Southern Country Sayings
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I just love all of our Southern country sayings and talking about them never seems to get old. A few times now I’ve asked people to tell me their favorites on our Facebook page and it always lights up with hundreds of contributions. It tickles everyone to talk about them and see what old Southern sayings others have to contribute as we all walk down memory lane.
So today I want to start that conversation on this post as a fun way of celebrating our favorite Southern sayings and learning a few new ones we might want to work into our vocabulary. So grab a sweet tea and settle in, y’all.
Favorite Southern Country Sayings
Butter my biscuit
“Butter my biscuit” is an iconic Southern phrase. Although we generally use it to impart surprise, you can get a lot of mileage out of it for other purposes as well.
Over yonder
When giving directions Southern-style, you’d say “over yonder”, meaning over there… somewhere.
Gone off your rocker
Someone who is crazy can be said to have gone off their rocker or possibly have gone around the bend. There’s no telling what they’re fixin’ to do. You might need to call the law on them if they get too rowdy. Don’t be afraid to give the station boys a ring, even if the miscreant is only knee-high to a grasshopper.
There are plenty of Southern folks who think they’re tough and lots of Northern types that say some mighty hurtful things about their countrymen. The best advice the South has for either one tends to be that if you’re going to be stupid, you’d better be tough as well.
Skint
People don’t go broke much in the South, they get skint instead. Most likely someone convinces them to do something for a Yankee dime. That’s also a kiss, just by the by, and don’t let anyone tell you differently. I also like, “He’s tighter than Dick’s hatband” for stingy people.
Y’all
You can’t very well do a piece about common Southern phrases without mentioning what has become, arguably, the most iconic piece of Bible Belt parlance: y’all. In the same way, many other contractions and accents have become part and parcel of the way the South speaks. If that ain’t true, then grits ain’t groceries and eggs ain’t poultry.
Fixin’ To
Another popular Southern expression is fixin’ to. If you’re fixin’ to do something, it means you’re getting ready and preparing to do it. Like I’m fixin’ to make some grits, y’all.
Automotive country sayings
Ain’t nothing more Southern than a good old stick-shift pickup, so I think that I’ll give you a few automotive selections before anything else.
- For instance, that thing you push to get the gas going is a foot feed.
- The dimwit that just passed you illegally is riding a hawg or Harley, not a motorcycle.
- If you got behind a slow driver, “That man must be haulin’ eggs.”
You may have seen people doing some foolish things on Southern country roads. That’s fine, they can stick their arm out the car window as long as they don’t cry when it gets knocked off. If they do, then to heck with them and the horse they rode in on.
Agricultural country sayings
It takes someone dumb as the turnip truck they fell off of not to know that Southerners are farmers by breeding, training, and choice. That means that you’re going to see a ton of agricultural terms thrown around in Southern slang. Someone might be stubborn as a mule, working like a horse, or plain old dog-tired after a long day.
If you need to work out a deal, it might be time to squat down on the horse blankets and hammer out all the bits that are finer than a frog’s hair. If you’ve got an idea of how to do something, you’ll probably have a bee in your bonnet about it. A little birdie might tell you something you would otherwise not know. If you’re doing something you’re good at, you’re either holding back or going hog wild.
“That girl is too scared to say boo to a goose.” Meaning she is just a scaredy cat. At least I think that is what it means. From my experiences with geese, they are “meaner than snake piss!” Speaking of geese: “You ain’t got the good sense God gave a goose.” Southern speak for calling someone dumb or stupid, sorry folks!
Another commenter mentioned, “I wouldn’t vote for him for dog catcher”. This meant it didn’t matter which office the candidate was vying for, he wasn’t worthy of being elected. If you got a job done quickly: “I got that job done before a cat could lick his hind end.”
Speaking of farming, you’ll need some soil to plow and real Southern parlance knows just where to come by it. It’s not uncommon to hear that if dumb were dirt, a particularly dull individual would be an acre or two. Feel free to adjust the field size to suit the individual in question. Some people need more than just an acre to really get your point.
I also can’t forget my favorite I use too often on Southern Plate: “Whatever cranks yer tractor.”
Bible Belt
Not for nothing is the South called the Bible Belt. Hang out there long enough and you are almost certain to hear a fair amount of religious terminology.
- I want to start by saying yes, bless your heart can be a good thing. In fact, I’ve heard it used more often than not in situations where it really is a good thing. If someone is going through a rough time or suffering a loss, you’d hug them and say, “bless your heart” as a show of compassion.
- Another catch-all phrase you are likely to hear before too long in the South is “Lord have mercy” in any of many different enunciations. It’s a hugely versatile term that can mean nearly anything if you give it the right inflection.
- “On God” to indicate commitment.
- “I’ll be there tomorrow if the Good Lord’s willing and the crick (creek) don’t rise” to limit that commitment. Meaning sometimes there weren’t bridges over creeks. If there had been heavy rain, the creek would cover the road and made it impassable.
- “From your mouth to God’s ears” to say you hope you will be able to fulfill that commitment nonetheless.
Angry country phrases
When people get angry, some of them throw a “hissy fit” or will be “madder than a wet hen.” Because y’all, when a hen is wet, it’s mad. Others will simply mutter “fiddlesticks” and move on. If you’ve really offended someone, chances are they’re fit to be tied. If so, just telling them not to get their britches in a wad is probably not going to cut it.
