Paskman
Not a user
I think it was"twitten" not twitter [emoji846] The Sussex country burr still exists in these parts[emoji106]
I bet Cornwall has a word for mud, they have a word for everything else it seems (campers are Grockles in their Grundy Bins) I will have a look.
It's Leys.
Also just found out that good is Ansum, I thought it was Handsome (as written) it is something they say very often instead of good.
Is ansum not just an alternative spelling of handsome reflecting the dropped H?
That's what I thought but in the dialect dictionary it is spelt Ansum meaning good, the best.
Anyway I have hijacked, sorry
Just had a read of the wiki page for Sussex dialect and it's quite fascinating. The farmer accent is perhaps best left in the past but we should bring some of the words back. Dumbledore for bumblebee and flittermouse for bat are both great. I also like boco for much (from the French beaucoup).
One that I hadn't realised was local is pug for mortar.
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sussex_dialect
I always associated gurt for big with Somerset, chipper for happy is across the whole south isn't it?
It's dark over Will's mother's. I had a Sussex accent for a while, gawn now. Sussex was famous for appalling muddy roads and they reckoned that's why Sussex girls had long legs! Darn't ask me who they were.
Interesting. Apparently, in Worcestershire they say "it's a bit black over Bill's (mother's).
That was from my ex Mother in law Bexhill born and bred and still living there!
Seems like variants pop up everywhere https://wordhistories.net/2020/05/21/bills-mother/
I think it was"twitten" not twitter [emoji846] The Sussex country burr still exists in these parts[emoji106]
most likely. though i have used of stodge for thick mud and pug for mortar.
Not heard of any of those. Mud is mud.
However, my dad (originally a Londoner) and granny (Hove, born and bred) had a range of expressions I've not heard elswhere. See if you can work out what the mean (most are threats of minor violence) and whether you have come across them:
"I'll give you a clip round the ear ole"
"You've giving my arse the ear ache"
"Don't come the old acid with me!"
"You don't know poop from clay"
"I'll give you a clip along side"
"Do you want a thick ear?"
Ah, the violent and threatening world of a childhood in Portslade in the 60s