Time, Manner, Place
Oct. 18th, 2003 02:12 pmEvery so often, I use a word which makes everyone go "eh?". Often this is because I'm using regional words in the wrong region (and, in fairness, sometimes it's because I'm just indulging my taste for obscure words). But recently, I apologised for saying "playing hooky" (playing truant), and was told that this was in fact (a) well-known and (b) American. So I'm wondering... how many of the words I often avoid really are obscure northenisms. Are they in fact well known? Are they not actually northern, but instead, perhaps, words that were common when I was little/are common among kids but not grown ups, or something completely different?
So, what I want to know is, for the following words, would you know what I meant if I used them? Would you be able to work it out ? Would you use them yourself ? Do you know whence they come ? I'm not particularly interested in whether they're in dictionaries/googlable etc, what I'm after is a measure of well-known-ness. Please comment, even if only to say "I have no idea what you're talking about, you freak!"
And as a side-issue - I'd always thought "minging" or "minger" were definitely on the list of northern words, but they seem to have become pretty widespread relatively recently. Any suggestions?
Probably more as I think of them.
So, what I want to know is, for the following words, would you know what I meant if I used them? Would you be able to work it out ? Would you use them yourself ? Do you know whence they come ? I'm not particularly interested in whether they're in dictionaries/googlable etc, what I'm after is a measure of well-known-ness. Please comment, even if only to say "I have no idea what you're talking about, you freak!"
And as a side-issue - I'd always thought "minging" or "minger" were definitely on the list of northern words, but they seem to have become pretty widespread relatively recently. Any suggestions?
- scunner (noun) - to take a scunner at someone
- ket(s) (noun) - I'm off to buy ket(s)
- chimble (verb) - that wall is chimbling
- molly (adj) - she's wearing a really molly top
- stotting (adj) - I'm stotting
- gegs (noun) - where did I put my gegs?
- mizzle (noun/verb) - the weather? Oh, it's just mizzling
- ginnel (noun) - take the first left down the ginnel
Probably more as I think of them.
no subject
Date: 2003-10-18 02:25 pm (UTC)You won't find stotties much further south than the Tees.
They may be winds in Richmond; In Darlngton, it's Post House Wynd with the y as in "sigh" (or in Blow, blow thou winter wind, where it has to rhyme with "kind"). In Yarm (North Riding)it's pronounced Bentley Weend.
O Douglas, Scots author, John Buchan's sister,wrote of a fattish woman "Mrs Jackson stotted forward on her high heels." A "stot" is a (?) Scots word for a steer/bullock.