Hey, you! The one holding the book. Have you ever seen a volume like this? Well, whether you realize it or not, it’s the one you’ve been waiting for. Jeff Foxworthy’s Redneck Dictionary will teach you how to speak this unique Southern dialect fluently. Whether you’re blue-collar or hoity-toity, swimming in cash or betting your bottom dollar, a little bit country or a lot of city slicker, this practical reference to redneck words and turns of phrases will give you hours of laughs. So expand your horizons and learn another language with this fun, instructive, and hilariously illustrated book as your guide. After all, speaking redneck is a heck of a lot easier than speaking French!
This book had me laughing so many times, my sides hurt! Jeff takes words I thought I knew and turns them completely inside out in ways that are so unique to his style of comedy. A great read for a gloomy day!
This book was an easy and entertaining read. I read it in like an hour. However, it wasn't as good as I was imagining it to be. I think Jeff Foxworthy in person (or on tv) is much better than this book. I won't be reading it again, but I might pick up one of his other books.
This short book contains a list of silly words that Foxworthy fans might enjoy, including groaners such as: -debate, as in "Which worm we gonna use for debate?" -license, as in "She ran over me with the pickup 3 days ago, and I ain't told a license." -odor, as in "She's odor than dirt."
This book is probably best suited for teenagers. As an adult, I didn't laugh out loud very often.
I kept on slowly reading this in the hope that I would find it funny. But, alas, I did not. I gave it 2 stars only because some hard working person went to all the effort to find the words that sounded like the phrase Foxworthy was saying. The book itself was unimpressive.
Made me and my husband laugh and laugh, it is a really good read if you need comedy you know in a small dose. :) well worth it glad it is in our collection!
“Jeff Foxworthy’s Redneck Dictionary” by Jeff Foxworthy, published by Villard.
Category – Humor Publication Date – September 26, 2006.
Many of us know Jeff Foxworthy from his series Blue Collar TV but few of us realize that he is the largest comedy-recording artist in history and has written over thirteen books. He is also the host of the TV game show, Are You Smarter Than A Sixth Grader.
His book, “Redneck Dictionary” is a humorous take on words that are used in the English language but may have a different meaning with a Southern dialect.
For Example:
Afar – There’s no sense being this cold, let’s build afar.
Bayou – I just walked right up to her and said, Hey darlin’, lemme bayou a drink.
Censure – I’ll have another drink, censure payin’.
Debate – I don’t wanna argue no more ‘bout which worm we’re gonna use for debate.
and it goes on and on.
The book is full of good humor and is a very easy read and one that can be put down and picked up without losing your place or your train of thought.
This collection of redneck words had me laughing out loud. Being from Kentucky I know that an accent can really change a word. I even found that some of these things I actually say when I'm back at home. It's not because I'm slow or don't comprehend proper English, it's just a relaxed way of speaking. Some of my favorites:
*Acne *Afar (definitely used this one) *Bayou *Beetle *Doodle *Geyser *Kenya *Sandwich
This book was so much more funny than I remember the other ones being. Each letter of the alphabet having its own comedy gems. These comedic definitions were the funniest things they had on the old tv show that Jeff used to be on with Larry and Bill back in the 90s, and, for a younger reader who never saw the show this is the perfect chance to see Jeff at the top of his game, and for the long time fan it is a chance to relive how good their tv show and live performances used to be.
I never thought I'd say this, but I guess Jeff has just gotten boring over the years. Either that, or it just isn't as good when you can't here his tones and inflections.
A classic case of "More isn't better." While this might have worked as three separate books (as originally written), taken as a single volume the joke quickly wears itself thin.