I keep accidentally speaking Coventry-ish

1235

Comments

  • Anyone watch Gavin and Stacey? Very funny programme but I laugh my arse off every time Nessa says 'Wos occurin'?' It's fab.

    I never sin that program but I bin sayin' "Wot's occurin'?" for years! :eek:

    (I do apologise, but I can't help typing in my delightful Coventry accent in this thread! :D)
    Been to this many PJ shows: Reading 2006 London 2007 Manchester & London 2009 Dublin, Belfast, London, Nijmegen & Berlin 2010 Manchester 1 & Manchester 2 2012...

    ... and I still think Drive-By Truckers are better.
  • I never sin that program but I bin sayin' "Wot's occurin'?" for years! :eek:

    (I do apologise, but I can't help typing in my delightful Coventry accent in this thread! :D)

    Is it a Cov thing too? No fucking way, I'm gonna have a larf with that one :D
    'We're learning songs for baby Jesus' birthday. His mum and dad were Merry and Joseph. He had a bed made of clay and the three kings bought him Gold, Frankenstein and Merv as presents.'

    - the great Sir Leo Harrison
  • Is it a Cov thing too? No fucking way, I'm gonna have a larf with that one :D

    I doon't know. Me and me work mate 'ave bin sayin' it fer years and we bof from cov innit.

    EDIT: We say it 'Laff'.
    Been to this many PJ shows: Reading 2006 London 2007 Manchester & London 2009 Dublin, Belfast, London, Nijmegen & Berlin 2010 Manchester 1 & Manchester 2 2012...

    ... and I still think Drive-By Truckers are better.
  • I doon't know. Me and me work mate 'ave bin sayin' it fer years and we bof from cov innit.

    EDIT: We say it 'Laff'.

    I know ya do, gimme a braaek I'm joost catchin' oop! :D
    'We're learning songs for baby Jesus' birthday. His mum and dad were Merry and Joseph. He had a bed made of clay and the three kings bought him Gold, Frankenstein and Merv as presents.'

    - the great Sir Leo Harrison
  • I know ya do, gimme a braaek I'm joost catchin' oop! :D

    innit.
    Been to this many PJ shows: Reading 2006 London 2007 Manchester & London 2009 Dublin, Belfast, London, Nijmegen & Berlin 2010 Manchester 1 & Manchester 2 2012...

    ... and I still think Drive-By Truckers are better.
  • innit.

    Naaaaaaaa' mean bruv?
    'We're learning songs for baby Jesus' birthday. His mum and dad were Merry and Joseph. He had a bed made of clay and the three kings bought him Gold, Frankenstein and Merv as presents.'

    - the great Sir Leo Harrison
  • Naaaaaaaa' mean bruv?

    I do. Safe innit, safe.
    Been to this many PJ shows: Reading 2006 London 2007 Manchester & London 2009 Dublin, Belfast, London, Nijmegen & Berlin 2010 Manchester 1 & Manchester 2 2012...

    ... and I still think Drive-By Truckers are better.
  • I do. Safe innit, safe.

    Dis thread's nuff jokes, innit.
    'We're learning songs for baby Jesus' birthday. His mum and dad were Merry and Joseph. He had a bed made of clay and the three kings bought him Gold, Frankenstein and Merv as presents.'

    - the great Sir Leo Harrison
  • audiodave
    audiodave Posts: 1,623
    Mark, if you're picking up this accent after a week and a half, I really, REALLY feel for you. Do you pick up accents easily? Thankfully, I don't seem to. After four years of living in Birmingham, no one has ever said that I have any kind of brummie twang, and so far, I can say the same of Coventry after living here for...3 months. Not that there's anything WRONG with the Coventry accent...but there isn't much right with it either. ;)

    As for Coventry being horrible...it's just a city. Most cities are horrible. Especially London (IMO...I hate that place). It has it's good parts and it's bad parts. Granted, there's a distinct lack of any sort of logic in the town centre, and I can't find anything apart from Ikea, which you can see from Sweden, but i'll let the off as they got bomed to fook in some sort of war. :p

    No matter how many times I hear the word 'batch' in reference to a bread roll, it doesn't fit. Alarms go off in my head...cuz it's not a fecking batch! I work in Birmingham and I heard people arguing about it the other week.
    ~AKA Dave-of-the-dead~

    I don't wanna think, I wanna feel

    Dublin 23/08/06 Lisbon I 04/09/06 Lisbon II 05/09/06 Paris 11/09/06 Verona 16/09/06

