A variety of New Orleans accents from YEAH YOU RITE!

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  • Опубліковано 21 жов 2024

КОМЕНТАРІ • 772

  • @dqtx3996
    @dqtx3996 8 років тому +580

    I was born and raised in New Orleans. I'll never forget when I was employed as a receptionist. The accounting lady was raised in the Garden district and grew up in the Gert town area. She swore she had no New Orleans accent and would make snide remarks about mine. That is until one day her father called and when I answered, he thought I was her. I laughed for days.

  • @doctorj2u2
    @doctorj2u2 12 років тому +188

    New Orleans is a whole wide world of its own. I am so glad I was born in its unique universe.

    • @sinepari9160
      @sinepari9160 Рік тому

      yes

    • @MC32595
      @MC32595 10 місяців тому +4

      yes definitely, that’s what makes it’s sinking all the more tragic. if or when new orleans sinks, we’ll lose a unique history and culture…

    • @NicoleJohn-kq2iy
      @NicoleJohn-kq2iy 6 місяців тому

      Right

    • @techrev9999
      @techrev9999 5 місяців тому +1

      A lot of the southern US is similar. I've never been to New Orleans, always wanted to go. It sounds pretty amazing.

  • @amortillies4193
    @amortillies4193 3 роки тому +14

    I love this damn accent 🤣🤣 OBSESSED!

  • @MrBenbaruch
    @MrBenbaruch 5 років тому +143

    I'm a Brooklynite and I love the Yat accent, sounds like they're from Brooklyn.

    • @mrtony80
      @mrtony80 3 роки тому +11

      I grew up a bit in Brooklyn too, and they really do have a version of the old school Brooklyn accent

    • @cdandrade92
      @cdandrade92 3 роки тому +13

      Check out Erik Singer's videos! He says the most likely reason they sound alike is due to the shipping routes. NYC and NOLA Are connected.

    • @donquixotedoflamingo5510
      @donquixotedoflamingo5510 3 роки тому +8

      That's because they had a similar immigration pattern as Brooklyn, around the same time and same type of immigrants, (Working class, Italian, German, Irish, Eastern European etc...)

    • @realdealreds2578
      @realdealreds2578 3 роки тому +6

      Love it. I love it to pieces. Between yats and rural Cajuns you have the sound of my whole family and it's literal music to my ears.

    • @jeksixten5751
      @jeksixten5751 2 роки тому +5

      The Irish contributed in the accent too lots of Irish settled there because the place has lot more Cajun and Creole Catholics...

  • @babyshay2228
    @babyshay2228 8 років тому +65

    that first accent reminded me of my aunt sooo much made me so nostalgic 💛

    • @janebeatty9472
      @janebeatty9472 7 років тому +2

      baby shay Me too! Use to love talking with my Aunt.

    • @IslenoGutierrez
      @IslenoGutierrez 7 років тому +2

      baby shay Creole Yat accent.

  • @mikaylacool
    @mikaylacool 13 років тому +63

    I've lived in New Orleans for 9 years now and I love New Orleans. The people, the culture, the accents. New Orleans has a definite culture of its own that you can't find anywhere else. I'm proud to call New Orleans home.

  • @Chipper6811
    @Chipper6811 16 років тому +44

    I love the typical "Yat" accent. My husband and all his family come from the Metairie, or more locally known as "Metry". It is so unique and different from the typical Florida Parishes accents (they have a more southern drawl to their voices). I wish that I grown up around the Metairie area, because I love going there, and it's just so unique. Gotta love how the "R" tends to disappear from the end of certain words.

  • @honeybdream
    @honeybdream 14 років тому +17

    I love New Orleans and all the amazing people that make the city so special!

    • @troyannbladsacker1811
      @troyannbladsacker1811 3 роки тому +1

      Unfortunately we are losing our accent. You don't hear it as much as when I was growing up in the fifties. I believe it's from the influx of out of towners. You hardly hear French spoken anymore. It makes me sad. My niece's children don't have a New Orleans accent. I'm finding that more and more in the young.

    • @WitchKing-Of-Angmar
      @WitchKing-Of-Angmar Рік тому +1

      ​​@@troyannbladsacker1811
      Unfortunately, this is because of mainstreaming and the rise of the internet. Soon enough, everyone who doesn't care about heritage will have the bland American accent.
      Do you say Church as Choiych? Here in new england we say it as Chaurch.
      Did you know back in the 1950s and earlier, the American Accent was incredibly different from today, so much more love and rarity in the way everyone spoke, and unfortunately the rise of middle-upper class in the 1960s introduced the common-ety of the losing the Y sound in a sentence like "weyll" to "well". Elizabeth Montgomery has a "Weyll" type of dialect. There's also a beautiful and captivating film from the 1950s showcasing dialects across the spectrum of the united states. He pronounces Marry, mary, and merry in their own ways, but more importantly and unlike modern days affiliation of merry with a strong 'mair' sound, he says it marry with a strong "mauree" sound.
      Take these two excerpts:
      "What a merry day Fred, will you join me outside?" 1967
      versus
      "W'hat a mauree day Andeh, won't you join(johyn) me outside." 1950
      It's the subtlety that makes it so different...and so impossibly hard to write in a verbal sentence without vocal audio.

  • @AneudiD78
    @AneudiD78 5 років тому +26

    That Yat accent is perfect! I would in fact almost compare that accent to people who live deep in Brooklyn NY, some from Long Island and a little bit in Staten Island, but the older generation.

    • @jeksixten5751
      @jeksixten5751 2 роки тому

      The Irish contributed in the accent too lots of Irish settled there because the place has lot more Cajun and Creole Catholics...

