Donate SIGN UP

London English

Avatar Image
follyfancier | 14:58 Tue 25th Oct 2011 | People & Places
26 Answers
why do Londoners say things differently
such as "you was" and "somefink"
no offence to anyone but I find it puzzling to say the least
Gravatar

Answers

1 to 20 of 26rss feed

1 2 Next Last

Best Answer

No best answer has yet been selected by follyfancier. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.

For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.
why do people in some parts of the midlands say buzz instead of bus

it's regional dialects and i love how different we all are. except for people from hartcliffe in bristol, that type of language mangling should not be allowed
I love bristol accent! Haha x
there's no f in summink
No different from other accents in others counties.

Unless you speak the 'Queens English' these irregularies in grammar and pronounciation crop up everywhere.

When I go up North the way they use language is completely different.

http://www.british-ge...bits-of-Norfolk-speak

I live in Norfolk. They muddle up their verb tenses here! and pronounce a lot of words completely differently.

I am a South Londoner, south londoners don't say somefink. That is North London/Essex.

What on earth makes you think that it is different in London? Where do you come from folly fancier?
not all, there are up to 7 million here, so it's a little difficult to say how many would speak that way
-- answer removed --
Me too Doc. I am told that when I get with my Suff Lundon family I drop back into the accent.
not bristolian specifically hartcliffe, if you've ever heard it you'll understand
I find it interesting that it is usually correct to say 'I was', 'we were', 'you were' but the phrase 'if I were a rich man' is also grammatically correct.
most Londoners don't.... young and ill-educated ones sometimes do.

Neither do they speak like phil Mitchell from east enders... aw-rite just ge'in it sawted
-- answer removed --
Question Author
I think I probably do speak "Queen's English" as Lottie calls it, that is just the way I was brought up, everyone at my school went to elocution lessons
i talk with received pronunciation, but my friends back home really do say

"aw-rite just ge'in it sawted"
accents and inherited dialect
i know some who do, but most who don't. No more than i would expect someone born in the north to continually say eh oop lad, or other expressions of that ilk. Apologies if i haven't got that right, but it's been a while since i visited my friends in the north..
I like regional accents, they sound warm and welcoming.
see me?
see mince?
see ma maw?
ma maw hates mince.

One for the Englanders to translate.
-- answer removed --
ma maw made braw mince
not now - she's deid.

:-)
Coming from Somerset I've always liked the local accent, trouble is all I seem to hear these days is Brummie, Scouse and Polish.

1 to 20 of 26rss feed

1 2 Next Last

Do you know the answer?

London English

Answer Question >>