Date: Mon, 18 Dec 1995 08:00:19 -0500
From: "Dennis R. Preston" preston[AT SYMBOL GOES HERE]PILOT.MSU.EDU
Subject: Re: het/heated
Rudy,
I had 'het up' as a kid (Louisville 1940's) with no realization that it was
related to 'heat.' My use of it was imitative, however; speakers who
'really' used it were older and/or 'rustic' (whatever that is). I noticed
that after I went north of Louisville people thought I was rustic. The very
idea!
Dennis
preton[AT SYMBOL GOES HERE]pilot.msu.edu
In response to a posting a while back by Jeutonne Brewer re her
mother-in-law's use of het as the past tense of heat, vb (clearly different
from the Pennsylvania usage of het in the present tense reported by Molly
Dickmeyer), I recall what seemingly was once a common South Midland (and
Southern?) expression "Don't get all het [=heated] up about it." I don't
know if this was included in the LAGS survey. Clearly we've lost a good
strong verb form.
Rudy
--Rudy Troike (rtroike[AT SYMBOL GOES HERE]ccit.arizona.edu)