Dialect/slang

The origins and history of placenames, nicknames, local slang, etc.
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jim
Posts: 1898
Joined: Sun 17 May, 2009 10:09 am

Post by jim »

I always understood "dinnae fash yersel" to be of Scots origin. Perhaps it entered local usage via Doctor Finlay's Casebook.

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

Post by Trojan »

jim wrote: I always understood "dinnae fash yersel" to be of Scots origin. Perhaps it entered local usage via Doctor Finlay's Casebook. So did I . Dunt is definitely Barnsley. I've heard "canna" for can't in Lancashire.In Morley they say "nivver bother" which means the same I suppose.
Industria Omnia Vincit

Johnny39
Posts: 894
Joined: Mon 11 Jun, 2007 3:54 pm

Post by Johnny39 »

"Too daft to laugh at" - a not very good comedian."Fair to middlin'" - on being asked the state of one's health.
Daft I call it - What's for tea Ma?

jim
Posts: 1898
Joined: Sun 17 May, 2009 10:09 am

Post by jim »

"He's a good turn but he's on too long"----he doesn't know when to shut up!

stutterdog
Posts: 859
Joined: Mon 15 Jun, 2009 4:46 pm

Post by stutterdog »

jim wrote: "He's a good turn but he's on too long"----he doesn't know when to shut up! He's all wind and watter! He's full of bull s%$£t!
ex-Armley lad

Bramleygal
Posts: 126
Joined: Fri 23 Jan, 2009 3:37 pm

Post by Bramleygal »

Like a tart in a tranceORLike a fart in a windstorm(Hopeless)

dogduke
Posts: 1407
Joined: Thu 03 Jan, 2008 6:47 am

Post by dogduke »

Like a fart in a windstorm(Hopeless) or a collender
Consciousness: That annoying time between naps.90% of being smart is knowing what you're dumb at.

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

Post by Trojan »

Johnny39 wrote: "Fair to middlin'" - on being asked the state of one's health. "Fair to Middleton" (in Morley anyway)
Industria Omnia Vincit

Uno Hoo
Posts: 755
Joined: Fri 20 Jun, 2008 2:04 pm

Post by Uno Hoo »

stutterdog wrote: Trojan wrote: It's funny to think that when I was a kid there were plenty of people about who were born and brought up before the motor car was invented.My great aunt used to call what we called then and still call today "coaches" - "saloons" not charabancs. If my memory isn't playing tricks she wasn't alone either. Anyone else (Blakey) remember this term? I've heard people say shara's for buses ,never the full word. My sister, when very young, used the word "sharrow" in a school essay - one of those "What I did in the holidays" type things that we had to write about. She genuinely thought it was the correct word for motor coach, and that it was spelt to rhyme with "barrow". Problem was, we lived in Leicester at the time - we must have spent a lot of the summer break with my maternal grandparents in Farsley - and neither the teacher nor any of the other children had ever heard the term. She had some difficulty in explaining what it meant. as at the time she'd never heard the word "charabanc".
The Moving Finger writes; and, having writ, moves on; nor all thy Piety nor all thy Wit can call it back to cancel half a Line, nor all thy Tears wash out a Word of it.

Bramleygal
Posts: 126
Joined: Fri 23 Jan, 2009 3:37 pm

Post by Bramleygal »

By gum!

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