Cheers for that link kiddy, a great read. Now I challenge someone to come up with a song that incorporates some of our numerous terms for mud.
Brilliant! I was about to say the words kiddy/old kiddy are good signifiers of a Sussex background and possibly accent and then you used it . QED
And my Mum, born and bred in Plumpton still uses the word Puggy to describe what can loosely be described as soil in her clay-infested wealden garden.
I noticed whilst in Hampshire the other week, that they seem to have a slight regional accent, then as you move into Dorset and across it gets more pronounced. Essex also has a distinctive accent.
Kent and Surrey seem to speak broadly with the same accent as we do in Sussex.
However, I have a Northern friend that reckons there is a definite Brighton accent, and we can be spotted a mile off.
Brighton people might sound like South Londoners. They don't sound anything like East Londoners or Essex boys.
I thought the Brightonian accent sounded like we dropped the middle of words, and making the letter t soft. At least that's what my friends from other parts of the country say