    London 18/06/07 Dusseldorf 21/06/07 Copenhagen 26/06/07 Nijmegen 28/06/07
  • Jeremy1012
    Jeremy1012 Posts: 7,170
    audiodave wrote:
    As for Coventry being horrible...it's just a city. Most cities are horrible. Especially London (IMO...I hate that place). It has it's good parts and it's bad parts. Granted, there's a distinct lack of any sort of logic in the town centre, and I can't find anything apart from Ikea, which you can see from Sweden, but i'll let the off as they got bomed to fook in some sort of war. :p
    I know what you mean, and of course all cities have bad parts but they usually have redeeming factors too, I've just never found that in Coventry. Apart from Sian and Sarah of course :) London is absolutely horrible in parts but it literally has everything you could ever need. Coventry just always kind of depressed me as a kid, you know when you have places your parents would drag you to and you just knew it was going to be a bad day? :D

    Having said that, this is all based on when I was a kid. I haven't been for a couple of years. Maybe the fun is there when you look for it? :D
    "I remember one night at Muzdalifa with nothing but the sky overhead, I lay awake amid sleeping Muslim brothers and I learned that pilgrims from every land — every colour, and class, and rank; high officials and the beggar alike — all snored in the same language"
  • audiodave
    audiodave Posts: 1,623
    Jeremy1012 wrote:
    I know what you mean, and of course all cities have bad parts but they usually have redeeming factors too, I've just never found that in Coventry. Apart from Sian and Sarah of course :) London is absolutely horrible in parts but it literally has everything you could ever need. Coventry just always kind of depressed me as a kid, you know when you have places your parents would drag you to and you just knew it was going to be a bad day? :D

    Having said that, this is all based on when I was a kid. I haven't been for a couple of years. Maybe the fun is there when you look for it? :D

    I can understand that, I hated being dragged around places by my parents. It isn't really the fun i'm here for. It's the people, or rather the person. But i've always been very much of the mind that it doesn't matter where you are as long as you're in good company.
    ~AKA Dave-of-the-dead~

    I don't wanna think, I wanna feel

    Dublin 23/08/06 Lisbon I 04/09/06 Lisbon II 05/09/06 Paris 11/09/06 Verona 16/09/06

    London 18/06/07 Dusseldorf 21/06/07 Copenhagen 26/06/07 Nijmegen 28/06/07
  • I know teacakes dont have crosses on them, but neither do they have currants. That is not a teacake in that picture.
    do you mean a scone then? :p
    The Astoria??? Orgazmic!
    Verona??? it's all surmountable
    Dublin 23.08.06 "The beauty of Ireland, right there!"
    Wembley? We all believe!
    Copenhagen?? your light made us stars
    Chicago 07? And love
    What a different life
    Had I not found this love with you
  • :rolleyes:

    Tsk... I doon't know what yer all talkin' abarrt. Us Cov lot doon't speak no diff-rent to uver people. Wunce you all get the 'ang of it, cov speak ain't nuffin.

    by the way, it's batch, not 'cob' or 'roll'.... batch. It's a bread fing innit.

    oh an' 'bath' is said lark 'baff' innit.

    You people know nuffink.

    luv an' 'ugs an' that.

    ~ disgruntled Coventry resident.
    chime... your translation skills are needed :D
    The Astoria??? Orgazmic!
    Verona??? it's all surmountable
    Dublin 23.08.06 "The beauty of Ireland, right there!"
    Wembley? We all believe!
    Copenhagen?? your light made us stars
    Chicago 07? And love
    What a different life
    Had I not found this love with you
  • A brief Coventry / Nuneaton dictionary and accent guide....

    innit - 'Isn't it?', as in 'don't you agree?'
    N'all - 'And all' / 'as well'
    ain't - 'Isn't'
    Batch - a bread roll, cob or bun
    Snap - 'lunch' (Nuneaton)
    Chuffin' nora - 'oh bloody hell!' (Nuneaton)
    Wunce - 'Once' (Nuneaton)
    Sen / yersen - 'Self' / 'Yourself' (Nuneaton)
    Nowt - 'Nothing'
    Owt - 'Anything'
    Just... - 'I have just done that'
    Well good - 'That's rather pleasing to me'
    She duz me 'ed in! - 'she does my head in' / 'she's rather irritating'
    Me - 'My'

    * 'th' becomes 'f' sound - "I fink I know what you're on about..." ("I think I know what you're talking about") UNLESS it's coupled with a vowel, then it becomes a 'v' sound - "Don't bovver!" ("Don't bother") or "Anuver" ("Another")
    * 'U's are heavily pronouced with a 'UH' sound - "MUHM" ("Mum")
    * drop 'g's from the end of words and drop 'H's from the front of words - "Doin' me 'ead in!" ("Doing my head in")
    * 'us' and 'oes' sounds become 'uz' - "buz" ("bus") and "duz" ("does")
    Been to this many PJ shows: Reading 2006 London 2007 Manchester & London 2009 Dublin, Belfast, London, Nijmegen & Berlin 2010 Manchester 1 & Manchester 2 2012...

