This glossary of words used in Paul Laurence Dunbar’s dialect poetry provides the spelling(s) used in the poems; audio recordings of the words spoken in a phrase from a Dunbar poem (most of which are spoken by Dunbar scholar and performer Herbert Woodward Martin); and the passage of the poem from which the pronouncer read.

The goal of this glossary and the Dunbar Music Archive is to build awareness of Dunbar's dialect poetry; to preserve the pronunciation and style of its delivery; to provide a glimpse into African American life and culture in the 19th and 20th centuries; and to provide a fuller picture of an untold African American history.

Minnita Daniel-Cox, the curator of the Dunbar Music Archive and the Dunbar dialect glossary, is an associate professor of music at the University of Dayton.

Follow


S

sma’t

sody

sol’

so-low

somefin’; somef’n

somep’n’

sont

soonah

sorrer; sorrers

sorter

sot

souf

soun’

spa’klin’

sparrers

spattin’

speck

sperrit

sperrits

spilet

'

’splain

S

spress

squawkin’

sque’z

squir’l

stahts

stan’

stan’in’

stan’s

sta’t

stingin’

'

’stinguish

S

stonin’

strainin’

struttin’

stubbo’n

stunt

Su

suah

subjic’

suckah

Suke

summah’s

suppah

suthin’

suttain

su’ttain

swahed

swaller

swallers

swa’min’

sweetah

swimmin’

swinge

'

’t

’t ain’t

T

t’ar

tarnal

tech

teef

tejous

tek

tell

tendah

'

’ten’s

T

ternight

thanksgibbin

ther’

they’s

tho’

th’oahts

th’oat

th’one

thoo

thoo

thundah

tiahed

t’inks

toon

tote

treed

trottin’

tuck

tuckahed

tuk

tu’key

tu’ky

tu’ned

tunin’

tu’ns

'

’twas; ’t was

’t well

T

t well; ’twell

'

’ud

’u’d

U

uligion

'

’un

U

un’neaf

unskun

urf