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Be where you act?


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Be where you act? #1 (permalink) Mon Nov 20, 2006 22:23 pm   Be where you act?
 

OK, I have that audio tape by Ed Foreman on which he says that he grew up on a farm and his father used to say to him: "Be where you act, boy!" Now, I understand the phrase but according to Google it doesn't seem very popular. What about you, have you ever heard or even used that expression?

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Be where you act? #2 (permalink) Mon Nov 20, 2006 23:07 pm   Be where you act?
 

Hi Torsten

I've never heard that phrase, but I have heard something similar to "be where you at". It sounds like the southern US dialect to me. Are you sure about the word 'act'?

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Be where you act? #3 (permalink) Mon Nov 20, 2006 23:12 pm   Be where you act?
 

Hi Amy, it's very possible that Foreman says 'be where you at' instead of 'be where you act' -- I'll have to listen to the phrase again. So, would you classify 'be where you at' as a common expression?
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Be where you act? #4 (permalink) Mon Nov 20, 2006 23:41 pm   Be where you act?
 

Could it also be: 'Be where you're at'?

    Everybody wants to be a cat, because a cat's the only cat who knows where it's at.
The Aristocats
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Be where you act? #5 (permalink) Mon Nov 20, 2006 23:47 pm   Be where you act?
 

Hi Torsten

I'd say "Where you at?" (for example) would be commonly recognized as a slang formulation. I think Americans who are not from the south might tend to classify it as southern and/or black English. I wouldn't use it myself. Jamie will probably be able to give you better feedback than I can, but I'd say it would be rarely used in some areas, and more widely used in others.

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Be where you act? #6 (permalink) Tue Nov 21, 2006 2:29 am   Be where you act?
 

Torsten ... I think you must have mis-heard a phrase. That sounds nothing like anything I have heard in *any* English dialect. Perhaps some more sentences from the same source might help us understand.
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Be where you act? #7 (permalink) Tue Nov 21, 2006 23:06 pm   Be where you act?
 

OK, I've listened to the phrase a couple of times more and the last part still sounds like "act" to me although it might be quite possible that it's "Be where you're at" as Conchita suggested. I actually have tried to contact Ed Foreman's office regarding his tape although I doubt he'll respond. I'll listen to the tape again later and post my findings here...

Thanks a lot for listening to me.
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Be where you act? #8 (permalink) Wed Nov 22, 2006 0:11 am   Be where you act?
 

.
I see no reason why the speaker (or his father) could not have coined the phrase-- so it would not necessarily appear in that precise form from a Google search. The point of 'be where you act', as you say, Torsten, is intelligible-- don't bluff, don't pretend to be something you are not, or something to that effect-- and it is catchy enough as it stands.
.
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Be where you act? #9 (permalink) Wed Nov 22, 2006 2:51 am   Be where you act?
 

Good thought Mister Micawber... although Tamara's response is persuasive. 'Be where you're at' could be a down-homey, Willl Rogers-ish way of saying be satisfied with who you are, where you are etc.
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Be where you act? #10 (permalink) Wed Nov 22, 2006 8:56 am   Be where you act?
 

.
I also like MM's take on things. What was the context just before that statement, Torsten? I think that would help.
.
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Be where you act? #11 (permalink) Wed Nov 22, 2006 9:56 am   Be where you act?
 

The context was the following: Ed Foreman was talking about the fact that a lot of people are someplace physically and somewhere else mentally. He said that many of us think the same thoughts every day. He was speaking live to an audience and said: 'I bet 60% of you are not in this room right now. You are here physically but your thoughts are somewhere else. You worry about the kids, about your job, about your health....'. And that he inserted that phrase his father used to tell him when he worked on the farm.
Does this help?
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Be where you act? #12 (permalink) Wed Nov 22, 2006 10:14 am   Be where you act?
 

Hi Torsten,

Another expression comes to mind: It's time you started to live in the real world. Does that chime with your original quote?

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Be where you act? #13 (permalink) Wed Nov 22, 2006 10:16 am   Be where you act?
 

Yes Alan, that's the idea exactly.
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Be where you act? #14 (permalink) Wed Nov 22, 2006 16:02 pm   Be where you act?
 

Hi Torsten

The context brings another expression to mind: (be somewhere) in body but not in mind. Your quote might be basically the opposite of that expression.

In other words, participate in and/or focus on ("be") what you're doing here and now ("where you act") fully.

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Be where you act? #15 (permalink) Wed Nov 22, 2006 19:04 pm   Be where you act?
 

Torsten

It's probably "Be where you at."

Which reminds me of the redundant statement "Where are you at?" and its ilk.
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