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Maddening Linguistics Question

OK, this is making my brain itch, and I need your help.

I’m an upper Mid-West transplant, so Southernisms sometimes don’t work for me.

My question to the crowd:

When referring to the set of furniture in a given room, is it a “suite” or “suit”?

Example:

“We went to the store the other day and bought a new bedroom suit”

My mind says it’s “suite”.  But four different Kentucky people, including my lovely and long-suffering wife, say “suit”.

Also, when referring to the little shelf that sits at the base of a window, is it a “sill” or “seal”?  Again, several Kentucky people use “seal”, while I’ve always said “sill”.

Please help.  It’s making my head hurt.

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16 Comments

  1. Unknown's avatar

    Well, as a life long westerner, I can authoritatively say that I've never heard of a set of furniture referred to as a suite or a suit, but it is a window sill.

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  2. Unknown's avatar

    http://www.thefreedictionary.com/bedroom+suite

    Also, just to make it muddy, the term “three piece suite” is a play on “three piece suit”, the former is furniture.

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  3. Unknown's avatar

    Native NC person here. It IS suite, but I have heard suit used here and in SW VA as well.

    It IS sill, you may be running into the accent as well.

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  4. Unknown's avatar

    It is sill and Suite, It's just the way they pronounce it sounds different.
    Like some say crick instead of creek or worsh instead of wash.

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  5. Unknown's avatar

    “Like some say crick instead of creek or worsh instead of wash.”

    Sweet!

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  6. Unknown's avatar

    Yeah, what everyone else said. Aren't colloquialisms fun?

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  7. Unknown's avatar

    sill and suite.
    Also, chest of drawers, not chester drawers.

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  8. Unknown's avatar

    People in East Tennessee say bedroom suit.

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  9. Unknown's avatar

    The two answers are “Set of furniture” and “Window sill.”

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  10. Unknown's avatar

    North of the Mason-Dixon line it is:
    The window sill.
    An airtight seal.
    A suit is worn to Church on Sunday.
    A suite refers to a series of rooms, such as the Honeymoon suite of the Notell Motel.

    South of the Mason-Dixon line:
    You might have a windah seal (read sill), which is phonetically identical to the airtight seal referenced earlier.
    A suit refers to a collection of furniture and is phonetically identical to the clothing you wear to Church on Sunday.
    A suite (sweet) still refers to a series of rooms, such as the Honeymoon suite of the Notell Motel.

    Moreover, depending on usage your window might have a sah-eel-al-ah – say it in four syllables.

    Y'all unnahstan' nah?

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  11. Unknown's avatar

    From New England.. its suite and sill 🙂

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  12. Unknown's avatar

    Growing up in Bowling Green, I always heard it said “suit”, though I always say suite”.

    And I think people are saying “sill”, but the accent makes it sound like “seal”.

    Somehow I grew up with no accent. I am thankful for this.

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  13. Unknown's avatar

    North got it 🙂 but it IS pronounced suit… LOL

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  14. Unknown's avatar

    Exactly, Old NFO.

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  15. Unknown's avatar

    Thanks y'all. I'm pretty good with accents, but these two have just stuck for some reason.

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