  • @Greg-iq5nd
    @Greg-iq5nd Рік тому +3

    I grew up in New Orleans and can so relate to this. Lovely!

  • @Chipper6811
    @Chipper6811 11 років тому +13

    Ya gotta love that Yat, especially the last scene. That's what I'm used to.

  • @verycooldoc
    @verycooldoc 8 років тому +57

    Years ago, I had a client from New Orleans. I could not understand a word this boy said. When he talked, it sounded like he had marbles in his mouth. I live in the rural south so I'm used to people talking with an accent but this was like nothing I had ever heard before. Finally, in desperation, I told him to start writing stuff down for me. It worked and he used to laugh at my inability to understand his accent. I swear, I thought he was speaking a completely different language.

    • @laurabratcher-page1854
      @laurabratcher-page1854 7 років тому +17

      I live in rural North Alabama, my cousins are from NW Mississippi, and the folks in NOLA--regardless of what part of town--talk like nobody ANYWHERE else in the South! And then you go down below and/or west of Baton Rouge, and the Cajun kicks in, and the NOLA folks can't understand a word of it, either!

    • @IslenoGutierrez
      @IslenoGutierrez 7 років тому +8

      VeryCool Doc The three main dialects of Louisiana: North Louisiana (general Southern), Acadiana (Cajun), greater New Orleans (Creole). The white Creole girl at 0:01 has a Yat dialect which is a Creole dialect (Creole is generally the culture associated with New Orleans). That's the dialect that has people the most curious usually.

  • @Angell_Lee
    @Angell_Lee 2 роки тому +2

    I am in love with the Yat accent, god bless from Canada xo

  • @GeographicScholar
    @GeographicScholar 11 років тому +77

    From a cultural geography perspective, the different accents being heard in New Orleans are a product of a great variety of people settling in New Orleans and making it home. French, Spanish, Italian, African, German, Croatian, Irish, Creole, and many different groups. Class can have something to do with this too. It has an influence on the food too. Jambalaya has Spanish influences, gumbo has African, Native American, French and other influences. The muffaletta points to Italian influences.

    • @jeksixten5751
      @jeksixten5751 2 роки тому +2

      The Irish contributed to the Accent too...

    • @CALLAHAN19
      @CALLAHAN19 Рік тому

      Yep u got that right good buddy... before all the crime got real bad, I stopped hanging out on Bourbon in 2018, but the fun I had an only had to drive 5 miles to get home was cool...now, no way... I had fun bigtime... girls from out of town, or around the world would ask me to just talk, they wanted to hear me speak,,, specially when I said the cities name, NEW ORLEANS... One girl from Idaho, toll me after talking with her, she said her boyfriend now sounds like a female after hearing me speak... she was faithful to him, so that was good...

  • @ReligionIsSophistry
    @ReligionIsSophistry 13 років тому +36

    My Yat accent comes and goes.... I have no trace of it until I become distressed in some way. It has happened a number of times while traveling and people will ask me if I am Irish or if I came from Brooklyn. Only once has someone recognized it for what it is, and that was a doctor.
    He asked my what part of New Orleans I was from, I told him then said it only comes out when i am upset or extremely tired, then he let his Yat accent take over too ..... It was great!

    • @jeksixten5751
      @jeksixten5751 2 роки тому +2

      Irish contributed Accent in New Orleans... many Irish settled there because they're Catholics like cajuns

  • @tee9412
    @tee9412 2 роки тому +23

    Im so obsessed with New Orleans, from the accents and food to the historic landmarks 😭

  • @englishlanguagewithnina5965
    @englishlanguagewithnina5965 5 років тому +19

    I lived in New Orleans for a few years and I have never been somewhere with sooo many accents. Sometimes people sounded more like New Yorkers than Southerners. I loved all of them. A few people made me feel like I was from another country because I had a northern accent and spoke with larger words. Such an interesting place.

  • @CreolePearls_
    @CreolePearls_ 7 років тому +70

    Im from new Orleans and just moved to texas ppl here tellme i sound like im fromthe Caribbean lol

    • @michellenkowalski
      @michellenkowalski 5 років тому +6

      I work (photography) for a family of woodworkers out in Lafitte just outside of New Orleans, they sound like they are cajun and when I asked, "hey ya'll from around here?" They said "no, we from the Caribbean!" my mind was blown!

    • @MacGuffinExMachina
      @MacGuffinExMachina 4 роки тому +2

      @@michellenkowalski Both NOLA and the Caribbean have a lot of African and French influence on the the dialects. That's probably why.

    • @reasonablelogic4971
      @reasonablelogic4971 4 роки тому +1

      I use to get that here in California .

    • @Shebrighteeh
      @Shebrighteeh 4 роки тому

      It’s true.

    • @olvinmartinez2394
      @olvinmartinez2394 4 роки тому +2

      I was told that in the military. Especially when I said WATER

  • @kingkrysen
    @kingkrysen 2 роки тому +5

    Louisiana and Texas accents are my favorite accents ever 🔥💯🔥

  • @toothlesspenguin
    @toothlesspenguin 11 років тому +40

    From "A Confederacy of Dunces"
    "There is a New Orleans city accent… associated with downtown New Orleans,
    particularly with the German and Irish Third Ward, that is hard to
    distinguish from the accent of Hoboken, Jersey City, and Astoria,
    Long Island, where the Al Smith inflection, extinct in Manhattan,
    has taken refuge. The reason, as you might expect, is that the same
    stocks that brought the accent to Manhattan imposed it on New
    Orleans."
    Now I can read the book with an accent :)

    • @bridgetd6805
      @bridgetd6805 4 місяці тому

      I'm reading the book now and looked for this video to get a sense of the accent!

