*Gullsworth*
My Hair is like his hair
Sussex - the pioneers of "text" talk.
C U L8R
Did "See you later" originate from Sussex? I used to date a girl from Hampshire (sorry) and she hated the saying!
Sussex - the pioneers of "text" talk.
C U L8R
You are correct. And unlike all those ignorant ' would of, should of' twats who HATE it when their grammar or spelling is corrected I am grateful to you for correcting me.
I have never heard of this word, this is interesting.
This.Is it not "we wunt be druv"?
But when oh when did Martlets get feet? I always had a thing about legless birds ... what happened?
It rhymes with "glove".how is druv pronounced?
Is it droove or druhv (if this makes ANY sense whatsoever?!?)
[MENTION=6]Lord Bracknell[/MENTION], youve used wunt and wun't. Presumably the latter is correct?
I'm not a native of Sussex and I might be more conscious of distinctive forms of dialect precisely because of this (and the fact that my family comes from Tyneside, where respect for dialect is inculcated into everyone at a very early age), but I've known the word "druv" (as a uniquely Sussex word) for YEARS.It would be better to use words that are more widely and readily understood in 2012.
I'm not a native of Sussex and I might be more conscious of distinctive forms of dialect precisely because of this (and the fact that my family comes from Tyneside, where respect for dialect is inculcated into everyone at a very early age), but I've known the word "druv" (as a uniquely Sussex word) for YEARS.
The language is richer because words like this survive.