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The Okie Dialect, or Oklahoma Dialect refers to the subdialect of American English of the English language spoken by residents of the state of Oklahoma.

It is a byproduct of historic migration of settlers to the state from the Southeastern United States such as Arkansas, Tennessee and Texas with its "country-western" sound in the late 19th century.

There's a known Native American influence in the dialect by the state's over 50 federally recognized tribal groups, some of them maintained or revived its own native languages to this day.

Variants found in the Tulsa area reflect the influences of Northeastern (i.e. New York, New England and Ohio) oilmen, while those in the northwestern part of the state have some more Midwestern (i.e. Kansas, Missouri and Illinois) loanwords and pronunciations.

In Oklahoma City, the arrival of families whose grandparents left in the dust bowl, are "returning" Okies from the West Coast (California) introduced some California English words and phrases in the dialect.

Twang

The Okie Accent is largely characterized by a twang which is the pronunciation of a word with elongated vowels and adding of extra syllables to increase the length of the sound of the words which serve to create a drawl. i.e., the word "get" would be stretched out in a complex but subtle pronunciation of "gee-ut-ah", someone unfamiliar with the dialect or not listening closely would hear simply "git".

Lexicon

Some words used in rural Oklahoma but not in many other American English dialects (or with different meanings) are:

  • tump or tip over a container to empty the contents, (tah-uum-pah)
  • wallered-out or , increase of a circumference (wah'-lurd-ah a-yo-tah)
  • pertneer or , almost, (purt-neer)
  • dasent or , dare not

In Culture

John Steinbeck wrote The Grapes of Wrath using an Okie dialect for the main characters. He consulted Farm Security Administration reports written by Tom Collins as a source for the dialect. The musical Lady in the Dark used a spoken Okie dialect.

Recordings of the Okie accent

Notes

  1. (Benson, p. 81)
  2. (Steinbeck, Woolenburg p. ix)
  3. (Davis, p. 139)
  4. (McClung, p. 160)

References

Further reading

  • Wikle, Thomas (1997). "Oklahomy Folks Says 'em Different": Axes of Linguistic Variation in Oklahoma". Chronicles of Oklahoma. 75 (1). Oklahoma Historical Society. {{cite journal}}: Unknown parameter |coauthors= ignored (|author= suggested) (help)

External links

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