Sure looks like science. A portion of fig. 1 from ref. 7. |
• Unusual vowel/diphthong sounds, such as "dahn" instead of "down."Not listed online, but what I remember from my Pittsburgh days, are the following:
• Unusual syntax, such as "the car needs washed," and "the grass needs cut."
• The word, "yunz," a variant of the southern "you-all," or "yahl."
• Pittsburgh people stand on line. Upstate New Yorkers stand in line.Pittsburgh at night. Photo by V. Chandra One outcome of the American Dialect Society's meeting was the naming of the "Word of the Year" for 2010. The word, "app," won over a close second candidate, "nom."[9] I'm certain you all know what an "app" is, but some are likely unfamiliar with "nom," a word usually found in lolcat circles. Nom is described as an onomatopoetic word for pleasurable eating. It's typically found in the expression, "nom, nom, nom..." in text on a photo of a sated cat. The 2009 word was "tweet," the 2008 word was "subprime," and the 2007 word was "bailout." The Society admits that their process for choosing the word is subjective and unscientific, unlike Merriam-Webster, which chose "austerity" as the 2010 word based on the increase in queries at its web site for the word's definition over the previous year. The New Oxford American Dictionary chose "refudiate," based on a polling of lexicographers.[9]
• When a Pittsburgher mentioned "city chicken," I thought he was talking about pigeons. City chicken is actually a short kebab of meat chunks on a wooden skewer, often breaded to resemble a chicken leg, that's fried or baked.