Dialect/slang

The origins and history of placenames, nicknames, local slang, etc.
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rangieowner
Posts: 528
Joined: Fri 15 Jun, 2007 10:57 pm

Post by rangieowner »

Geordie-exile wrote: leesparky wrote: Leeds slang is great.However, the bit that bugs me is saying 'lend' and 'borrow' the wrong way round - argh! It drives me mad!!! It is annoying, but it's not Leeds-centric I don't think - just a common mis-statement. Like 'conflab' for the more correct 'confab'. Or saying 'haitch' instead of the correct 'aitch'. 'Brought' instead of 'bought' is another I hear a lot. I don't know if these are Leeds 'sayings' but I remember a lot of my contemporaries saying 'bockle' and 'chimley'.     i just put this down to being uneducated or just lay talk!!
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sundowner
Posts: 461
Joined: Sun 22 Jun, 2008 4:11 pm

Post by sundowner »

I have known Harewood House as it is spelt now it is allways pronounced Harrwood House did we say it wrong or have they changed it.?

Trojan
Posts: 1990
Joined: Sat 22 Dec, 2007 3:54 pm

Post by Trojan »

sundowner wrote: I have known Harewood House as it is spelt now it is allways pronounced Harrwood House did we say it wrong or have they changed it.? Harewood is the name of the place, Harwood Earls - I think that's correct.
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Lilysmum
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Joined: Fri 28 Mar, 2008 12:31 pm

Post by Lilysmum »

sundowner wrote: I have known Harewood House as it is spelt now it is allways pronounced Harrwood House did we say it wrong or have they changed it.? It's normally pronounced "airwud owse" unless your posh and talk proper like wot I do.

Si
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Location: Otley

Post by Si »

"Clap-cold" - cold.Does anyone know the origins of this?My wife can't say cold without saying clap-cold!

sundowner
Posts: 461
Joined: Sun 22 Jun, 2008 4:11 pm

Post by sundowner »

Lilysmum wrote: sundowner wrote: I have known Harewood House as it is spelt now it is allways pronounced Harrwood House did we say it wrong or have they changed it.? It's normally pronounced "airwud owse" unless your posh and talk proper like wot I do. Hi Lilysmum you must have gone to the same school as wot i did.I went to a high school it was on a hill.It was also approved.

FLOJO
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Joined: Sun 01 Jun, 2008 6:46 am

Post by FLOJO »

Si wrote: "Clap-cold" - cold.Does anyone know the origins of this?My wife can't say cold without saying clap-cold! Si, my mother would say you have let your tea go clap cold, I still say it and don't know where it comes from.
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Uno Hoo
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Post by Uno Hoo »

sundowner wrote: Lilysmum wrote: sundowner wrote: I have known Harewood House as it is spelt now it is allways pronounced Harrwood House did we say it wrong or have they changed it.? It's normally pronounced "airwud owse" unless your posh and talk proper like wot I do. Hi Lilysmum you must have gone to the same school as wot i did.I went to a high school it was on a hill.It was also approved. Just because the BBC and others say Harwood doesn't mean it's correct. Years of inbreeding among the so-called "upper" classes has engendered impediments other than "chinless wonders". Apparently Evelyn Waugh always pronounced claret as "clart", a good Yorkshire word meaning something else entirely! I've often wondered that on the occasions he broke wind, if he would consider he'd let rip a "faret"!
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Si
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Location: Otley

Post by Si »

"Clart" sounds to me like a silly Waugh affectation. After all, the word comes from the French "clairet" (pronounced "clairay") meaning "pale," as Bordeaux wine was originally a rose, unlike the more powerful red (cabernet sauvignon) produced today.

Trojan
Posts: 1990
Joined: Sat 22 Dec, 2007 3:54 pm

Post by Trojan »

Si wrote: "Clart" sounds to me like a silly Waugh affectation. After all, the word comes from the French "clairet" (pronounced "clairay") meaning "pale," as Bordeaux wine was originally a rose, unlike the more powerful red (cabernet sauvignon) produced today. I think "clart" is a local version of "clout" = cloth. As in shart = shout abart = about etc.
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