interviewer: uh-huh 647: What you cut off her. Interviewer: um {NS} The animals that you get bacon from you call those? {NS} 647: Hog. Interviewer: uh-huh 647: That's hog meat. {C: distant} {X} {C: walking away?} {NS} {X} They tell me to be in school I don- what's wrong with those children? Here's what I tell you things have changed. And see my children I tell them never to be out of school I raise ten eleven children one grandson. Ten of my own and one of my grandson {NS} and children went to school and children never was put out of school for nothing. Interviewer: uh-huh 647: Never was put out of school. And yet these children here now they all time out of school. They all the time put out of school for something. Sometimes a whole bunch of 'em out back there is out of school. The siste- those sisters the big sisters they all out of school. It's so bad. Interviewer: Their mother just doesn't make them go? 647: That's what it is these mothers don't raise their children right. {D: The children ain't raided like they used to be raised.} They go and the fight the school teacher I tell 'em they ain't got no business fighting no school teacher. You go to school to learn you ain't go to school to fight or be sassy. I don't like sassy children. {NS} Me and sassy children don't go. {NS} Interviewer: ha {C: Vehicle} {NS} 647: {D: I don't like no children with sassy. } {NS} I like good children. {NS} Interviewer: um {NS} You know the hogs {NS} when they're first born you call them a? 647: {D: A cork} Interviewer: Huh? 647: {D: A cork} Interviewer: Oh the hog. 647: A hog? Interviewer: uh-huh 647: Oh you call them a little pig I know. Interviewer: uh-huh What about when they get a little bit bigger? {NS} 647: I guess they still a pig. {NS} Interviewer: And if they're a female you call them a? 647: {NW} {C: Laughing} {NS} You know what they call them. Don't you know what they call a female hog? Interviewer: What? 647: A sow. Interviewer: uh-huh Does that word sound kind of bad to you? 647: I don't like that word mm-mm You? It how do it sound to you? Interviewer: Huh how does it sound to me? 647: Yeah saying a sow. Interviewer: I didn't grow up hearing the word. So I mean it doesn't sound you know. 647: It don't sound bad to you? And how about a a female dog call them a jib that don't sound bad? Interviewer: I didn't he- learn that word until recently 647: You didn't learn that word? I likes to say a she dog me. Interviewer: uh-huh 647: I don't like to say no jib. Interviewer: What about the male hog what do you call him? 647: A boar hog. Interviewer: uh-huh Does that sound bad to you? 647: mm-mm that don't {C: bump} sound so bad. But I don't like all them old kind of word me I don't know. Interviewer: What if what if the boar hog what if he's been castrated then you call him a 647: A hog. Interviewer: uh-huh 647: A hog I believe. I think that's what they call 'em. {NS} Interviewer: And you know the stiff hairs that a hog has on it's back 647: hmm Interviewer: #1 What # 647: #2 What's that? # Interviewer: You know the #1 same # 647: #2 They gives a # hair is all I call it a hair me. Interviewer: uh-huh What about on a hair brush? You have a? 647: Real stiff hair brush? Interviewer: uh-huh 647: That looks like that's hog hair here it's so stiff. Interviewer: uh-huh They call those the bris- 647: I don't know what they call it. Interviewer: And the big teeth that a hog has 647: {D: They call them tudges.} Interviewer: uh-huh {NS} And the thing you put the food in for the hog? 647: There's a trough where you put for hog. {NS} Interviewer: #1 What would you call- # 647: #2 {X} # Interviewer: huh? 647: You feed the hog in a trough. Interviewer: uh-huh What would you call a hog that's grown up wild? 647: A wild hog that's all. Interviewer: uh-huh 647: A wild hog. {NS} Interviewer: And {NS} say if you had some horses and mules and cows and so forth {NS} and they were getting hungry you'd say you had to go feed the? 647: The horses and the mules. Interviewer: uh-huh Would you ever call them the critters or the stock? 647: I hear people call them stock too. Interviewer: uh-huh 647: mm-hmm Interviewer: What if you were talking about turkeys and chickens and geese and so forth? You'd say you had to go feed the? 647: Go feed uh sa- uh go feed my chickens I ain't never fooled with no geese and turkey. Interviewer: uh-huh 647: Go feed my chicken but not no turkey near no geese. {NW} {C: Sneeze} Interviewer: If it's time to {NS} to feed the s- stock and do your chores you'd say that it's? 647: It's time to feed him. Interviewer: uh-huh Do you ever hear people say it's feeding time or fodder time? 647: mm-hmm Interviewer: What did they say? 647: What they say about what time to feed your animals? Interviewer: uh-huh 647: That's what I say me time to feed the animals. Interviewer: uh-huh 647: mm-hmm Time to feed your horses or something. Interviewer: And you know the noise that a calf makes when it's being weened? You'd say the calf began to? 647: The calf make noise? Interviewer: uh-huh What kind of noise does a calf make? 647: I don't know me. They hollers I know. {NS} Interviewer: huh? 647: They hollering but they don't I don't know how {D: you know hollers} Interviewer: What about a cow what noise does she make? 647: Oh she make a funny noise too. Interviewer: You say she does what? 647: Oh I forgot how you say it. I forgot how you say that. Interviewer: What about a horse? 