Haboobs, swamp box and ki-yotes: Arizona residents favor protecting the ways they speak

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Haboobs, swamp box and ki-yotes: Arizona residents favor protecting the ways they speak
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Have you been caught in a haboob? Have you driven on a frontage road? These are some of the terms that one may hear during their time in State 48, and a majority of residents want to see them preserved.

James Powel Cronkite News PHOENIX – Have you been caught in a haboob? Have you driven on a frontage road? Have you ever used a swamp box?

But Karen Adams, a professor of linguistics, said the contours of the Arizona dialects are more nuanced than described. Adams is director of graduate studies in the Arizona State University department of English. "Mesa" is the Spanish word for table but refers to the geographic feature. The pronunciation of the desert animal that is the mascot for the hockey team now playing in Tempe as “ki-yote” is a remnant of the Wild West. The Arabic word “haboob” was added to the lexicon by scientists in the 1970s to describe dust storms during monsoon season.

Listen now and subscribe: Apple Podcasts | Google Podcasts | Spotify | RSS Feed | Omny Studio “There’s always in-migration into Arizona, either from the West Coast or originally the East and the South,” Adams said. “As long as there’s continuous population movement, there’s going to be changes in the different varieties, depending on who’s moving into the area and who’s not.”

In 2011, the Welsh National Assembly passed measures to make Welsh an official language within the country and created the role of the Welsh language commissioner to protect and develop the use of the language. “There’s no question that the Welsh language is part of a Welsh identity, and it’s part of what makes Wales different from the other parts of the United Kingdom,” Jones said. “However, we’ve been at pains to say that the Welsh language belongs to us or whether you speak the Welsh language or not.”

Gustnadoes form along the edge of storms and cause a tornado-looking whirlwind, like the one seen above from July 2018.

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