  • @hamiltonclancy
    @hamiltonclancy 5 місяців тому +1

    This is a brilliant brilliant share . Incredible.

  • @judyknight6702
    @judyknight6702 6 років тому +2

    We lived in NOLA from 1980-1982 and loved the Time Saver commercial with Rosemary and AnnaMay. If someone has a copy of one of these commercials would post it on UA-cam!

  • @HoneyBSweet1962
    @HoneyBSweet1962 12 років тому +7

    I simply love the different dialects and sounds! It's all a part of the rich gumbo of New Orleans, Nyalins, New Oryins! Yeah, you rite!

  • @TheHolyMongolEmpire
    @TheHolyMongolEmpire 8 років тому +299

    Many New Orleans sounds almost exactly like many NYC accents.

    • @ManicOreo
      @ManicOreo 8 років тому +54

      I have read it's due to the settlement of large amount Italians in both cities.

    • @michaelembree7491
      @michaelembree7491 8 років тому +31

      New Orleans is LOUDER than NYC.....Also people from New Orleans use the word " BASTARD " often, even in front of there mother . I was born on Canal street.....I know WHAT I am talking about !!!

    • @MacGuffinExMachina
      @MacGuffinExMachina 8 років тому +39

      Not just Italians, but other similar ethnicities mixing together. I guess it comes with being a port city.

    • @ManicOreo
      @ManicOreo 8 років тому +4

      +MacGuffin yeah! My answer was incomplete. There was similar immigrant populations in both cities.

    • @ThePeacePlant
      @ThePeacePlant 8 років тому +1

      jtreynol .. what do you mean they imposed it? why did people from NYC come here or Vice Versa

  • @cynthiahawkins2389
    @cynthiahawkins2389 Рік тому +1

    OMG I am a born and raised New Yorker. Living here in the Quarter since 2019...You should see the looks I get when I start talking!!!

  • @edwnx0
    @edwnx0 15 років тому +15

    I live in Quebec, a province in Canada, and the Yat accent reminds me a lot of some of the accent we hear over here. It also kinda sounds like a Brooklyn accent.

    • @sams3015
      @sams3015 3 роки тому +1

      Probably the French links & I hear Brooklyn too

    • @jeksixten5751
      @jeksixten5751 2 роки тому +1

      The Irish contributed in the accent too lots of Irish settled there because the place has lot more Cajun and Creole Catholics...

  • @Shay_TheUnpopularOpinion_
    @Shay_TheUnpopularOpinion_ 3 роки тому +10

    I’m from New Orleans I struggle all the time with the complete opposite... not keeping my accent! Lmao! My mom would always corrected my speech as a child , she didn’t want me with the accent 😓

  • @IslenoGutierrez
    @IslenoGutierrez 13 років тому +11

    I'm proud of my Yat accent. My dad's family was originally from the 9th ward back in the day when it was mostly Whites and my mom's family was from St. Bernard Parish. My family was from the Bywater neighborhood of the 9th ward and the Marigny neighborhood of the 8th ward, but now most moved out to the suburbs in Metairie, the Westbank, St. Bernard and Slidell.

  • @E9oK9kMaV
    @E9oK9kMaV Рік тому +14

    i love old videos like this. so nostalgic for pre-2000s days.

  • @taino20
    @taino20 9 років тому +67

    I used to live in New Orleans. Later, I was aware of the accent difference, but when I first arrived, I knew nothing about it. I got into a cab in the French Quarter. When the driver asked me where I wanted to go, I was shocked that he sounded as if he were from Brooklyn, New York. When I asked him which part of Brooklyn he was from, he answered, "Brooklyn? I 'm from New Orleans and I have never been outside of the city." Yes, some people in New Orleans speak like they're from Brooklyn, New York, and not with the stereotypical Southern accent.

    • @InPerfectOrder
      @InPerfectOrder 9 років тому +12

      +taino20 there is actually a perfectly good explanation for why the Yat accent sounds just like Brooklyn! It's because the immigration pattern was the same: Irish, German and Italian back at the turn of the 19th century. I love it!

    • @taino20
      @taino20 9 років тому +1

      +Jessica Waters Thank you very much, Jessica. I'm really interested in accents and dialects. I had no idea that some people(Yat accent) speak like Brooklyn. I'm from New York City. I thought everybody in New Orleans spoke with the stereotypical Southern accent.

    • @assaultislove
      @assaultislove 8 років тому +4

      Sounded like he had a Yat accent. It sounds like Brooklynese on Quaaludes

    • @taino20
      @taino20 8 років тому +2

      +assaultislove Thank you for the info. and morning laughter. "Brooklynese on Quaaludes."

    • @IslenoGutierrez
      @IslenoGutierrez 7 років тому +5

      taino20 Damn how long ago was that....because most cabbies now sound like they are from the Middle East or India lol

  • @charjl96
    @charjl96 5 років тому +41

    Ha. Those two girls at the end sound like my aunts

  • @casingadreamw.nuecases1293
    @casingadreamw.nuecases1293 4 роки тому +9

    New Orleans was so beautiful 😞

    • @IslenoGutierrez
      @IslenoGutierrez 3 роки тому +6

      It’s still beautiful...they built a new hospital and several areas have been renewed and look nicer... but New Orleans is always going through changes... but it did have a decline since the times in this video...but I think it will have a nice future... they even built a nice park along the St. Claude levee between Poland and Elysian Fields... it’s getting nicer again...