647: A horse hollers. Interviewer: mm-hmm Say if you wanted to call a cow to get her to come to you how would you do that? 647: Well you call her by her name and she come to you. Interviewer: uh-huh 647: Well I ain't never had nothing to cal- that I had to call I call them me. Interviewer: uh-huh How would you call a calf? 647: How you call a calf? Interviewer: uh-huh 647: You don't call them I don't think you call no calf. They comes to their mother when you when they want to come to her. Interviewer: uh-huh 647: mm-hmm Interviewer: What would you say to a to get her to stand still so you could milk her. 647: Well you just tell 'em to keep still. For you to milk 'em you tell 'em to keep still. Interviewer: uh-huh {NS} What do you say to a mule or a horse to make them turn left or right when you're plowing? 647: Honey I don't know I don't know. {NS} I ain't never did plow no horses #1 {D: just had mule}. # Interviewer: #2 Ha # {NS} Did you ever hear anybody call a horse? 647: uh-uh Interviewer: What about to get him started you tell the horse? 647: Get up I guess something like that. Interviewer: And to stop her? 647: Move. Interviewer: And to back up? 647: Tell him back up. Interviewer: And ho- #1 did you eve- # 647: #2 You # pull on the rope Interviewer: #1 uh-huh # 647: #2 tell 'em to # back up. Interviewer: Did you ever hear anybody call sheep? 647: No I ain't never did see a live sheep. Interviewer: What about hogs? 647: I seen hog but I ain't never seen no sheep. Interviewer: How would people call hogs? 647: They don't call 'em they they have 'em in a pen you don't have to call 'em. Interviewer: uh-huh What about chickens? 647: Oh I used to call chicken but I don't call no more chicken now. Interviewer: How did you use to call them? 647: I don't know I forgot. {NS} I don't ever call my chicken I just throw feed time and let 'em come get it. Interviewer: ha. What different um kind of bread do people make out of flour? 647: You can make biscuit bread and you can make light bread. Interviewer: uh-huh 647: And you make cakes. {NS} That's all the different I know. Interviewer: What do people put in light bread to make it rise? 647: Oh you got to buy you got to make yeast for it. #1 And then make # Interviewer: #2 uh-huh # 647: your bread. And put your bread there and let your bread rise and put it in the stove put it in a pan let it rise and put it in the stove. Interviewer: uh-huh 647: And bake it. I don't even know how to make no more bread I ain't make bread in so long. Interviewer: ha You say there's two kinds of bread there's home made bread 647: mm-hmm Interviewer: and then there's What you buy at the store you call that? 647: Bread buying from the baker. uh-huh That's not homemade bread Interviewer: #1 that's? # 647: #2 No # uh-uh Homemade bread you make your bread yourself. Interviewer: uh-huh 647: And bake it yourself in your stove. Interviewer: uh-huh 647: That's what you call homemade bread. Interviewer: What about the other kind of bread? 647: Biscuit bread? Interviewer: No that you buy at the store. You call that? 647: Bread buying it from the baker Interviewer: #1 uh-huh # 647: #2 I # call it baker's bread me. Interviewer: uh-huh And talking about how much flour you might buy you might buy a sack that has five? {NS} 647: Oh I don't know I don't buy no sack of flour. {NS} Interviewer: How much how much flour did a sack have? 647: Ninety-eight pound. Interviewer: uh-huh What about something that you make up a batter and you fry three or four of these for breakfast? 647: Pancake? Interviewer: uh-huh 647: You like pancake and syrup? Interviewer: Yeah. 647: I don't eat that. I used to like that I don't like that no more. Interviewer: uh-huh What about something people would make they fry it in deep fat and it has a hole in the center? {NS} 647: What it is? I don't know. It has a hole in the center? Interviewer: uh-huh 647: What they frying in what? Interviewer: In deep fat. 647: I don't know I never did s- Interviewer: Do you ever hear of doughn- 647: Doughnut that's what you talking about? Interviewer: uh-huh 647: They fry doughnuts in fat? Interviewer: How do you make doughnuts? 