Green Cross Code Man
Wunt be druv
It is indeed fascinating. It makes me very melancholic though as so much has been lost.
It is indeed fascinating. It makes me very melancholic though as so much has been lost.
That's mockney, not Sussex.As I have lived away from Brighton for a long time now, I can say there is definitely a Brighton/ Sussex accent. I can hear it when up here on the local news, someone is being interviewed from down there.
Sounds West Country to me
That's mockney, not Sussex.
I only ever heard one person with a genuine accent when I played cricket against some team in the deepest darkest Weald (forget exactly where). He thrashed our bowling all over the ground.
I was chatting to someone about dialects a little while ago. They told me that apparently Sussex dialect is influenced by French due to our proximity to the coast and because fishing communities on either side of the channel would come into contact. Supposedly Sussex dialect has a feminine tense to it, and there’s an old saying that goes, “Everything in Sussex is a she, except for a tomcat…and even he’s a she”.
That's mockney, not Sussex.
I only ever heard one person with a genuine accent when I played cricket against some team in the deepest darkest Weald (forget exactly where). He thrashed our bowling all over the ground.
It is indeed fascinating. It makes me very melancholic though as so much has been lost.
I disagree. There is definitely a Brighton accent that's well-established for over a century. The proof is in listening to old Max Miller recordings from the mid-20th Century, well before Mockney was ever a 'thing'. Miller was born and bred Brighton, lived here all his life and the way he spoke, I still hear all the the time in Brighton and Worthing. I can't put my finger on it but there's a softness to his voice that Mockneys don't have and there's certain ways he says words that are definitely not said the same way in London.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Nm61yavCp-o
I remember going into the Trevor Arms in Glynde in the 80's. I was with a friend from Cheshire who had no clue what the locals were saying to him. He looked at me for an interpretation….I had no ****ing idea! Less then 20 miles from where I was born they may have been from Mars. It was a slightly creepy feeling like I'd stumbled into some weird rural badger rodgering cult. We drank our pints and stayed!
Seaford does have an R in it as does FordWhere i live some of the older folks still have a rural burr and pronounce Seaford c-FORD, not seafud.
Bighton accent is definitely different to a London accent , similar but softer than the south london influenced accent you get in Crawley. I reckon if you gave me a recording of someone who grew up in Whitehawk and someone who grew up in Broadfield i'd be able to tell which was which
That's right. And most true Seafordians would pronounce the 'r' when I lived there.Seaford does have an R in it as does Ford