Foodie Southern sayings
Of course, we wouldn’t be doing justice to the American South if we didn’t mention its unique cuisine. The Southern kitchen is so important to its culture that some things have made their way from the kitchen range into normal conversations. If someone is starving to death in the dining room, you might want to brew them up something hot or give them a little something to tide them over.
If it’s hot out, don’t forget to offer them some coke. That’s any fizzy drink, not just the brand-name Coca-Cola. If you’re out in the fridge, remember to check in your cellar before heading off to buy more.
Family country sayings
Family is important in the Deep South too. As they say, Southern blood runs deep. You’ll be hard put to find even a single Southerner who can’t recall their grandparents asking for “some sugar.” That’s a kiss, for you Northern folks. There’s plenty of effort that goes into making sure that kids get brought up right.
FAQs
What is the most southern saying?
I think we can all agree that the most Southern slang is y’all.
What is a Southern greeting?
An old-fashioned Southern greeting some folks still use today is howdy.
What is Southern slang for tired?
A Southern way of saying I’m exhausted is “plum tuckered.”
That’s just a small selection of all the great Southern expressions that you guys have poured into this page. If y’all think I missed something, feel free to put your favorite country sayings in the comments section. If you see a term there that no one seems to understand, please, share your Southern pride and define it for us. Catch you later, hun. Bye now!
“You think I don’t have culture just because I’m from down in Georgia. Believe me, we’ve got culture there. We’ve always had sushi. We just called it bait.”
~Ben “Cooter” Jones
Some of the local sayings I grew up with was: “drunker than a skunk”, ” a cat on a hot tin roof “, “dumber than a box of rocks”, and my mom would always say, “Shut the door, you weren’t born in a barn.”
When I lived in Mississippi folks would say we “like” something instead of lack, as in “we like 2 apples for the pie”
“well lookie here! if it ain’t nina sue! get on up hure gal and give your poor old granny a hug! how’s your ma and dem? dey doing good? pull up a chaairh and sit a spell. what you done done to your haair chile? looks like you done been in a scratching match with a flock of chickens! heavens, don’t ya own a haair brush? lord that hair would have gone good with yur cozen loulou’s clothes…. looked like she was drug backwards through a biare patch, dipped in a mud puddle and hung out to dry. don’t know what has gotten into kids these days. ya done heared about yur cozen harold? hes living in yankee terratory these days, done gone off and moved way up to macon! lord help us the family done scattedered hither and yon. some folks are gonna have to travel a couple hours to get here for supper tonught. well ya gonna just stand there like a bump on a log or are ya gonna give granny a hug and sit down a spell? get on back to the kitchen and give your aunts a hand, dem mustard greens and poke chops ain’t gonna cook demselves. and tell dem i want plenty of pot liqur in dem greens this time.”
lol, i think i remember it all. it was just a 10 foot walk from my car to granny’s front porch.
When someone does a poor job the first time, “Well I guess your gonna have to lick your cat over.” And if someone looks sick, “You’re looking mighty peaked.”
Hoodwinked is the same as being taken advantage of. The name is spelled Linda but pronounced Linder. And my favorite, back in the day of paper and post office letters, one would say, “I remain in the land of the living.”
CUT IT OFF -have friend from Virginia-instead of saying turn the stove off she would say cut it off. Was at her house and she asked me to cut chicken off.
I turned stove off and cut the chicken off the bone.
-good thing I knew she was making chicken salad sandwiches.
A dear friend from (Sweet Home) Alabama told me that “bless your heart” really means “you are so stupid!”. Any thoughts, y’all?
Depends on the context and character of person saying it. To me, it means more like “You poor thing, I’m so sorry” and that is what it has always meant in my family. Some folks say it in an unkind way which is unkind and unfortunate.
When talking TO someone it is usually meant as “thank you”
You baked a pie for me? Well bless your heart”
When talking ABOUT someone it usually means “poor, dumb, bastard”
“He ain’t got sense enough to git in outta the rain. Bless his heart”
You can usually say anything,about anyone,so long as you add “bless his heart”
“He showed up at church drunk as a skunk, bless his heart”
Never used “Bless your heart” ( his or her or anybody’s heart )in a mean way. Blessings are from God and that’s akin to taking His name in vain..
I was born and raised in the south and still here. Bless your heart does not mean you are stupid. Someone from the north wrote that not a true southern. Bless your heart is a term of endearment meaning exactly what it says. Or feeling sorry for someone and wanting to say something nice , hence bless their heart. Or because they have gone through some rough times.
99% of the time that is true!!
My dad’s dad (who died ~20 years before I was born) would say about a truck that had a lot of power, “That thing’ll pull hell off the cross!”
Also, if you had a lot on your plate you might say you’re “busier’n a cat coverin’ crap on a marble floor.”
My wife’s family still introduces me to new sayings…at least one new one a week for the last 6 years we’ve been married. The most regularly used one is “They got enough money to burn a wet mule.” (They always get frustrated that I add logic to the equation, like the fact that I would never use money to start a fire no matter how much I have, and I’d definitely DRY the object before burning it, and why burn a perfectly good mule?)
A guy who has no problem getting women “has got girls stacked up like cord wood”.
And my favorite came from a fellow deacon recounting his childhood. He was talking about a girl so ugly she’d “make a freight train take a dirt road”. (You have to blurt that out really fast to get the full effect. Even then, you’d just have to be there. I think I was shedding tears I laughed so hard.)