    ... and I still think Drive-By Truckers are better.
  • dunkman
    dunkman Posts: 19,646
    * amurNay - I am not

    * aslaat - "I was like that"; i.e., I was remarked to say (So the boss sez tae me that I was lazy, and aslaat "Naw amurNay!")

    * Aye - Yes

    Am'no - I'm not

    [edit] B

    * baltic - really cold (It is the Baltic!)

    * bampot - an idiot, unhinged person (He is a bampot)

    * bawbag - scrotum, pejorative (That guy's a bawbag)

    * bawsed - drunk (I was pure bawsed the other night)

    * blootered - drunk

    * boggin - smelly, dirty (That's boggin'!)

    * bowfin - smelly, similar to howfin.

    [edit] C

    * chib/chibbin - a chib is a weapon (knife, bat, wood) - chibbin is the adjective ("He's gonnae get a chibbin!")

    * coupon - face ("What's the matter with your coupon?")

    * cunt - dual meaning; either an insult (You're a total cunt) or as part of a threat ("I'm gonnae kick your cunt in")

    [edit] D

    * dog/doggin - Having sexual intercourse in the back of a car ("Oh my God. they were doggin'!")

    * dug - a dog

    * Doss - brilliant, good. . ("that chicken soup was doss like!")

    Dondur - a walk (comin fur a wee donder doon yonder?)

    [edit] F

    * feert - to be scared (I am faird of the dark)

    * fousty - dark/damp

    [edit] G

    * geggy - mouth - "( Wheesht yer geggy")

    * ginger - carbonated drink,

    * gowpin/lowpin - sore body part - (My knee is gowpin)

    * Gock* - to stare ("wits that bawbag gockin at?")

    * Ged* - meaningless term ("wit ya dain ged?")

    [edit] H

    * hackit - ugly

    * howfin/howlin - smelly

    [edit] I

    Isnae - Is not ("He isnae there")

    [edit] J

    * jaked - being in a state of drunkenness (I was jaked last night)

    * jake(y) - a homeless or unkempt person (usually describing an alcoholic)

    * jessie/jessy - wimp/big girl's blouse

    * jobby - a single stool; plural form "jobbies"

    [edit] L

    * liftit - to be arrested by the police

    * loaby - hallway

    [edit] M

    * maw - mum (Aye yer maw)

    * mawkit - very dirty (Your trousers are mawkit!!)

    * mince - rubbish/nonsense - (Don't talk mince)

    * minger/mingin - originally a Scottish word for dirty/smelly/horrible thing or person

    [edit] N

    * napper - head

    * naw- no

    * nippin - nagging

    * numpty - a useless individual/moron

    [edit] P

    * pan - break or disfigure (pan the windows in)
    * pan breid - rhyming slang for deid/dead (my dad's pan breid)
    * pure - very, totally (I was pure drunk last night)

    [edit] S

    * skonn - to hit with a thrown object -(Some diddy just skonned the back of ma napper wi a pie)

    * scooby - clueless, (Don't have a scooby) ((Scooby Doo=clue)

    * scramble - a wedding tradition where the father of the bride would throw small change from the departing wedding car to neighbouring kids

    * skiddle - to play in water

    * skoosh - easy (That exam was a skoosh)

    * slitter - to dribble food/miss the mouth

    * steamin - drunk

    * stocious - heavily drunk, (He was blootered; totally stocious!)

    * store dug - lazy/laid back

    * stowed oot - busy, full (That pub is stowed out!)

    * swallae - to swallow

    * swatch - to look at

    [edit] T

    * tan/tanned - to drink (I tanned ten pints last night!)

    * toaty - small/tiny

    * tube - an idiot/fool
    oh scary... 40000 morbidly obese christians wearing fanny packs invading europe is probably the least scariest thing since I watched an edited version of The Care Bears movie in an extremely brightly lit cinema.
  • Oh and I forgot, 'doesn't' becomes 'don't'

    :D
    Been to this many PJ shows: Reading 2006 London 2007 Manchester & London 2009 Dublin, Belfast, London, Nijmegen & Berlin 2010 Manchester 1 & Manchester 2 2012...