  • @bridgetd6805
    @bridgetd6805 4 місяці тому +1

    This is so fascinating. I had no idea about all these different accents

  • @jcumse
    @jcumse 5 років тому +43

    So sad these regional accents are being lost. Everybody talks the same, like they re from Wisconsin or someplace.

    • @reasonablelogic4971
      @reasonablelogic4971 4 роки тому +6

      I've once met a Wisconsinite. It felt as if I'd met an Eskimo.

    • @CallMeOpia
      @CallMeOpia 3 роки тому +4

      everyone is starting to sound like they're from California. it's a shame, i agree

    • @thomaswhittington9443
      @thomaswhittington9443 3 роки тому +1

      bro Wisconsin people have a crazy accent

    • @KalOrtPor
      @KalOrtPor 3 роки тому

      All of us being able to talk about it here and watch this video instantaneously from across the world is part of the reason why.....I mean after TV, highways, and the global economy things were already on that track, but the last 25 years put it into hyperdrive. Also ramped up word misuse and misspellings ("for all intensive purposes", "bonified" and the like wouldn't have gained traction if people that didn't really understand what they were hearing hadn't been able to spread them like wildfire so easily), but that's the price of technology.

    • @genxx2724
      @genxx2724 2 роки тому

      @@CallMeOpia I’m a native Californian and I agree. What’s the fun of visiting different places if it’s all the same?

  • @AgathaLOutahere
    @AgathaLOutahere 3 роки тому +15

    Well, as a native of the NYC region I can say unequivocally that Debra Chauvin's accent is eerily similar to suburban NYC accent, perhaps even heavier.

    • @Tony_Cardoza
      @Tony_Cardoza 2 роки тому +3

      What about the two ladies at the end? Their accents are pure blue collar yat.They rule! I love those two. Cute too.

  • @phoenixone100
    @phoenixone100 14 років тому +4

    been away from N'awlins for years and still have not lost my accent!

  • @caribbeanroots7024
    @caribbeanroots7024 5 років тому +7

    I’m from New York but I love New Orleans accents

  • @DreamsInANightmare
    @DreamsInANightmare 13 років тому +5

    i love their accents

  • @reasonablelogic4971
    @reasonablelogic4971 4 роки тому +7

    I went to school uptown, at Fortier. I never forget being told I sound "white" by my classmate. What she really meant was I didn't speak her dialect. Moving to Cali whites would say I sounded West Indian.

  • @IslenoGutierrez
    @IslenoGutierrez 14 років тому +9

    Those girls talking about the "Yatty" girls that work in their office are Yats themselves, just to a lesser degree. They still have the Yat accent with the exception that they pronounce their R's. They don't sound that far off of the the last 2 girls, which is considered full on Yat, which today, is found in St. Bernard Parish (Chalmette), because of White flight of the 9th Ward.

    • @IslenoGutierrez
      @IslenoGutierrez 3 роки тому +2

      @@Libertine852 Actually, white flight of most of the city, not just the 9th ward. The city of New Orleans went from being 69% white to 67% black in a matter of two decades...so yeah, white flight. Didn’t have anything to do with driveways and crowds because those folk’s families been living in that city for centuries. It had to do with migration patterns involving race. None of this has anything to do with 300 years of our culture.

    • @IslenoGutierrez
      @IslenoGutierrez 3 роки тому +1

      @@Libertine852 I don’t know where you’re getting all this stuff you’re talking about, but it’s nonsense. One of my parents is from the city of New Orleans and the other is from St. Bernard Parish. I know for a fact (because my city family talked about it all the time) that the white flight happened because blacks started moving into the city in large numbers from outside of New Orleans, due to the civil rights movement that allowed them to now do so at that time and whites were not happy with that as they wanted to live in white neighborhoods like they always have been and it is that which caused the white flight. And it even got to the point late in the white flight where whites that moved to the suburbs would look down on whites that decided to remain in the city... so I know the reason because half of my family was part of it and they talked about it many times. And on top of that, many of my friends are from NOLA white flight families that lived all over the city in fully white neighborhoods that are now fully black neighborhoods today and their families have said the same exact thing. So I don’t know where you’re getting all that from but it’s not accurate. White flight happened because non-NOLA black migration happened and white New Orleanians didn’t want their neighborhoods to change. But you can’t blame them, they had every right to want their neighborhoods to remain how they were. One group came in and replaced the other. And now look what’s happening with all these white transplants (carpetbaggers) they are now replacing the blacks in various parts of the city and the blacks don’t want them there doing that and are complaining about them.

    • @IslenoGutierrez
      @IslenoGutierrez 3 роки тому

      @@Libertine852 I’d have to disagree with you. The black NOLA citizens of pre-Katrina and today were not always there. The US Census of New Orleans in 1950 was 69% white and 31% black. The pre-Katrina 2000 census shows New Orleans was 67% black and 28% white... a complete role reversal from the 1950 census. Large waves of blacks moving from outside of New Orleans took place after the civil rights era allowed them to move into white neighborhoods. This happened in most major cities in fact as most major cities in the US turned from predominantly white to predominantly black. I can say for 100% certainty that I know many black New Orleanians that have told me their families originate in other parishes and towns outside of the New Orleans area such as other parts of Louisiana and Mississippi. So I’m not remaking the history of New Orleans...New Orleans was predominantly white before 1980 and was still significantly white into the 1980’s until the 1990’s. I didn’t say all the whites left the city. Most of the affluent white neighborhoods uptown, near the lake and near City Park did not turn black, those whites stayed because most blacks moving in could not afford those areas and thus, no gentrification took place in those areas. But don’t be fooled, most white New Orleanians went to the suburbs. White New Orleanians have been surrounded by suburbs for centuries before white flight and never flighted before...race is absolutely the main factor.
      If you choose to ignore the migration patterns and stories that prove that the migration was race related, that is your own business. But because I have a wealth of knowledge about the city and it’s history, I just can’t accept it. No, not all of it was race oriented...some may have moved for the reasons you name...but the vast majority of it was race related. Sure, white New Orleans neighborhoods were always not that far from black New Orleans neighborhoods, but they mostly didn’t share neighborhoods and stayed within their areas. The migration is now happening all over again but as a black flight and a white gentrification instead of the white flight and black gentrification that took place in the late 20th century. Now we see a total reversal as blacks move to the suburbs and as white out-of-state transplants (white carpetbaggers) move into their neighborhoods and the white population is rising as the black population is decreasing. A complete reversal.

