Regional Dialect Question

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Re: Regional Dialect Question

Postby Bethers » Sun Mar 30, 2014 6:59 pm

Dago T's - is what I knew them by - course, I also was from the Chicago area. And for those of you who don't know - ONLY that undershirt was/is called a Dago T. I was married to an Italian - only type of undershirt he owned.

I hate the term wife beaters ... dang ...that sux.
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Re: Regional Dialect Question

Postby mtngal » Sun Mar 30, 2014 8:50 pm

Wow, interesting answers. In my sheltered experience, they are tank tops. (And Dago was/is a slur).
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Re: Regional Dialect Question

Postby BarbaraRose » Sun Mar 30, 2014 9:17 pm

Muscle shirt around here. "Wife beater" is just disturbing :evil:
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Re: Regional Dialect Question

Postby cpatinjones » Tue Apr 01, 2014 6:57 am

I always called them undershirts.

The first time someone refrerred to it as "wife beaters", I was stunned.

Now, another name "Dago-Tees".

Interesting. :)
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Re: Regional Dialect Question

Postby mitch5252 » Tue Apr 01, 2014 7:34 am

..
Think Marlon Brando in A Streetcar Named Desire...

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When I was growing up (NOT when I was little), this was the Dago-T (or Cicero-T, named for the Chicago suburb of Cicero); the regular sleeved t-shirt was an undershirt; and the mesh thing was the muscle shirt.

I never heard the term wife-beater until just a couple of years ago (less than 5).
..
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Re: Regional Dialect Question

Postby MelissaD » Tue Apr 01, 2014 8:52 am

As I travel around the US I've heard a couple of others.

Bubbler is a water fountain like you drink from in the hallway.

Berm or edge of the road we called the ditch.

"Booking" meant you were going fast.

I don't notice them as much these days. Probably due to TV, the internet and people tend to travel more. I have met a couple of people that have never been more than 50-100 miles from their birth place and they were in their late 50's early 60's. I found that rather odd. By the time I left high school I'd already been in every state east of the Mississippi, Eastern Canada and Colorado (by plane, kind of hopped over NE and IA ;) )
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Re: Regional Dialect Question

Postby Phoenix » Tue Apr 01, 2014 9:00 am

undershirt
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Re: Regional Dialect Question

Postby IrishIroamed » Tue Apr 01, 2014 11:48 am

Dago T's in IL

MelissaD wrote:Berm or edge of the road we called the ditch.


Berms in IL go up (little hill) not down (ditch).
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Re: Regional Dialect Question

Postby Excel » Tue Apr 01, 2014 1:54 pm

Interesting comments... so I'll add mine... I am from Cicero (Illinois) & grew up in a very mixed neighborhood.... Had many Dago friends (& they didn't consider that name a 'slur')... nor did Polish families get offended by being called Pollocks, but of course that was many years ago (in the 50's & 60's)... Yes, I've been around a long time now... However, back to the shirts.... my Dad wore those kinds & they were just called undershirts back then... I have pictures of him when he was involved with the CCC's & helped build roads, camping ground areas & fought forest fires all along the west coast from Oregon down to California. Those were the kind of shirts the men wore in all the pictures I have of him & his buddies... He led an interesting life though a hard one. To get back home to Chicago area from the West Coast he 'rode the rails'... many a great story there... He also worked on the Hoover Dam as a 'Powder Monkey'.... he set up & set off the TNT they used to blast the mountains... many a sad story there that was never told to the public... Anyhow, just thought I'd share a little history from my family.
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Re: Regional Dialect Question

Postby Bethers » Tue Apr 01, 2014 2:01 pm

IrishIroamed wrote:Dago T's in IL

MelissaD wrote:Berm or edge of the road we called the ditch.


Berms in IL go up (little hill) not down (ditch).

Yep on berm - it's a barrier - while the ditch goes down. But there can be a berm IN a ditch lolol

Excel - love your story (ies).
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