But you've got to do it in "Boontling." https://timeline.com/boontling-language-boonville-cc765109e201
"In return, Boonters gave Adams his own nickname, B.J., after an earlier resident also called Adams." If there was such an earlier resident.
Who doesn't love a secret language? I learned a bit from a bunch of websites and yeah - it's a pretty easy language to talk dirty in. That's a good part of what it was made for. Ya, I by harp a wee slib of the ling. :smile: J.
We lived near Boonville for 10 years. Many there believed the language originated around the Civil War, so pro-Southerners could talk privately about pro-Northerners. The only phone booth had an official AT&T "Bucky Walter" sign. John Bear Go Dubs
When I was young in NYC, I would hear a patois(?) that combined a slang vernacular with slurred speech and was intentionally indecipherable to non-speakers. That came from Dixie and was the African-American alternate language.