Reading a Jay Rayner review this morning, I was struck by his mentioning of Sussex's myriad words for mud.
"Just as the Inuit are reputed to have many words for snow, so the people of Sussex, both East and West, are said to have many words for mud. A lot of them have a pleasing onomatopoeic squelch. There is “gawm”, for the nastiest-smelling kind of mud and “stodge” for the thickest pudding-like type. There is “swank” for a muddy bog and “stug” for watery mud, and “gubber” for a trench of rotting matter." https://www.theguardian.com/food/2021/jun/27/jay-rayner-restaurant-review-theres-an-awful-lot-to-like-about-the-sussex-in-london
Can't say I've heard any of these in relation to mud. Have you?
When thinking of other local words, Twitten was the first thing that popped into my head. What other truly local words do we have?
"Just as the Inuit are reputed to have many words for snow, so the people of Sussex, both East and West, are said to have many words for mud. A lot of them have a pleasing onomatopoeic squelch. There is “gawm”, for the nastiest-smelling kind of mud and “stodge” for the thickest pudding-like type. There is “swank” for a muddy bog and “stug” for watery mud, and “gubber” for a trench of rotting matter." https://www.theguardian.com/food/2021/jun/27/jay-rayner-restaurant-review-theres-an-awful-lot-to-like-about-the-sussex-in-london
Can't say I've heard any of these in relation to mud. Have you?
When thinking of other local words, Twitten was the first thing that popped into my head. What other truly local words do we have?