Food & Drink1 min ago
Janners
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Why are Plymouthians knowns as 'janners?'
BBC2's 'Eggheads' were at a loss to explain.
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.You may get many different answers here but I will give the one my Dad told me. Sailors make up slang terms for just about everything, jobs, places, etc. Portsmouth is "Pompey", Devonport is "Guz" and so on. As sailors are known as "Jack Tar" they needed to identify other types of people on and around the ship so the name "Jan Dockie" was used to describe a dockyard worker. This became "Janner" which originated at Devonport in Plymouth and consequently meant anyone from that city.
I suspect that, like so many dialect words, the derivation of 'janner' is lost in antiquity. These links don't really answer the question but, hopefully, they may be of interest:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Janner
http://www.stevebond2k.eurobell.co.uk/janner.htm
Chris
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Janner
http://www.stevebond2k.eurobell.co.uk/janner.htm
Chris
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