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tbradsim1

Lifer
Jan 14, 2012
9,104
11,066
Southwest Louisiana
. 2 Crawfish Farmers looking down at a Crawfish hole.

 

mso489

Lifer
Feb 21, 2013
41,210
60,459
That makes me think of the "Eat More Chicken" ad on TV where they had what was clearly a cow speaking in a man's voice. Us city folks. Tsk-tsk.

 

tbradsim1

Lifer
Jan 14, 2012
9,104
11,066
Southwest Louisiana
Carver it's short for Thibadeaux.Bou is short for Baudoin, T is used a lot in Cajun country , meaning little and most times a term of endearment. Screwy ain't it. HaHa

 

carver

Part of the Furniture Now
Mar 29, 2015
625
3
Belgium
Both very French names.

I know several versions of /ti/ /bo/ (Thibault, Thibauld, Thibaut, Thibaud, Thibeau, Thibeaud) one of which is my own, but I've never encountered any Thibadeaux. That must be a pretty ancient version.
My family and friends usually call me "Thib" /tib/

 

pappymac

Lifer
Feb 26, 2015
3,305
4,362
Thibadeaux. That must be a pretty ancient version.
Thibodeaux is also found down here. There is even on small town named Thibodeaux. All part of the Acadian French who were forced out of Nova Scotia by the English.

 

darwin

Part of the Furniture Now
Apr 9, 2014
820
5
Yet another variant I've commonly seen in the Vinton/Sulphur/Lake Charles area is Thibideaux. It's also common on the Texas side of I-10 in Orange/Vidor/Beaumont.

 

bigtex

Starting to Get Obsessed
Feb 2, 2015
160
26
TX
Ya sure Bou isn't short for Boudreaux?

That Cooyon is at it again! I'm gonna call his Ma an told her he is sendin letters to da paper again. She'll strip him down to his conson an give him a whoopin'....

 

pappymac

Lifer
Feb 26, 2015
3,305
4,362
Darwin - you know them people in the Golden Triangle ain't right in the head...

 

darwin

Part of the Furniture Now
Apr 9, 2014
820
5
Oh yeah. In Vidor especially. For the longest time I've heard people say they're grateful for not being from there. Probably different now anyway. Going to a reunion of folks from the Beaumont-Lake Charles line in November and most of 'em I haven't seen in a decade. I was, for good or ill, not born in Cajun country but farther west in Baytown. I have no trace of the accent but my folks did even after living fifty years away from Sout' Luziana.

 

pappymac

Lifer
Feb 26, 2015
3,305
4,362
The worst parts of the area is actually Port Arthur and Orange, Texas. When people in Vidor go shopping, they go to Beaumont.
I lost my Southeast Texas accent while I was in the Coast Guard. First 28 months was spent in an engineroom working with two guys from Maine.

 

bigtex

Starting to Get Obsessed
Feb 2, 2015
160
26
TX
I have a family reunion coming up his month in Starks, LA as well. But the good part for me is that I was bred, born and raised in TX!

 

shutterbugg

Lifer
Nov 18, 2013
1,451
21
T is used a lot in Cajun country , meaning little and most times a term of endearment. Screwy ain't it.
Not really. It's actually "tee", a transformation of the French word "petit" (pronounced puh-TEE) which in fact means "little" and can be a term of endearment (Mon petit=little one).
Until recent moves to re-educate Cajun youth, most Cajuns were illiterate in French and had no idea the origins of words which had become transformed. I once spoke with a Cajun who told me his grandmother used to say "pov bete" if her dog took to limping, and told me "bete" meant "stupid" so she was calling her dog stupid. I told him no you idiot, "bete" the adjective means stupid, but "bete" the noun means "beast/animal". She was saying "pauvre bete" meaning "poor critter".

 

pappymac

Lifer
Feb 26, 2015
3,305
4,362
I've always got a kick out of people trying to translate Grosse Téte - which is a small village to the west of Baton Rouge. Invariably they get it wrong with many thing it means Big Teats. I have also heard Big Nose. Reality is it means Big Head. My father and his family were from the bayou/swamp country and stretched from Grosse Téte south to Port Gibson. Our last name is Gibson and I've been told that their is a connection between our last name and Port Gibson but I've never found written documentation of it.
I still have cousins living in the Bayou Sorrel and Bayou Pigeon area for those of you who may have watched Swamp People on the history channel. People in that area really talk and live like they portrayed on the show.

 

shutterbugg

Lifer
Nov 18, 2013
1,451
21
In French, grosse tète means fathead, not big head. Big Head would be Grand Tète (with the correct accent, grave not acute). Grand Teton (as in the national park and mountain formation in Wyoming)literally means Bit Tit in French.
But Louisiana French (Cajun and Creole, which are not the same by a long stretch) differ from standard French as much as redneck American English differs from BBC UK-English. Think Larry The Cable Guy vs Sir Roger Moore. For example in Louisiana the term beau jocque (jacques) loosely translates to big-guy (in fact it was the stage name of the 6'7" 275-lb zydeco performer born Andrus Espre), whereas in standard French it means handsome-James.

 
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