647: I don't know I buy doughnuts {X} me I don't make no doughnuts. {C: mumbling} Interviewer: #1 What sort of # 647: #2 If I don't # know how to make uh-huh I don't guess. Interviewer: What sort of things do you make out of cornmeal? 647: {NW} {C: Yawning} Cornbread. {C: Yawning} Just about all I make out of cornmeal. Interviewer: What about taking just the cornmeal and salt and water and making something that you can eat with a spoon? 647: I don't know I ain't never did make that. Interviewer: Do you ever hear of mush or cush-cush? 647: Yeah I hear talk of that but I ain't never did made that I don't know how you make it. Interviewer: What's that? 647: Cush-cush I made it cornbread I know how to make cornbread. Interviewer: uh-huh {NS} 647: I use that. {NS} Interviewer: Do you ever hear of mush? 647: uh-uh Do you ever hear of a corn dodger? {C: 678 yawns} No what that is I don't know what that is. I don't know what kind of what that is {X} I don't know I don't know much about them things. {NS} Interviewer: And {NS} the inside part of an egg you call that? 647: The yolk of the egg. Interviewer: uh-huh What color is that? 647: The egg is yellow. Interviewer: huh? 647: The egg is yellow. Interviewer: uh-huh And if you cook them in hot water you call them? 647: Boiled egg? Interviewer: What if you #1 Crack # 647: #2 Well break egg # break egg in ho- in warm water? Interviewer: uh-huh 647: Poach eggs? Interviewer: uh-huh 647: Shoot I don't eat that. Interviewer: ha {NS} 647: That's too nasty ew. I don't eat poach eggs. Interviewer: uh-huh 647: That's what the doctor told me poach eggs I don't {X} {NS} I don't like boiled either you see boiled eggs everyone. I'm supposed to eat two boiled eggs for breakfast. Oh {D: I ate meat when I then stopped to eat meat I don't eat no egg} boiled eggs. I get tired of all this stuff. Poach eggs I don't eat that at all. Interviewer: You know um the kind of pork the kind of salter um pork you can use for boiling with greens 647: What's that? Interviewer: the kind of meat you use for boiling with greens. 647: What kind of meat I don't know I don't know about that. Interviewer: You know that real fat salt pork? 647: Oh. You use that for putting in greens? Interviewer: uh-huh What would you call that kind of meat? 647: Fat meat. Interviewer: uh-huh What about when you cut the side of the hog? What do you call that? 647: I don't know. Cut the side of the hog? Interviewer: uh-huh 647: I don't know. Interviewer: Well the kind of meat that you buy sliced now to eat with eggs. 647: Oh bacon? Interviewer: uh-huh Do you ever hear people talk about a side of bacon or a middling of bacon? 647: mm-mm I just go ahead and buy bacon here I don't know if it's the side or middle or what. Interviewer: uh-huh What about the edge of the bacon what they cut off before they slice it? {NS} 647: I don't know I ain't never seen it. {NS} Interviewer: And you could take the trimmings and slice them up and grind them and season them and you'd make? 647: That makes a pork sausage? Interviewer: uh-huh What about the person who kills and sells meat he's called a? 647: Butcher. Interviewer: And if meat's been kept too long you say that it's done what? 647: Spoiled? Interviewer: And what do you make with the inside parts of the hog what inside parts do you eat? 647: I don't eat nothing like that sure. I don't eat pork at all I don't fool with it. Interviewer: uh-huh 647: I don't worry with no pork meat. Interviewer: Do you ever hear of the chit? 647: Chitlin chitlins that what they call? Interviewer: uh-huh 647: Yeah I don- yeah I don't eat that either you eat that? Interviewer: I hadn't ever had it. 647: I don't eat that. {NS} Interviewer: What about um {NS} the other inside parts that they eat? {C: Vehicle} {NS} 647: What inside parts? {C: Vehicle} Interviewer: Of a hog. {NS} Do you ever hear of a harslet or haslet? 647: mm-mm I don't ever hear talk of that. Interviewer: What can they make with the meat from the head? 647: hog head cheese. Interviewer: uh-huh Do you ever hear of anything called scrapple or pon haus? 647: uh-uh What I don't know what that is. Interviewer: What about something they can make from the liver? 647: I don't know I never knowed nothing to make with no liver. Interviewer: Do you ever hear them make anything out of the blood? 647: Blood sausage yeah. Oh my lord. {C: yawning} Interviewer: How did they make the blood sausage? 