Quizzes & Puzzles6 mins ago
Dialect
15 Answers
I admit I was being lazy. Prolly is not a word Probably is.
nor is Kida or even kinda, should be Kin of, sorry
anyway made me wonder
Do you have special (dialect) words for things where you live?
In (very) rural Hampshire and Sussex folks keep Chicken (however many) not Chickens. Next Wednesday will not be tomorrow that is 'this Wednesday'. Next Wednesday is the following week.... if you follow!
nor is Kida or even kinda, should be Kin of, sorry
anyway made me wonder
Do you have special (dialect) words for things where you live?
In (very) rural Hampshire and Sussex folks keep Chicken (however many) not Chickens. Next Wednesday will not be tomorrow that is 'this Wednesday'. Next Wednesday is the following week.... if you follow!
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.Loads up here I had to figure out when I moved up north.
Gipping - "it made me gip" - it made me throw up/ nearly throw up.
To let on to someone - to say hi to them.
Pants - that they are trousers up here, pants to me are knickers.
Ginnel/Brew - alley between backs of houses/hill
To call someone - to say something offensive about someone eg "so and so called me"/"you calling me".
Making a brew/brewing up - making a cuppa
Barm/muffin - a bap or roll from where i come from.
In wales - cheers instead of bye and ta da is used a lot too.
Gipping - "it made me gip" - it made me throw up/ nearly throw up.
To let on to someone - to say hi to them.
Pants - that they are trousers up here, pants to me are knickers.
Ginnel/Brew - alley between backs of houses/hill
To call someone - to say something offensive about someone eg "so and so called me"/"you calling me".
Making a brew/brewing up - making a cuppa
Barm/muffin - a bap or roll from where i come from.
In wales - cheers instead of bye and ta da is used a lot too.
i remember i had to think about regional dialects and stuff for my english but i cant remember that much now!
my mum says 'spice' for sweets.
does everywhere else know the words chav and scal? because i remember when i went to scotland and they had no idea what we meant by that because they say 'N.E.D's' instead which stands for non educated delinquents!
my mum says 'spice' for sweets.
does everywhere else know the words chav and scal? because i remember when i went to scotland and they had no idea what we meant by that because they say 'N.E.D's' instead which stands for non educated delinquents!
Well, CHAV is a social worker acronym which stands for Council House And Violence, I expect the same phrase exists in Scottish social work but it hasn't trickled down to common use as it has south of the border.
I assume Scal is short for Scallywag, this seems to stem from post Civil War U.S. This was a political term applied to white southerners who associated with black people. Scallywag has now come to mean a dishonest and untrustworthy person.
I assume Scal is short for Scallywag, this seems to stem from post Civil War U.S. This was a political term applied to white southerners who associated with black people. Scallywag has now come to mean a dishonest and untrustworthy person.
Nowt is very common up here too.
Right to as in it's "right" nice.
"Silly o'clock " was one I used to love meaning the early hours of the morning.
"Go have a word with yourself " too.
"Mardy" for stroppy/miserable.
Proper as in "it's proper ******* it down out there"/ "it's proper nice".
We had an random discussion the other day about how to pronounce Halfords, I say Hal and my workmates say Hol.
They take the **** out of my pronounciation too, such as u's.
Right to as in it's "right" nice.
"Silly o'clock " was one I used to love meaning the early hours of the morning.
"Go have a word with yourself " too.
"Mardy" for stroppy/miserable.
Proper as in "it's proper ******* it down out there"/ "it's proper nice".
We had an random discussion the other day about how to pronounce Halfords, I say Hal and my workmates say Hol.
They take the **** out of my pronounciation too, such as u's.
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