The word is hick. An uneducated person from a small town or the country Bumpkin is similar. In the South (the southern part of the United States), people from the country (not from large cities) speak with a different accent.
Distinct features are the drawl and the twang. See my source for a good example of drawl. He exaggerates his accent at one point, but even when he s speaking normally, you ll still hear the drawl.
It sounds like he s holding tobacco in his cheek, which is probably how the drawl originally started. If you watch him carefully, you ll see the left side of his mouth (on your right) doesn t move, like he s holding tobacco in there. The drawl lengthens the vowels and draws them out.
The twang is different. Listen to my fourth source. The guy in the shirt that says Texas has the best example.
He starts at 0:46. Listen to how he pronounces Longhorns as Lawng-horns when he says "Go Longhorns". That s twang.
Yes, despite what the guy says, the accent is associated with uneducated people from the country. People from cities in the south speak with city accents that are different. The Texas city accents are different than the Texas rural accents.
It's spelled "hicks", as the plural of "hick", but it denotes someone from a rural, unsophisticated area. As in "He's such a hick, he's never even seen someone from another country". "Bumpkin" is a similar word, but older and less used.
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