  • @JesusChrist2000BC
    @JesusChrist2000BC 4 місяці тому +5

    I'm just a random 28-year-old black guy from Tennessee but I think the yat accent is easily the coolest accent in the united states. So if you speak that dialect you are super cool to me.

  • @sequanm8013
    @sequanm8013 4 роки тому +7

    My mom's side is from the projects; they sound like the girl at the beginning on the top right (when they had four ppl on screen), but actually a bit more ghetto. My dad's side is middle class-ish and from the seventh ward; they sound just like the man at the beginning on the bottom right. 😏

  • @yes4albert
    @yes4albert 16 років тому +3

    Thanks for this informative vid. On three separate occasions I've mistaken people from New Orleans for Brooklynites. Now I understand they were speaking Yat. Fascinating.

    • @jeksixten5751
      @jeksixten5751 2 роки тому

      The Irish contributed in the accent too lots of Irish settled there because the place has lot more Cajun and Creole Catholics...

  • @aGwEENapple
    @aGwEENapple 12 років тому +6

    I love their accents!

  • @IslenoGutierrez
    @IslenoGutierrez 11 років тому +3

    I love WWOZ, I listen to 90.7 all the time. All that Jazz!

  • @GeographicScholar
    @GeographicScholar 11 років тому +12

    A famous writer from New Orleans, John Toole, called New Orleans "that Hoboken on the Gulf".

    • @IslenoGutierrez
      @IslenoGutierrez 3 роки тому +1

      Yes, many people are unfamiliar with his quote...but I know it..

  • @creatornat
    @creatornat 16 років тому +7

    Thanks for posting this!! It really breaks things down for all the 'non-new-orleanians'. ;)
    I LOVE these accents!! And I miss Mckenzie's!!(pardon my spelling)

  • @agneswebb5127
    @agneswebb5127 5 років тому +2

    OMG, thank you for this! It's truly amazing.

  • @cgreen6369
    @cgreen6369 5 років тому +5

    Just saw the film Green Book, mainly shot in Louisiana. A NOLA friend with a Yat accent was cast in a speaking role that takes place in a Brooklyn bar! The Brooklyn/Yat accents are not the same, but I guess the director thought that to an average moviegoer they wouldn't notice the difference!

    • @MadisonBuratt
      @MadisonBuratt 5 років тому +1

      Charles Green when I went to Brooklyn, people thought I was a native 😂 I’m from Gonzales, but my mom has that yat (from grand isle buT was always in New Orleans)

    • @microbios8586
      @microbios8586 Рік тому

      The accent is basically the same

  • @BLXDTX
    @BLXDTX 9 років тому +20

    I was born and raised in Biloxi, MS and grew up hearing all of these accents around town. The uptown and y'at accents were the most common. I guess it stems from the fact that so many people from Biloxi have lots of friends and family from New Orleans. I must point out that this similarity isn't the case with all the other towns along the MS Gulf Coast and is pretty unique to Biloxi.

    • @austinkonrad
      @austinkonrad 9 років тому +2

      Blx5 In Gautier we you here a tinge of the Mobile accent. Were as NO yat sounds like a southern version on Brooklyn, Mobile sounds like a very subtle Boston accent. While very different than Boston, the Mobile accent comes the closest to Boston in the USA in terms of how they say parking lot, six pack etc.

    • @austinkonrad
      @austinkonrad 8 років тому +1

      Sam yep, it always cracks me up the way people from Pascagoula say baby lol, and boy oh boy do they get furious at how we pronounce their town PasAgula instead of PasCagula.

    • @MacGuffinExMachina
      @MacGuffinExMachina 7 років тому +1

      I think it's that so many people from SE LA take poor man's vacations to Biloxi and the surrounding areas lol. Some people like it so much they move there.
      The gulf coast and maybe like Jackson are the only parts of MS I will step into. Otherwise, I feel like I'm in Deliverance without the mountains.

    • @heatherbudden7028
      @heatherbudden7028 6 років тому +4

      As someone from SELA, I have spent a lot of time on the MS Gulf Coast and have always loved it there. Being there feels like being in Louisiana; of course historically the MS Gulf Coast and Mobile, AL were part of Louisiana. I think people outside the Gulf Coast area have no idea what that part of MS is like, or what Mobile, AL is like either. People have certain ideas about the State of Mississippi in general, and expect the Coast to be the same. It is not. As you mentioned, people on the Coast do not speak with the 'stereotypical Southern' accent. In fact when visiting I can always pick out the people from other parts of Mississippi. They are the ones with the southern accents.

    • @keithjrisk
      @keithjrisk 6 років тому

      Heather Budden - You are speakin' the TRUTH!

