Words specifically used in one area of the country

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vernon

Harder than Ronnie Pickering
Location
Meanwood, Leeds
For a good read on regional variations in childrens folklore and language try

Peter and Iona Opie's 'Lore and Language of Schoolchildren'.

It's fascinating and will unearth buried memories of some of the strange sayings and rituals that died with childhood.
 

JohnC60

Active Member
A favourite here in Cornwall is "dreckly".
dreckly is similar to mañana (spanish) but not so urgent. "I'll get it done dreckly" (I'll do it when I'm ready)
 

Twilkes

Legendary Member
On the radio last week Ken dot Bruce spoke to Susan Boyle and asked her about here life before her fame -
"I used to get up late and go and get my messages" was her reply.
Not heard that for 30 years (Scottish Girlfriend way back). Messages being shopping (from your Message Line= Shopping list)

Scotland might be cheating, with Scots being a recognised dialect and everything, but:

Puggy = fruit machine
Hingmee = thingummy = anything you can't remember the word for [took me weeks to work this out when I first moved here]
Shoogle = move/shake [e.g. we'll all shoogle up one space/just give it a shoogle]
Outwith = outside of [e.g. he was the fastest rider outwith the paid professionals]
Stramash = disturbance, noisy racket

Some of these probably aren't even Scots though.
 

PaulB

Legendary Member
Location
Colne
One expression used around here that makes me HATE the person saying it, is, 'agert'. It's used in the phrase 'anawer agert' and I shudder when I hear it, and it is heard a lot.

What does it mean? 'And so I said...' or maybe, 'and my demeanour to that particular bon mot was...' It's lazy, idle, said for emphasis and sums up the generally shocking low standard of education for some in this particular corner of Lancashire.

A further 'Lancastrianism' that convinces bystanders the speaker could not possibly have English as a first language tend to come in mountain settings. On encountering a cheery 'Nice day' from a walker heading in the opposite direction whilst attempting a Bob Graham Round, a well-known runner tends to return the phrase, 'Aye, it's grandasawt, intit?'
 

mcshroom

Bionic Subsonic
**Cough**. DEE and DAR! :rolleyes:

There, where and were are all said different. Why generations of school children in Sheffield spelt where and were the 'wrong' way round.

Only for Deedahs, not for us lot that spoke proper in Rotherham ;)
 

PaulB

Legendary Member
Location
Colne
Being a travelling sort of person, my ear for accent or dialect tends to be good and I can pick up on what's being said anywhere...except Aberdeenshire! Doric is so strange, I'm sure I'd understand more in the most nationalist bars of Llanberis than in pubs in the outer areas of Aberdeenshire. The first time I heard it I assumed it was Gaelic but certain words are said in (very heavily accented) English to dispel that theory. It makes no sense at all to an English speaker and even a Scottish colleague I was once with was as mystified as me as to what was being said.

Anyone know any Doric words or phrases?
 

bobg

Über Member
oo ay laa ( phonetically) mystified me for ages when I moved here. It's a common used greeting ie
"hello lad..."
What's ee like ... isn't he daft/clever/stupid etc
Getting off at Edge Hill, ( the railway station just before Lime Street in Liverpool ) = coitus interruptus. I 've heard it elsewhere using different railway stations just before major city ones
Someone mentioned "dreckly", I was brought up in east London and my grandad used to say it, I believe it's a corruption of "directly ie soon
 

Rickshaw Phil

Overconfidentii Vulgaris
Moderator
Mither - that's one I don't hear elsewhere.

Barm, nesh, mard or mardy (both mean "moody" to me), bobbins, duck and cock I am all familiar with*

Favourites that I never hear outside the locality are "flit" to mean "move" (as in home) and "thrutch" to mean fidget or wrestle or raum (which is another one).

*shut it
Mither is one I have often heard in Shropshire, along with Nesh (to mean feeling the cold excessively).

Brivvet is one that I haven't heard anywhere else. It's usually used to refer to someone who is poking their nose into things they shouldn't be.
 
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