    ... and I still think Drive-By Truckers are better.
  • A brief Coventry / Nuneaton dictionary and accent guide....

    innit - 'Isn't it?', as in 'don't you agree?'
    N'all - 'And all' / 'as well'
    ain't - 'Isn't'
    Batch - a bread roll, cob or bun
    Snap - 'lunch' (Nuneaton)
    Chuffin' nora - 'oh bloody hell!' (Nuneaton)
    Wunce - 'Once' (Nuneaton)
    Sen / yersen - 'Self' / 'Yourself' (Nuneaton)
    Nowt - 'Nothing'
    Owt - 'Anything'
    Just... - 'I have just done that'
    Well good - 'That's rather pleasing to me'
    She duz me 'ed in! - 'she does my head in' / 'she's rather irritating'
    Me - 'My'

    * 'th' becomes 'f' sound - "I fink I know what you're on about..." ("I think I know what you're talking about") UNLESS it's coupled with a vowel, then it becomes a 'v' sound - "Don't bovver!" ("Don't bother") or "Anuver" ("Another")
    * 'U's are heavily pronouced with a 'UH' sound - "MUHM" ("Mum")
    * drop 'g's from the end of words and drop 'H's from the front of words - "Doin' me 'ead in!" ("Doing my head in")
    * 'us' and 'oes' sounds become 'uz' - "buz" ("bus") and "duz" ("does")

    I think you will find that this applies to a lot of the north as well.
    Astoria 20/04/06, Leeds 25/08/06, Prague 22/09/06, Wembley 18/06/07,
    Dusseldorf 21/06/07, Manchester 17/08/09, London 18/08/09, LA 06/10/09, LA 07/10/09.

    Ain't gonna be any middle anymore.
  • I think you will find that this applies to a lot of the north as well.

    It does! :D It's amazing how similar they are considering that Cov and Nuneaton are right in the middle of the country :confused:
    Been to this many PJ shows: Reading 2006 London 2007 Manchester & London 2009 Dublin, Belfast, London, Nijmegen & Berlin 2010 Manchester 1 & Manchester 2 2012...

    ... and I still think Drive-By Truckers are better.
  • audiodave wrote:
    Mark, if you're picking up this accent after a week and a half, I really, REALLY feel for you. Do you pick up accents easily? Thankfully, I don't seem to. After four years of living in Birmingham, no one has ever said that I have any kind of brummie twang, and so far, I can say the same of Coventry after living here for...3 months. Not that there's anything WRONG with the Coventry accent...but there isn't much right with it either. ;)

    As for Coventry being horrible...it's just a city. Most cities are horrible. Especially London (IMO...I hate that place). It has it's good parts and it's bad parts. Granted, there's a distinct lack of any sort of logic in the town centre, and I can't find anything apart from Ikea, which you can see from Sweden, but i'll let the off as they got bomed to fook in some sort of war. :p

    No matter how many times I hear the word 'batch' in reference to a bread roll, it doesn't fit. Alarms go off in my head...cuz it's not a fecking batch! I work in Birmingham and I heard people arguing about it the other week.


    To answer your question, I've never found out whether I pick up accents easily as I've never moved more than a few hours from my town.. However, I did know a good South African friend in Uni and it wasn't long til whenever I hung out with him, I'd be saying 'Harzit?' instead of 'How's it going?'... I loved the accent and we had so many giggles over drinks, I couldn't help it.

    I too am of the mind that it doesn't matter where you are, it's the people who make a place. And everyone here has made me feel like Coventry is home from home :) I think the reason I've slipped into the accent is that it seems even easier than my own... one thing that's already going is the 'u' sound in the middle of words like 'much'... so it's 'mch' now. And Sarah laughs at me when in the morning I'll say 'Alright lov?' instead of 'Alright luv?' That's happened in nearly 2 weeks.....

    God/Eddie Vedder help me :D
    'We're learning songs for baby Jesus' birthday. His mum and dad were Merry and Joseph. He had a bed made of clay and the three kings bought him Gold, Frankenstein and Merv as presents.'

    - the great Sir Leo Harrison
  • It does! :D It's amazing how similar they are considering that Cov and Nuneaton are right in the middle of the country :confused:

    Tis very strange, I think alot of the things are said the same but with a very different accent.

    It's just a lazy way of speaking really.
    Astoria 20/04/06, Leeds 25/08/06, Prague 22/09/06, Wembley 18/06/07,
    Dusseldorf 21/06/07, Manchester 17/08/09, London 18/08/09, LA 06/10/09, LA 07/10/09.

    Ain't gonna be any middle anymore.