  • @IslenoGutierrez
    @IslenoGutierrez 13 років тому +3

    @Rachulie That accent some people think sound like a Ny/Nj accent is known as the New Orleans Yat accent which was usually associated with Downtown New Orleans, but also existed as well in Mid City/Gentilly and parts of Uptown like the Irish Channel and Carrolton, which it was the most widespread accent. It is the old White New Orleans accent which still exists in parts of the city today, but is extremely strong in the suburbs now, due to White flight of the city in the 60's, 70's and 80's.

  • @greengirl9341
    @greengirl9341 4 роки тому +4

    The host sounds the most authentic

  • @oywidapoodles
    @oywidapoodles 14 років тому +3

    the end is like an excerpt of some sort of 80s sitcom XD

  • @IslenoGutierrez
    @IslenoGutierrez 12 років тому +1

    @IslenoGutierrez See my previous comment. Did you not hear the first girl from the 9th ward talk on this video? Did not sound black at all. That is yat. That is the accent of Chalmette. Not black. If anything, it bears a similar sound with Brooklyn, NY, but with some southern influence thrown in. Even the two girls at the end do not sound black, and they are full on yat. They are from the 9th ward too, but this was filmed almost 30 years ago when the 9th ward was white.

  • @jab3785
    @jab3785 11 років тому +14

    The last one does sound very Brooklynish.

  • @9thGenerationCajun
    @9thGenerationCajun Рік тому +1

    It has changed so much in my 47 years of living here,90% of these people probably moved away after Katrina or passed. I truly miss the 80's & early 90's New Orleans vibe. Mostly how much friendlier people were back then & we didn't have shootings on I-10 or on Bourbon.

    • @dns9643
      @dns9643 Рік тому +2

      Late 80’s early 90’s had some of the highest murder rates ever in New Orleans.

  • @Wolfsrain90
    @Wolfsrain90 11 років тому +4

    That's incredibly interesting, actually. Thanks for sharing!

  • @BourbonondaBayou
    @BourbonondaBayou 15 років тому +2

    that's funny you say that.i'm from south louisiana and on my vacation to vegas some people told me i sounded like i was from n.y

  • @owlcritic
    @owlcritic 10 років тому +32

    Im fr/om Chalmette, Dats right dawlin, frum down in da parish, so how ya momanddem been

    • @asdf85581
      @asdf85581 9 років тому +3

      I'm from Picayune, MS. My dad commuted to Kaiser for many years. Miss those big Kaiser company picnics, and going to Rocky and Carlos for po boys.

    • @owlcritic
      @owlcritic 9 років тому +1

      Use to eat at Rocky's before heading out for my post with a security co. Spaghetti and meat balls.

    • @asdf85581
      @asdf85581 9 років тому +1

      Have y'all recovered from Katrina pretty good? I haven't been down that way in many, many years?

    • @IslenoGutierrez
      @IslenoGutierrez 7 років тому +1

      james garrity Rocky's! Veal Parmesan with baked macaroni, red gravy on the macaroni, a small wop salad, French bread with butter and a Barq's root beer. My usual Rocky's order since I was old enough to walk!

    • @gymnast2890
      @gymnast2890 7 років тому +1

      El Matador Ya'll are killing me with the food! My parents still cook creole/cajun dishes jambalya is a staple, po-boys, French bread (not the same), etoufee & different stews...it's just not the same, just a Louisiana girl living in a Georgia World.

  • @wolfclaw98sc
    @wolfclaw98sc 12 років тому +2

    believe me, it's wonderful ;P i wish i was still living in this wonderful place

  • @sylvialightman5224
    @sylvialightman5224 7 років тому +1

    Oh my. I sounded like that when I moved to Texas at age 16. Jeez. It still creeps in when I talk fast. I never noticed until I moved away from the Marigny. Goodness!

  • @sara9528
    @sara9528 4 роки тому +6

    I grew up on the westbank I now live in Arizona and everyone thinks I am from New Jersey 😂

  • @daveheel
    @daveheel 7 років тому +2

    i lived in new orleans for about 30 years and didn't think i had any accent until i moved to california where many people there pointed it out to me. and after years of living in california, i lost my accent because people there couldn't detect one.

  • @keepkiaweird
    @keepkiaweird 5 років тому +3

    I went to John w Hoffman as well. I miss my city

    • @hand2handmc
      @hand2handmc 5 років тому

      south Roman st.a cross from Taylor park, sad to say no longer there

  • @paisleyprincess7996
    @paisleyprincess7996 3 роки тому +1

    I’m from The TC’s in MN, the East Side of St. Paul to be exact. I think anyone who grew up on the ES of St. Paul before the 90s has the blue-collar St. Paul accent. It’s still Minnesotan but it sounds rougher. I know I sound like St. Paul. My kids were raised mostly in the suburbs, and my daughter sounds waaayyyy more “Proper” than me. If you go to Northside of MPLS...a you can always tell the black folks who were born and raised her before the 90s. If you listen to Prince, that’s how they sound

  • @Prodigious1One
    @Prodigious1One 15 років тому +8

    Wow, thanks for this clip. I love learning about the different accents and dialects of the United States.
    I didn't know about the yat accent before watching this. It's really unique that it resembles the Brooklyn accent.

    • @mikestarke1216
      @mikestarke1216 3 роки тому +2

      nope N.O. had it first brooklyn copied us! :))

    • @Prodigious1One
      @Prodigious1One 3 роки тому +1

      @@mikestarke1216 wow, cool. I heard a lady from New Orleans speak with the yat accent.

