Can we talk regionalisms for a minute? Does anyone outside of Somerville say "So don't I" when they mean "So do I"?
The Great Write Way, Chapter Two: Twice upon a time...
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Does anyone outside of Somerville say "So don't I" when they mean "So do I"?
That's just crazy talk.
I've heard that. . . but where?
That's just crazy talk.
I know it. But there it is. "I want to go to the mall." "Yeah, so don't I."
Can we talk regionalisms for a minute? Does anyone outside of Somerville say "So don't I" when they mean "So do I"?
Maybe. I don't think I say it, but it doesn't sound out of place in my imagination. Granted, I'm still in general vicinity. I think it might be passing away, though.
Oh, here's another stupid accent-ish example -- Dennis Lehane doesn't write out dialogue phonetically, but when Patrick is making a filler sound, he says "ahm," not "um," which is just so right.
Can we talk regionalisms for a minute? Does anyone outside of Somerville say "So don't I" when they mean "So do I"?
One of my professors uses it and other similar constructions (and totally confuses everyone whose first language isn't English.) He grew up in Worcester.
One of my professors uses it and other similar constructions (and totally confuses everyone whose first language isn't English.)
Shoot, he'd confuse me and my only language is English. Well, and Pig Latin.
Jesse, here are some discussions of "So don't I":
(MA) [link]
(MA) [link]
(PA, and Central NY?) [link]
(not just MA?, and in reference to the prior link) [link]
(Carleton County, New Brunswick, CA) [link]
(Vermont) [link]
It appears it might be in lyrics to a song (maybe by Queen, I didn't click the lyrics links because they're usually terrible about pop-ups and viruses).
I can hear myself saying it now in response to certain questions, or if I've phrased a rhetorical in the negative, with "wouldn't you" or something. Huh.
It might even be a family thing, or social circle sort of thing. I was caught short by both the "neither" and the "them boxes".
It may be a social class thing. My grandparents were way down on the social totem pole.