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joveski 04-11-2009 07:23 AM

(potentially stupid) grammar question
 
i was wondering about the phrasing on the last words of this verse of Betty called me in. he has a weird way of phrasing the words and it comes up in a lot of his songs. is this a typical canadian accent or a noval Lightfoot creation?.. i dont hear it in american singers, but it happens the most in the song and a lot of his others? especially of the last word of a verse


Betty my true love do what you do 'tonight'
Where she goes I hope she knows she's 'right'
The worst of 'times' and the best of 'times'
She was never the 'kind' to kick and bitch and 'fight'


help out someone from the other side of the world!

charlene 04-11-2009 08:03 AM

Re: (potentially stupid) grammar question
 
I'm not sure I understand what your asking.
Perhaps it's for rhyming effect..seems 'normal' to me tho..
;)

joveski 04-11-2009 09:00 AM

Re: (potentially stupid) grammar question
 
i guess i'll never be canadian then :(

maybe Dave or Sydney Steve can back me up!

jj 04-11-2009 09:34 AM

Re: (potentially stupid) grammar question
 
fine observation, jove

if i "hear" you right, i wouldn't call it a canuck accent thing but i know of other singers that naturally bend a one syllable lyric ..or take a 2 syllable word and ride it into 3 or 4

but what you're really talking about might be the phonetics of the "i"....there is the soft "i" as in pIck, there is the hard "i" as in mIke and then there's what i call the lightfoot "i" (aka, the maritime "aye")...there's also the lightfoot "a" "e" "o" and "u"...and always "y"

aside: Betty is used in a few GL tunes....i imagine it was a special gal or just a common name surrounding him growing up in those parts....anyhow, my middle sis (Betty-Ann) moves to Orillia decades ago...much to my surprise, years later everyone up there calls her Liz...anyhow, i wasn't really going anywhere with that

joveski 04-11-2009 09:48 AM

Re: (potentially stupid) grammar question
 
in my 31 year old years, he changes the "i" into "ae"

i thought it might be a canadian thing

is an:

Betty my true love do what you do 'toonate'
Where she goes I hope she knows she's 'rate'
The worst of 'tames' and the best of 'tames'
She was never the 'kaind' to kick and bitch and 'fate'

just like "allright" becomes "all-rate" (maybe cunuck accents think its the same thing!) :)

if i sit here and listen to every album, i can probably flood the board! i thought it might be a canadian thing

:)

jj 04-11-2009 10:03 AM

Re: (potentially stupid) grammar question
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by joveski (Post 150980)
i thought it might be a canadian thing

it's not actually a maritime thing, i should have said it's Gord's Irish coming out...it's spelled "i'ye" :)


but in the rural areas, like Orillia, we do talk "Fargo" too...it's a blend

charlene 04-11-2009 12:01 PM

Re: (potentially stupid) grammar question
 
I still don't hear it mate. Must be your Aussie ears..
;)

hey JJ - Elizabeth can be shortened to Liz, Betty, Lisbet, Lillibet, Eliza, Beth, etc..
and Gord is Scottish..not Irish..

;)

Brian 57 04-11-2009 02:50 PM

Re: (potentially stupid) grammar question
 
I knew a girl from Long Island where "quarter" and "water" rhyme. (Quoahtah and Wuoahtah"). I also understand that a welsh accent causes broad and road to rhyme.

jj 04-11-2009 07:03 PM

Re: (potentially stupid) grammar question
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by charlene (Post 150990)
I still don't hear it mate. Must be your Aussie ears..
;)

hey JJ - Elizabeth can be shortened to Liz, Betty, Lisbet, Lillibet, Eliza, Beth, etc..
and Gord is Scottish..not Irish..

;)

oh that's right, it's YOU who's Irish! lol

i made a Gordian slip:)

charlene 04-11-2009 07:40 PM

Re: (potentially stupid) grammar question
 
I'm Canadian of Italian and Scottish heritage..No Irish at all..
;)
was it a full slip or half slip?

Oh, Linda 04-11-2009 10:39 PM

Re: (potentially stupid) grammar question
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by Brian 57 (Post 150999)
I knew a girl from Long Island where "quarter" and "water" rhyme. (Quoahtah and Wuoahtah"). I also understand that a welsh accent causes broad and road to rhyme.

When I lived on the east coast I got a brand new name. Many words ending in "a" get changed to "er" so I became Linder. My British friend Howard calls me the same thing. So does my Australian friend Annette.

brink- 04-12-2009 04:02 AM

Re: (potentially stupid) grammar question
 
Mende, I know of what you speak. I think it is a Gord/Canadian thing.

joveski 04-12-2009 06:31 AM

Re: (potentially stupid) grammar question
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by brink- (Post 151021)
Mende, I know of what you speak. I think it is a Gord/Canadian thing.

phew!.. someone understands :)

jj 04-12-2009 07:44 AM

Re: (potentially stupid) grammar question
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by brink- (Post 151021)
Mende, I know of what you speak. I think it is a Gord/Canadian thing.

happy bunny day to you and yours, deb :headbang: (that's a bunny hopping and listening to Gord, his ears are just bunched up under those phones)

just to clarify, not an overall Canuck thing but a dialect more rooted and on the east coast and you can hear it when they speak whereas not when Gord speaks but when he sings

isn't interesting how British singers often lose their accents when they sing? in this case, Gord picks one up when he does...hope that's clear as mud:)

char...yeah, i fully and completely slipped! i'm scot/wales/eng, no 'rish

brink- 04-12-2009 07:23 PM

Re: (potentially stupid) grammar question
 
Thanks JJ, Happy Day to you and Harry too.

