BBC Voices Recordings: Bentilee, Stoke-On-Trent

BBC Voices Recordings: Bentilee, Stoke-On-Trent

BBC VOICES RECORDINGS http://sounds.bl.uk Title: Bentilee, Stoke-on-Trent Shelfmark: C1190/32/01 Recording date: 24.03.2005 Speakers: Ball, Amanda, b. 1966 Stoke-on-Trent; female; nursery nurse (father b. Stoke-on-Trent, security; mother b. Stoke-on-Trent, housewife) Ball, Daniel, b. 1922 Tunstall; male (father b. Hanley, steel-worker; mother b. Penkhull, canal boat worker) Ball, Joan, b. 1924 female (father b. Ironbridge, labourer; mother b. domestic service) Ball, Philip Andrew, b. 1960 Stoke-on-Trent; male; manufacturing (father b. Tunstall, kiln worker; mother b. Werrington, pottery worker) The interviewees represent three generations of a Stoke-on-Trent family. PLEASE NOTE: this recording is still awaiting full linguistic description (i.e. phonological, grammatical and spontaneous lexical items). A summary of the specific lexis elicited by the interviewer is given below. ELICITED LEXIS ○ see English Dialect Dictionary (1898-1905) ∆ see New Partridge Dictionary of Slang and Unconventional English (2006) ◊ see Green’s Dictionary of Slang (2010) ♥ see Dictionary of Contemporary Slang (2014) # see Dictionary of North East Dialect (2011) ⌂ no previous source (with this sense) identified pleased pleased; mint◊ (suggested by interviewer, used as term of approval); cool (used as term of approval); wicked (initially misunderstood when used by daughter as term of approval); happy; glad tired knackered; sleepy; drowsy http://sounds.bl.uk Page 1 of 3 BBC Voices Recordings unwell ill; under the weather (suggested by interviewer, used occasionally); sick; sickies (of absence from work due to illness); off-side1 (old) hot sweat; sweaty; scorcher; roasting cold frozzen#; chilly; freezing annoyed angry; vexed (old, learnt from parents, “are you vexed of me?”) throw chuck (“chuck that away”, also used frequently as term of endearment) play truant skipped school; skip school; abscond; skive; wag (suggested by interviewer, not known); skiving sleep kip; take a kip; doze; snooze; sleep play a game top and whip (of old-fashioned spinning-top toy); join in hit hard thump; beat (“beat it”); swipe; whack; belt (“belt it”) clothes clothes; me gear (heard used); clobber; dress trousers kegs♥; hot pants; trousers; pants (suggested by interviewer, not used); flannels (used in past of trousers worn with sports jacket) child’s shoe trainers; pumps; plimsolls mother ma; mother; mum gmother nan; nana; grandma m partner my hubby; fella friend mates; me crew (used by young speakers of “gang”, e.g. “Bucknall crew”); pal; mate gfather grandad; grandpa forgot name something; friend⌂ (of person); thingymejig⌂ [θɪŋimiʤɪg]; thing (of object); oojah-ma-flip∆ (suggested by interviewer); “all right, mate” (to person) kit of tools tool-kit trendy tart (of female “out on the pull”, i.e. actively seeking sexual partner); poor; chav (suggested by interviewer, not known by older generation) f partner the missus, her indoors (used of own wife to friends, not used in presence of own wife); me better half; sweetheart (used by own husband of self) baby sibling (heard used); baby; kid (censured at work as nursery nurse); tot; babby○ (suggested by interviewer); nipper rain heavily pour down; pouring down; raining cats and dogs (“oh blimey, it’s raining cats and dogs”); chucking it down∆ toilet lavatory (“posh”); lav; loo; W.C.; bog walkway alley; alleyway; entry long seat settee; couch (“posh”); sofa run water brook; dribble main room lounge; living-room; parlour (used when first married of front room lodgings in terraced house); front room (of room in terraced house) rain lightly spotting; drizzle; spitting; mizzle (suggested by interviewer, not known) rich ?brainy⌂; posh, stuck-up, toffee-nose (used in past), la-di-das (of rich people) left-handed keggy-handed○; keggy○; left-handed unattractive minger; ugly; pig-ugly lack money skint; poor drunk smashed; “P.I. double S. E. D.’d” (i.e. euphemism for ‘pissed’); bottled; sozzled 1 David Wilson’ Staffordshire Dialect Words: a historical survey (1974) includes ‘off-side’ in this sense. http://sounds.bl.uk Page 2 of 3 BBC Voices Recordings pregnant up the spout (“up the spout, she is” used in past); full as a bedtick○2; expecting; in the club; up the duff, got a bun in the oven (current) attractive fit; sweet (of female); nice-looking; lovely insane mad; crazy; round the bend; round the twist moody grumpy; touchy; in one◊3 © Robinson, Herring, Gilbert Voices of the UK, 2009-2012 A British Library project funded by The Leverhulme Trust 2 English Dialect Dictionary (1898-1905) records ‘full as a tick’ in sense of ‘eaten one’s fill’ but not in this sense. 3 Green’s Dictionary of Slang (2010) records ‘go into one’ in this sense. http://sounds.bl.uk Page 3 of 3 .

View Full Text

Details

  • File Type
    pdf
  • Upload Time
    -
  • Content Languages
    English
  • Upload User
    Anonymous/Not logged-in
  • File Pages
    3 Page
  • File Size
    -

Download

Channel Download Status
Express Download Enable

Copyright

We respect the copyrights and intellectual property rights of all users. All uploaded documents are either original works of the uploader or authorized works of the rightful owners.

  • Not to be reproduced or distributed without explicit permission.
  • Not used for commercial purposes outside of approved use cases.
  • Not used to infringe on the rights of the original creators.
  • If you believe any content infringes your copyright, please contact us immediately.

Support

For help with questions, suggestions, or problems, please contact us