Need help with Southern dialect (American)
DemonicAngel
brighteyes632210 at yahoo.com
Thu May 26 02:33:04 UTC 2011
I saw your message and had to ask my better half since he was born & raised in central Florida.
We believe the phrase you're looking for would be "The bed's done been made" instead of the correct 'The bed has been made'.
This use of 'done' can vary depending on which southern state the character is from and if they live a large city or in the middle of nowhere.
Hope this helps.
Nadine
--- In HPFGU-OTChatter at yahoogroups.com, "justcarol67" <justcarol67 at ...> wrote:
>
> Hi, Potioncat and anyone else from below the Mason-Dixon line. I'm editing a book in which the narrator speaks a rural Southern dialect. I need to know when to use "done" with the past tense, as in "I done made the bed." Is "done" equivalent to "had" ("I had made the bed"--past perfect tense indicating a previously completed action in contrast to simple past tense, "I made the bed")? Or does it emphasize that something has been done ("I done already made the bed")? (I remember once hearing someone in North Carolina say, "It done been settled," meaning "it has already been settled.") Are both these uses correct? Am I missing some other use of "done" in this dialect? I appreciate any help you can give me.
>
> Please don't respond unless you're a bona fide American Southerner.
>
> Thanks in advance,
> Carol, who recalls numerous other colorful Southernisms but unfortunately none that can help me with this particular problem
>
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