I have noticed that talking to Gord he has a different pronunciation than when he sings. Interesting too that people that stutter often lose the stutter when they sing, i.e. Mel Tillis.

I think I shall go to Bah-ham-a.

RM 04-12-2009 08:15 PM

Re: (potentially stupid) grammar question
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by brink- (Post 151035)
I think I shall go to Bah-ham-a.

That reminds me......his pronunciation of Salinas in 'Me And Bobby Magee' use to drive me nuts. When he recorded it, he sang Sa lye nas, Thankfully, when I saw him perform that song last year, the correct Spanish pronunciation of Sa lee nas was in place.

I say po-tay-toe, and you say po-tah-toe.

Oh, Linda 04-12-2009 08:49 PM

Re: (potentially stupid) grammar question
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by RM (Post 151040)
That reminds me......his pronunciation of Salinas in 'Me And Bobby Magee' use to drive me nuts. When he recorded it, he sang Sa lye nas, Thankfully, when I saw him perform that song last year, the correct Spanish pronunciation of Sa lee nas was in place.

I say po-tay-toe, and you say po-tah-toe.

Lots of his geographic pronunciations are peculiar . . .

CaliFORN' EYE ay

North Ontar EYE' o

. . . for example

I like this thread a lot. Something tells me it'll go on for quite some time. I might have to go by Oh, Linder....

joveski 04-12-2009 10:26 PM

Re: (potentially stupid) grammar question
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by Oh, Linda (Post 151044)
Lots of his geographic pronunciations are peculiar . . .

CaliFORN' EYE ay

North Ontar EYE' o

. . . for example

I like this thread a lot. Something tells me it'll go on for quite some time. I might have to go by Oh, Linder....


i always thought they were so that the can fit the beat of the song.. it seems like it, but it might be an accent thing

hkusam 04-13-2009 12:14 AM

Re: (potentially stupid) grammar question
 
Is it an Aussie "thing" to spell the word novel..."noval"?

joveski 04-13-2009 12:51 AM

Re: (potentially stupid) grammar question
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by hkusam (Post 151052)
Is it an Aussie "thing" to spell the word novel..."noval"?

no, more like bad spelling!

why do americans spell COLOUR as COLOR?. dont the keyboards have a U key? :)

RM 04-13-2009 12:58 AM

Re: (potentially stupid) grammar question
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by joveski (Post 151053)
why do americans spell COLOUR as COLOR?. dont the keyboards have a U key? :)

We're just very efficient folks.

Dave, Melbourne,Australia 04-13-2009 02:26 AM

Re: (potentially stupid) grammar question
 
Joveski,

I think the answer to your question is that Gord emphasises the consonant at the end of a line. A good example is the song "Much To My Surprise". (James Taylor, on the other hand, emphasises vowels and pronounces "a" and "the" as "ay" and "thee".)

Hey, yesterday I met a Canadian-born winery owner at Panton Hill, just north-east of Melbourne (near the fire-devastated Kinglake area). He said he once went ice fishing at Lake Simcoe and the fisherman next to him turned out to be Gordon Lightfoot!

brink- 04-13-2009 11:53 PM

Re: (potentially stupid) grammar question
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by Dave, Melbourne,Australia (Post 151055)
Joveski,

I think the answer to your question is that Gord emphasises the consonant at the end of a line. A good example is the song "Much To My Surprise". (James Taylor, on the other hand, emphasises vowels and pronounces "a" and "the" as "ay" and "thee".)

Hey, yesterday I met a Canadian-born winery owner at Panton Hill, just north-east of Melbourne (near the fire-devastated Kinglake area). He said he once went ice fishing at Lake Simcoe and the fisherman next to him turned out to be Gordon Lightfoot!

And how small is the world??? That is incredible.

Shade of a Maple Tree 06-30-2009 08:38 PM

Re: (potentially stupid) grammar question
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by joveski (Post 150980)
in my 31 year old years, he changes the "i" into "ae"

i thought it might be a canadian thing

is an:

Betty my true love do what you do 'toonate'
Where she goes I hope she knows she's 'rate'
The worst of 'tames' and the best of 'tames'
She was never the 'kaind' to kick and bitch and 'fate'

just like "allright" becomes "all-rate" (maybe cunuck accents think its the same thing!) :)

if i sit here and listen to every album, i can probably flood the board! i thought it might be a canadian thing

:)

Actually what you're hearing is the Scottish influence in Canadian English.

In Canada's early days, Scots accounted for approximately 25% of the population. Today, amongst native English-speakers in Canada, about 35% are of Scots ancestry, 55% are of English heritage and the remaining 15% or so are Irish. Part of the reason why there was an influence at all is that the Scots back then ran the schools, the banks, the churches and played a large role in government (hell, our first Prime Minister was a Scot!!) In short, they played a huge role in shaping Canada's language and culture.

To most Canadians what you hear in Gord's accent is pretty subtle and passes without notice. But to Americans and other non-British speakers of the language, it's often quite noticeable. Listen to a speaker of Scots English say the words 'tonight', 'times' and 'right' and you'll hear what I'm talking about. The pronunciation may not be exactly the same but you'll hear unmistakable commonalities.

Shade of a Maple Tree 06-30-2009 08:42 PM

Re: (potentially stupid) grammar question
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by Oh, Linda (Post 151044)
Lots of his geographic pronunciations are peculiar . . .

CaliFORN' EYE ay

North Ontar EYE' o

. . . for example

I like this thread a lot. Something tells me it'll go on for quite some time. I might have to go by Oh, Linder....

The pronunciations of 'California' and 'Ontario' you noted are not the way Canadians pronounce the words. Gord deliberately mispronounced the words for stylistic reasons.

Hope that helps. :biggrin:


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