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chrise

29th September 2020, 19:11
I was once ridiculed by an aquaintance for pronouncing "tooth" as "tuth" (as I do). I asked him if he pronounced "book" as "boo-k" rather than "buk".
1916 of 2514  -   Report This Post

tyke51

29th September 2020, 19:17
Chrise

Yet we pronounce `truth` as `trooth` - it`s all weird but we all seem to think our version is the correct one!
1917 of 2514  -   Report This Post

chrise

29th September 2020, 19:20
too true, tyke!
1918 of 2514  -   Report This Post

granama1

29th September 2020, 19:24
PaulH@1911. I agree about posh people 'talking down' but many accents seem to be 'put on' to me. They seem like regional affectations. I have flattened vowels and say bath, castle and cubs in a particular way...as they are spelled, not baarth, caarssew and cabs. So Bath Buns often provokes hilarity in the estuary english. Similarly my Newcastle raised eyebrows among the Northern tribes who think it's Nucassl. If bath was baarth and Newcastle was either Noocarssul or Nucassl or Noocarsuw then the words would have been written like that. Don't get me started on Birmingham etc bloimey.
1919 of 2514  -   Report This Post

chrise

29th September 2020, 19:29
Hi granama1
I think the distinction in the pronunciation of Newcastle is mostly about where the stress is - those in the know stress the second syllable.
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granama1

29th September 2020, 19:47
Way I bonnie lad....I used to live there and me and me marra used to gan doon thu Toon for the odd stotty cyakye tha nars.

(I did my PhD there).

One local chap said if you go into a pub and listen to the general hubbub, Geordie is quite 'sing-song' but if you go into a pub in Yorkshire it's Morse code 'dahdahdaditditditditdahdahdah'. Hubbubs are quite interesting.
1921 of 2514  -   Report This Post

granama1

29th September 2020, 19:51
Sorry, stotti key ache, is what I meant to say.
1922 of 2514  -   Report This Post

orson

29th September 2020, 21:29
Watching one of those Norwegian dramas on BBC4 I was surprised when they said yem for home. (It's actually hjem but they said yem.) That's because it reminded me of school holidays I spent in County Durham when I knew that to gan yem meant to go home. It cannot be coincidence and there are similar words in Swedish and Danish.

As for tooth, I remember one boy at school who pronounced it tuth and that annoyed me. He was from Birmingham. I cannot find a dictionary that gives that pronunciation so it must be a minority dialect. A little research tells me that the Anglo-Saxons pronounced it so as to rhyme with "both", so that doesn't help.
1923 of 2514  -   Report This Post

paulhabershon

29th September 2020, 22:07
Granama1@1921

Hubbubs: I was amused to be told that the noise emanating from an upmarket pub or a posh cocktail party is 'Ears! Ears!' Not a bad approximation.
1924 of 2514  -   Report This Post

rossim

30th September 2020, 08:39
My hubby says tuth and he's Gloucester born and bred.
I'm from further south and have always said 'two th'.
He also says stu and I say 'st you'.
I've learnt to live with it!
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