    • @greenmachine5600
      @greenmachine5600 3 роки тому +1

      @@mikestarke1216 wrong

  • @IslenoGutierrez
    @IslenoGutierrez 7 років тому +6

    White Creole girl (French Creole) in the beginning (colonial Louisiana French ancestry/possibly some Spanish in there too) 0:01 Surname Chauvin in New Orleans.

    • @derlinclaire1778
      @derlinclaire1778 6 років тому +1

      Chain in is a French surname,friends.

    • @IslenoGutierrez
      @IslenoGutierrez Рік тому

      @@derlinclaire1778 The surname Chauvin in Louisiana is a French Creole surname (French Creoles in Louisiana are white Louisianians whose ancestors came to Louisiana from France and Québec). The surname Chauvin came to Louisiana from Québec. Of course I know Chauvin is originally a surname from France, but I’m saying where it came to Louisiana from and who had it. Cajuns (Acadian Creoles), Creoles of Color and Afro-Creoles may also have the surname Chauvin and they received it from French Creoles from intermarriage (for Cajuns), miscegenation (for Creoles of Color) and renaming (for Afro-Creoles).

  • @mudderfocker
    @mudderfocker 11 років тому +3

    makes me miss LA....

  • @nola305
    @nola305 10 років тому +7

    The BEST way for anyone on this channel who's curious about New Orleans dialects, accents and speech patterns is to visit any youtube channel that has New Orleanians in impromptu conversations (while being filmed) with EACH OTHER and the topic isn't about accents and speech patterns of the people (Black or White), then you'll hear genuine accents without them paying attention to the way they're pronouncing words or using them too correctly, just an even flow of New Orleans "thick" accents and speech patterns.

    • @IslenoGutierrez
      @IslenoGutierrez 3 роки тому +1

      But it must be noted that black New Orleanians and white New Orleanians have different accents from each other while still sharing many dialect and accent features. There are a range of local black accents and a range of local white accents plus white transplant accents (whites that moved to New Orleans since Katrina). When I say New Orleans, I mean greater New Orleans which includes the suburbs of New Orleans too where these accents exist also. Local black accents are strongest in the city and local white accents are strongest in the suburbs. It has been this way since the 1970’s-1980’s when white flight from the city turned the city from majority white to majority black. And the transplant white accents are strongest in the city because that’s where they have been settling since Katrina and they rarely exist in the suburbs. These are distinctions that people should know about when discussing New Orleans area accents.

  • @madameblackimusprime
    @madameblackimusprime 3 роки тому +1

    This is actually really cool. I wish I had one of these but I don't even sound like I was born here.

  • @IslenoGutierrez
    @IslenoGutierrez 11 років тому +1

    I live in New Orleans, so I listen to 90.7 FM WWOZ. But I've seen the website too. I like "the Dean's list" with Dean Ellis and I also like "Overnight Jazz" with Jelly Roll Justice.

  • @6InchTruth
    @6InchTruth 15 років тому +1

    I miss my state. I can not wait to move back. I definitely miss the culture. When we'd go on vacations, the locals would treat us like celebrities when they would learn where we're from.

  • @Wondwind
    @Wondwind Рік тому +3

    First girl sounds more New York than a New Yorker

  • @daisybtoes
    @daisybtoes 11 років тому +4

    Part Two - Creole - also refers to languages (any languages) which have blended together, and it is called "creolization". In places like Haiti, Florida and a number of Carribbean Islands have Creole people, which not unlike the lingos, is a blend of black and white. Then there is Cajun, which is French Canadian. They established themselves in Parishs OUTSIDE NOLA, and if they don't speak Cajun French, they usually have the accent.

  • @WitchKing-Of-Angmar
    @WitchKing-Of-Angmar Рік тому +1

    The narrator has it best easily! 4:20
    Right here, almost every word has the addition to it.

  • @twingofamemonster1969
    @twingofamemonster1969 11 років тому +3

    It's good to be apart of a unique culture. :-)

  • @crystalsmith9991
    @crystalsmith9991 2 роки тому +1

    I grew up in the lower 9th⚜️ ward .left the area around 1994 ..now 28years I'm searching the web 🕸️⚜️🤣

  • @1blastman
    @1blastman 6 років тому +1

    Is that the Boudin Man from WWOZ commentating? I love this video!

  • @byootifulmynd
    @byootifulmynd 6 років тому +3

    I love the Yat accent.

  • @Ken.-
    @Ken.- 8 років тому +60

    If you mosey on down to 2:10 you'll find the gay accent.

    • @eddenoy321
      @eddenoy321 7 років тому +5

      No one could miss that.

    • @marselmusic
      @marselmusic 5 років тому +1

      HAHA you so rude but lol true...

    • @marselmusic
      @marselmusic 5 років тому +3

      you don't really have to bee higgins/diggins to find out!

    • @Yungtacosss
      @Yungtacosss 5 років тому +1

      Hahahahaahahah!!!

    • @BrysontheeTV
      @BrysontheeTV 5 років тому +1

      Lmao hilarious 😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😊

  • @IslenoGutierrez
    @IslenoGutierrez 11 років тому +1

    People from the New Orleans area are creoles, no matter their race. It's the culture and being born and raised in that culture. Cajun on the other hand are the descendants of the Acadians exiled to Louisiana centuries ago. They too have a distinct culture in Louisiana. Example of a white creole (French creole): New Orleans mayor Mitch Landrieu. Example of a black/mixed race creole (creole of color): New Orleans musician Aaron Neville.

