Talking Southern – To Your Health (Part 2)

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Talking Southern – To Your Health (Part 2)

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ā€œTolerableā€ is a grand old word, applicable in many situations. When used to describe one’s health in much of the South, though, its middle syllable is dropped and ā€œtol’ableā€ is the result.Ā  (Many of us, in speaking do the same thing with several other words – ā€œprob’lyā€ and ā€œli-bryā€ come to mind right off the cuff, for, of course, ā€œprobablyā€ and ā€œlibrary.ā€)

When it comes to health, ā€œtol’ableā€ is a versatile term.  Usually it means something on the order of  ā€œacceptable but not terrific,ā€ ā€œgetting by, thank you, ā€œI’ve been better,ā€ etc.  In this meaning, one who is tol’able is less well than someone who is ā€œfair to middlinā€™ā€ or even just plain old ā€œmiddlin’.ā€  

But here is the rub: ā€œtol’ableā€ is a term of tremendous nuance. It can be used, and is by some, to cover all the territory between ā€œso fine I can’t stand itā€ and ā€œso sick I want to die.ā€  Thus, one who says he is ā€œtol’ableā€ may actually be healthier than one who is fair to middlin’ or just plain middlin’.  

In short, ā€œtol’ableā€ can mean anything from ā€œpretty darn goodā€ to ā€œpretty darn badā€ when it comes to describing health, so one must often rely on non-verbal aspects of communication when interpreting its meaning – such as body language, inflection, personality, and tendency to under- or overstate things, etc. – to determine how someone who says he’s ā€œtol’ableā€ really is.  So please be careful to do so.  You’ll get the hang of it eventually.

And if you don’t get the hang of it eventually, well…your compiler hates to be rude, but Delta is ready when you are, unless you are just too ā€œpo’lyā€ to make the effort, in which case we’ll give you a pass.

ā€œPo’lyā€ is the last quasi-medical term we shall discuss in this two-part series. It is a contraction, of course, of ā€œpoorly,ā€ which term should require no elucidation.  One who feels poorly – or ā€œpo’ly,ā€ as we tend to say it, either through natural accent or exaggerated dialect – feels rotten, terrible, God-awful, or almost dead.  It is mighty hard to feel worse than ā€œpo’ly.ā€

One might feel ā€œpo’lyā€ because of disease, virus, food-poisoning, or any number of things. Arthritic people (or others who have engaged in more physical exertion than they normally partake of) may be so ā€œstove-upā€  that they feel ā€œpo’ly.ā€    Your compiler knows not the derivation of the term ā€œstove-up,ā€ but it sounds altogether Southern to him.

Following is a sentence that uses both terms:  ā€œLuther’s been feeling right po’ly since he sawed up that tree Sar’dy* — he’s all stove-up from using his chainsaw and can hardly get up out of his Barcalounger.ā€

So if this story has a moral, it is to try to avoid first-hand knowledge of the terms ā€œstove-upā€ and ā€œpo’ly,ā€ to make your ā€œtol’ablesā€ the good kind, and to try to keep the scale at ā€œfair to middlinā€™ā€ or better all the time.

Dan Langford

Dan Langford

Dan Langford is a 7th-generation Fayette Countian. He was first elected to the Brooks Town Council in 1998, and has served as mayor since 2010.

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