Submitted by so-unobvious t3_121ol3n in Pennsylvania
38% of U.S. states do not have an official language, and Pennsylvania is one of them!
Submitted by so-unobvious t3_121ol3n in Pennsylvania
38% of U.S. states do not have an official language, and Pennsylvania is one of them!
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I don’t know what to say
Or what language to say it in
We don't need one.
How could we decide between Yinz and Jawn?
Well screw youse too, bro
Younse would like to say HI!
Just like we do between pop and soda, sub and hoagie, and Sheetz and Wawa.
It's based on your cultural genetics given you by your childhood zip code, lol.
In all seriousness, we don't really use either term here in the Poconos.
Edit: spelling
Do Philly people not call them hoagies? I thought that was the one thing that united us Pennsylvanians🤣
Yes. Typically most people within about a 60-mile radius of Center City Philly do. I'm about 80 miles out and people here more likely call them subs though I grew up closer to the city and call them goagies. I saw a map once showing where in the U.S. they were called subs vs. grinders vs. hoagies and most of PA and most of the country call them subs apparently.
Ah, thanks for the clarification. Guess it’s more of a thing that unites Pittsburgh and Philly!
Do Pittsburghers call them hoagies? If so, I never knew that.
We do! Love a good hoagie
Huh, TIL.
I do too plus great cheesesteaks.
Back in the ‘60’s we used to call them zeps. (I lived between Pottstown and Phoenixville) Somewhere along the way we began calling them hoagies, yet here in Canada we call them subs.
I’m totally remembering zeps, and that’s from the mid 70s when I lived in Norristown..
Well we got Pittsburghese, north central, south central, eastern and Philadelphia languages to start
Is it creek or “crick”?
We also have Pennsylvania Dutch which is a German dialect.
Pennsylvania Deutsch is also a thing. It's not exactly (High) German... definitely not English.
Beat me to it! I was thinking the same thing! Call it "YinzandYo"
Water or wooder?
'wadder' is how it seems to come out of my mouth.
Town or tahn?
both for me are right. and i live in greensburg which is just outside of pittsburgh. born and raised
My Dad worked in Greensburg. I know exactly where it is!
It's interesting how totally different the western part of the state is from the eastern portion. Having lived in both, I prefer the PGH area, hands down.
I prefer PGH and not the Pennsyltucky I live in.
I lived in Amish country for a short time. I liked it though. It was just a short time though, so I guess that's a little different then long term or growing up there.
It depends on the size. Crick is small. No trouble crossing. Creek could be an issue, depending on recent rain.
For me it’s if I’m referring to a named body of water or not. “That’s Spring Creek” vs “I’m heading down to the crick”
Its crick
Both! Creeks are bigger than cricks.
yes
My understanding is crick or creek, which term is used is based on the waterway. Best answer is - it depends. IMO a creek is picturesque, has more volume and can usually support fish. A crick is a smaller, not a ton of water and might have minnows and crayfish.
Good. We shouldn't, although the state should support indigenous and PA Dutch language revitalization efforts
Pennsylvania appears to be one of the only states not recognizing an indigenous people anyway. Lenape tribe were/are here it's never been a question and are still here albeit after the usual ugly history where there was certainly a shove to eradicate them. Sounds like the Monty Python dead parrot argument or something " We are here " ( visibly ) " No you're not " ( speaking to a tribal member ).
NO idea what in hell government gets out of the flat refusal. Pretty infuriating.
Also worth noting the Seneca Nation had 1500 acres in northern PA up until the 1960s, but then it was flooded when the Kinzua Dam was built. Also still in the area, but that was when the last tribal land in the commonwealth was taken. Honestly I wish I knew how to change that, should I try to do something locally or take it up with my state rep? https://pahistoricpreservation.com/cornplanter-grant-native-american/
Yup I was suprised moving to PA from NY, we grew up right by rez’s and there was lots of native talk and culture in school. Down here… nothing. Like they never even existed
I nonimate Flemish.
goed idee, Vlaams is mooi
I nominate Frisian
I nominate Gaeilge
Monk's Café Flemish Sour
It should be Pennsylvania dutch.
Honestly would be funny as fuck if the Pennsylvanians just start unanimously speaking Pennsylvania Dutch like how the Irish brought Gaelic back
Dude, I live in Dutch Country, I do not want to start speaking it, the English is weird enough is.
I once read, somewhere that I cannot recall, that there was a time when a third of Pennsylvanians spoke Pennsylvania Dutch. My father is Pennsylvania Dutch and his father was bilingual, but his mother forbade him from being taught the tongue as it wasn't, "modern." She later admitted that this was a mistake. He once told me that he hated going to the local barber shop in his small coal town as all the old men would speak Pennsylvania Dutch and he would have no idea what they were saying.
My grandfather once visited a bar in Upper Darby, where we lived when I was very young, and the locals asked if he was Swedish, because of his accent. My mother has told me that when she met his grandparents, she could never quite tell when they were speaking Pennsylvania Dutch and when they were speaking 'Dutchified' English.
When I was in college, in an act of futility, I took courses in German that were taught by a woman from southern Germany. I once showed her my grandfather's old Grundsau Lodsch (Numma Finf an da Schwador) pamphlets, and she was amused to find the language rather familiar. (She also said that I sounded Austrian when I tried to speak German)
I wish that I were bilingual, because I would not be too far from High German, even if I would sound like something of a 'hick' in Germany, and it would be amusing if I could banter with my father auf Deitsch when he visits. My grandfather would often torment my mother, a self-described 'suburban princess' from Central Pennsylvania, by speaking Pennsylvania Dutch around her. He used to recite some poem that began, "A Truss truss trilly, a farmer hat in Philly," and ended, "the farmer had to sell," that I wish I knew all of. The Pennsylvania Dutch have strange, slight cruel streak, especially toward children. (Anybody who has lived in mortal terror of the Belschnickel knows what I refer to.)