  • @Rachulie
    @Rachulie 13 років тому

    @MrGuy92 Why do some ppl from nola sound like theyre from nj? (like the first lady)
    and they never get ANY SOUTHERN accent right, what makes you think they can do nola? :P

  • @504CharlieBoy504
    @504CharlieBoy504 2 роки тому +1

    I grew up uptown st Stephen's school yard. Yes other parts thought we sounded uppity

  • @slimturnpike
    @slimturnpike 9 років тому +45

    Excellent summary. Proud to be a native New Orleanian.

  • @designerproductions
    @designerproductions 2 роки тому +2

    My fave accent

  • @tabletofgalaxy
    @tabletofgalaxy 7 років тому +2

    The man in the fourth box @ 0:46 is Creole though and thorugh!!!

  • @IslenoGutierrez
    @IslenoGutierrez 10 років тому +27

    New Orleans Yat dialect: Heyyy whea' yAT bay, howz ya MAma'n'em, YEa ya rite, I'm gone cross da NUtraground to da stAW to make GROshrees, tell 'a I'll be in nEA. .....born and raised in New Orleans.

    • @owlcritic
      @owlcritic 10 років тому +2

      hey dawlin, if ya see ma cuzin Danuld tell him Jim said to get some moter earl fo da boat and ar y'all cummn ova ta nght to watch da Saints?

    • @laurabratcher-page1854
      @laurabratcher-page1854 7 років тому +1

      El Matador, I went to chuach wif a main tawk like dat! Boun' ta be home folks! Hows yamama'n'nem?!!

    • @IslenoGutierrez
      @IslenoGutierrez 7 років тому +1

      Laura Page Whea' ya from Laura???

    • @One-si6pc
      @One-si6pc 4 роки тому

      Nailed 👏🏾❤️👏🏾❤️

    • @IslenoGutierrez
      @IslenoGutierrez 3 роки тому

      @@One-si6pc 👍🏼👍🏼👍🏼

  • @shaymcgee9148
    @shaymcgee9148 Рік тому +4

    One of the only things I find that studies like this usually don’t get completely right is that there’s a “Black accent”. The truth is that Black New Orleanians have different accents depending on their neighborhood as well. Different cadences to their speech depending on their origin. But it’s never studied as closely and just jumped together. Even in a majority Black city, it still gets lumped together. There are variations. There are even famous variations. Take rappers Lil Wayne, Juvenile, Master P, and Mannie Fresh. All Black men from different areas of New Orleans. Listen to them. They sound different.

    • @james-p
      @james-p 5 місяців тому

      I don't know what part of New Orleans the Neville Brothers are from, but Art Neville's accent is my favorite New Orleans accent. "Burn" sounds almost like "boin," and "roast" sounds almost like "rawoist." It's almost like a northeast accent tempered by a southern accent and is very pleasing on the ear.

    • @shaymcgee9148
      @shaymcgee9148 5 місяців тому

      @@james-p I’m not sure what part but I think they’re from the 12th ward. But that pronunciation is more common amongst older folks. Younger folks don’t pronounce it that way. I do sometimes but only because it’s cute and funny to me. Lol

  • @MbartM96
    @MbartM96 6 років тому +2

    I have been ignorant all these years - I had no idea the New Orleans accent was so distinct to the rest of Louisiana.

  • @Wolfsrain90
    @Wolfsrain90 13 років тому +3

    @scarynight63 I hear that some Louisianans sound like they're from Brooklyn because of similar immigrant mix.

  • @1blastman
    @1blastman 12 років тому

    Hey it's nice to hear Billy Dell from WWOZ do the narration. I loved his Wednesday night show "Records from the Crypt"

  • @LadyMadia
    @LadyMadia 15 років тому

    tadfly yeah you rite! I LOVE diversity and the way people from 1 city,speak!! LOVE IT! LOVE NEW ORLEANS! Its the BEST city in the USA!

  • @AnbusKi
    @AnbusKi 15 років тому

    Dialects are fascinating!

  • @kamabua8507
    @kamabua8507 11 років тому +3

    >;~D My late~Papa would ALWAYS confuse folks when they asked ( because of his speech pattern ) where he was from. He'd reply, simply, "Patterson." The other person would respond, excitedly, that they were from New Jersey as well. THAT's when he'd correct them with Patterson, LA and leave them consternated ( I am sure ) for hours.

  • @Godlovesher61GodlovesU
    @Godlovesher61GodlovesU 12 років тому +4

    I like the so called," YADAH YADAH "voice its awesome! And it doesn't sound ignorant to me!

  • @xdrazormon454
    @xdrazormon454 6 місяців тому +1

    The guy in the lower right sounded like a mixed accent with Southern accent and French

  • @foodiste
    @foodiste 11 років тому +1

    Its so true. It really does sound like that.

  • @pattybert5890
    @pattybert5890 Рік тому +2

    If I didn’t know where these people were from, I’d have assumed they were from the Northeast. Crazy how colloquially diverse New Orleans is.

  • @calaverasgrande
    @calaverasgrande 15 років тому +1

    I kind of understood that the Yat accent evolved from a similarity in cultural makeup of the Irish Channel, Roman Catholic part of uptown to the New Jersey or Boston area. You got Irish and Italian ok?

  • @IslenoGutierrez
    @IslenoGutierrez 14 років тому

    @hispanidad78 Hola mi socio, eres Canario tambien? o eres Puertorriqueno de antepasados Canarios en Puerto Rico? Sabes, muchos Puertorriquenos son descendientes de Canarios. Que es su apellido? Mi apellido es Gutierrez de la parroquia de San Bernardo, Luisiana pero descendiente de la isla de Tenerife y La Gomera en Las Islas Canarias. I'm on Facebook. I live on the Westbank, my mom's family is from St. Bernard and my dad's family is from the 9th Ward that moved to St. Bernard in the seventies.