647: I don't know. I don't know cuz I don't know where I was at. Interviewer: uh-huh Say if you had some butter that was kept too long and the butter didn't taste right you'd say the butter was? 647: Rank. Interviewer: uh-huh 647: mm-hmm Interviewer: And this is something like a fruit pie only it has several layers of fruit and dough in it? 647: What a fruit cake? Interviewer: Of course maybe if you made it out of apples you call it a? 647: Apple pie? Interviewer: uh-huh Do you ever hear of an apple cobbler or an apple slump or? 647: Yeah I hear talk of apple cobbler. Interviewer: uh-huh 647: mm-hmm Interviewer: And you might take milk or cream and mix that with sugar and pour it over pie you'd call that a? 647: Put milk and sugar over pie? Interviewer: uh-huh Just a a sweet liquid. 647: I never seen it. Interviewer: uh-huh Say if someone has a good appetite you'd say he sure likes to put away his? 647: His food. Interviewer: And food taken between regular meals you'd call that a? 647: mm I don't know. Interviewer: Well say you've already eaten dinner but then you go in and {NS} 647: Eat between meal? {C: Vehicle} {NS} Interviewer: And fix yourself something to eat around the middle of the afternoon {C: vehicle} 647: oh {C: Vehicle} Interviewer: you'd call that a? 647: Eating between meal. Interviewer: uh-huh {NS} Do you ever call that a bite or a snack or a lunch? 647: Yes uh yeah lunch or a snack. Interviewer: uh-huh 647: mm-hmm Interviewer: And if dinner was on the table and the family was standing around the table you'd tell them to go ahead and? {NS} 647: Eat your dinner. Interviewer: Or they're standing up you tell them? 647: Sit down and eat your dinner. Interviewer: mm-kay So you'd say so then he went ahead and what down. 647: And he wha- what you say? {NS} Interviewer: You s- say he was standing up and then he? 647: Sat down. Interviewer: mm-kay And you say {NS} nobody else was standing because everybody had done what? {NS} 647: eaten their dinner eaten their meal. Interviewer: Or had what down no one else was standing because they had all. 647: Sat down. Interviewer: And if you want somebody not to wait until the potatoes are passed over to them you tell them just go ahead and? Say there's the potatoes on the table you might tell someone just go ahead and? 647: Help yourself. Interviewer: So you'd say so he went ahead and? 647: mm Interviewer: and what himself? 647: Served his self Interviewer: Or you told him to help himself #1 you'd say then he? # 647: #2 mm-hmm # Interviewer: He went ahead and and what himself to the potatoes? 647: I don't know honey. {NS} Interviewer: Say if someone offers you some food that you don't want you'd say no thank you I don't? 647: I don't want it. Interviewer: uh-huh 647: mm-hmm Interviewer: And if food's been cooked and served a second time you say that it's been? {NS} 647: has been served already. {NS} Interviewer: uh-huh {C: Vehicle} {NS} You say it's {C: Vehicle} {NS} yet over or warmed up? {C: Vehicle} {NS} 647: mm-hmm {NS} Interviewer: You put food in your mouth and then you begin to? 647: Say what? Interviewer: huh? 647: What? Interviewer: You put food in your mouth and then you do what? 647: {NW} Interviewer: Or with your teeth? {NS} You put the food in your mouth and then you do what to it? 647: Eat it? Interviewer: Well with your teeth first of all you? 647: First of all with your teeth what? Interviewer: You go like this you. {NS} 647: You eating it. You eating your food. Interviewer: Or you're breaking the food up you say you're? 647: mm-hmm Chewing your food. Interviewer: uh-huh You say he couldn't eat that piece of meat because it got stuck in his throat and he couldn't? 647: mm-hmm It's hard something like that. Interviewer: uh-huh You say it got stuck in his throat and he couldn't? 647: Couldn't swallow it. Interviewer: uh-huh And peas and beats and carrots and so forth that you grow you call those? 647: {D: See I remember peas. } Interviewer: Or they're all different kinds of? 647: Frui- uh um vegetables. Interviewer: huh? 647: All different kind of vegetables. Interviewer: uh-huh um And whiskey that's made out in the woods you call that? {NS} 647: Got me about that whiskey cuz I don't make that. Interviewer: Ha Did you ever hear of people making it? {NS} 647: Not down here. Interviewer: What about beer that people would make themselves? 647: {X} {NS} Nobody ever make beer down here I don't think. Interviewer: uh-huh {NS} Say if something was cooking and it made a good impression on you you'd tell somebody just? That just? 647: {D: what?} Interviewer: You walk into the kitchen and tell me just that food just? 647: Good? Interviewer: uh-huh Would you say just smell it or #1 smell of it? # 647: #2 Smell # good or. Interviewer: uh-huh 647: mm-hmm {NS} Interviewer: And you'd say this isn't imitation maple syrup this is? This is gen- This isn't imitation this is? 647: mm Oh lord I don't know. {D: you got me I don't call that. } Interviewer: You'd say this is real this is genu- You say it's genuine or genuine? 647: mm {D: I don't} {NS}