And I think it’s just called “Irish” now; Gaelic is what we’re supposed to call Scots Gaelic.
Scottish* Gaelic. Scots is a completely different language, closer to English than Gaelic.
I hear there is a low dutch too?
And that’s for the better so govt documents don’t come all in one language
Do we need one?
Meaning unclear; racially harassed pizza guy for having Spanish on the tv
Our official language should be "who gives a fucking shit."
How about the Lenni Lenape language to honor the original inhabitants?
Alaska did this with the indigenous languages
So?
Language should be american - we speak America in PA
/s
Ain't no one speakin no Mexican on my watch.
Hey, isn't it enough that we have a national religion? You greedy jerks want everything.
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There is no official language in the US. I would be shocked if most of the states who have one aren't Red states. For people who love murica and the constitution so much, they're generally happy to get rid of our traditions and rights as long as it serves their bigotry.
The US not having an official language is symbolic of our "melting pot" status.
Probably because Philly English and Pittsburgh English are so different from each other, and each side will defend theirs to the death
Good. Let's keep it that way.
Unnecessary
Go karma farm somewhere else.
All of the comments here are great, but if we’re being serious, it gets pretty interesting.
I mean we have the Amish/Mennonite/PA Dutch contingent, some of whom still speak an old dialect of German as their first language.
Then we have the modern immigrant population speaking a variety of languages, predominately Spanish dialects.
Regardless, I’m glad we don’t have an official language, because we never really did.
Mumble is the local dialect in the northeastern part of the state
In the formerly Pennsylvania Dutch parts the second language is bickering. (My mother, a Scottish-Irish woman from Central Pennsylvania's suburbs, told me that when she first met my father's aunts, she thought that they hated one another.)
That's just how they communicate
I'm from New Jersey, our language is sarcasm
Simlish is the only way
Its youz. Dem guys and yo and goin toda shore
Jeet yet? No, dijew?
We ain’t need no fishal language
Pennsylvania Dutch!
Don't be a schnickelfritz.
Have you been to Philly?
Did you know we don't allow atheists to hold political office?
One of like 8 states that directly contradicts the federal constitution.
This is such a weird point, and it's why sometimes it counts and sometimes it doesn't. The PA Constitution is weirdly worded:
>§ 3. Religious freedom.
>
>All men have a natural and indefeasible right to worship Almighty God according to the dictates of their own consciences; no man can of right be compelled to attend, erect or support any place of worship, or to maintain any ministry against his consent; no human authority can, in any case whatever, control or interfere with the rights of conscience, and no preference shall ever be given by law to any religious establishments or modes of worship.
>
>§ 4. Religion.
>
>No person who acknowledges the being of a God and a future state of rewards and punishments shall, on account of his religious sentiments, be disqualified to hold any office or place of trust or profit under this Commonwealth.
IIRC, this was put in place so that no-one could be disqualified because of the practice of religion and served to make sure that you were not barred from office for practicing and flavor of worship. But it certainly doesn't proscribe atheists from holding office.
Incorrect. (Technically incorrect, the worst kind of incorrect.)
Atheists can hold political office in PA.
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Official? Every freaking document I have read, signed etc in all my years in Pennsylvania has been in English. That's FACT and darn near "official". Of course we can split the atom ...
There is a vanishing Texas German community out there.
As it should be. Official state business is done in English, many forms offer several languages. Why isolate non- English speakers ?
One more thing for Republicans to demand for purity.
Here in the mountains of Pa, we speak American.
Yinz don't say
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The north philly accent is beautiful right? Youz and Nawt fo Nawting?
Don’t forget color is kellers here and crick is also creek .
No creek is crick!
Yinz new what I meant
My Dad used to ice skate Dahn on Hay’s crick ( before it was polluted)
When I was younger, my father's family would have annual gatherings at a property owned by their parents known as, "the crick." I remember many summers of try to catch crayfish.
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Based PA
Coal cracking heyna
I actually didn't know this about PA, but I did know this about Texas (was born and raised there lol). There were a few cities in the countryside around Austin Texas that speak like a mixture of German, Polish and English, and they also make the best kolaches on the planet lol
Edit: I made it sound like there were whole countries around Texas' capitol, but I really meant "not big cities like Houston" lol
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There are tons of official languages in Pa.
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I think the official language of over half the state is “ Hillbilly “.
Roof or ruff?
We need it to be Klingon.
Dint yinz know dat?
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We should make Esperanto our official language.
That's so not unobvious
i think its about time we adopted one.
i'm tired of the southern PA people saying "WaWa"
when the proper term for getting gas/food is "Sheetz"
I'm pretty sure it's English.... Source: I live there and everything's in English
There's plenty of people and businesses in PA who don't speak English. I've met people's grandparents who only speak eastern European languages like Czech and polish, third and fourth generation Mexican families who always speak Spanish to each other, Puerto Rican restaurants who only have menus in Spanish, Italian neighborhoods with a ton of Italian speakers, and so on.
Source: I've lived here all my life.
Bonus points: I've never lived in Philadelphia or Pittsburgh with huge immigrant communities, all the examples I cited are in cities under 75k in PA
Waterwebgrasshopper t1_jdmnwjr wrote
Did you also know the U.S. does not have an official language?