Malcolm Robinson Posted April 5, 2014 Report Posted April 5, 2014 How did you score....... I missed one. http://www.chroniclelive.co.uk/news/north-east-news/how-well-you-know-geordie-6823267
Alan Edgar (Eggy1948) Posted April 5, 2014 Report Posted April 5, 2014 8/10 - a Doylem & a Scratcher are new (or they are the two brain cells I lost this morning) to me.
Malcolm Robinson Posted April 5, 2014 Author Report Posted April 5, 2014 There was a couple I had to guess at too Eggy.
Vic Patterson Posted April 5, 2014 Report Posted April 5, 2014 A lot of this is not Geordie but I loved the Geordie content!
Canny lass Posted April 5, 2014 Report Posted April 5, 2014 Only 7/10 for me! I'll have to get home more often! A question: Did you all get the Word "kets". I've never Heard this in the plural form. I've only ever Heard "ket" and then not only with the meaning sweets. My parents used the Word "ket" to describe anything that was rubbish. That could be anything from sweets to furniture to TV programmes.
Alan Edgar (Eggy1948) Posted April 6, 2014 Report Posted April 6, 2014 Only 7/10 for me! I'll have to get home more often! A question: Did you all get the Word "kets". I've never Heard this in the plural form. I've only ever Heard "ket" and then not only with the meaning sweets. My parents used the Word "ket" to describe anything that was rubbish. That could be anything from sweets to furniture to TV programmes. Same here - only the singular 'ket' and it was used to refer to any product that was thought to be sub-standard.
Vic Patterson Posted April 6, 2014 Report Posted April 6, 2014 I first heard "Ket†when living in Bedlington, referring to something being not nice, usually cheap. I thought Kecks were a more modern slang for pants or trousers! Lots of words appear to be very localised depending on the industry, Morpeth farming, Bedlington/ Ashington mining, Blyth port shipbuilding. A few years ago you could easily spot were a person was from by the words and accents they used. Because of travel and communications people are not isolated as they were and like a mixing pot becoming more "standard†or similar, regionally and nationally! In the "old†days there wasn't much need to understand the chep in the next village never mind a different region!
keith lockey Posted April 6, 2014 Report Posted April 6, 2014 I got 6 out of 10. Some of those were beyond me...Doylem!!!!
Adam Hogg Posted April 6, 2014 Report Posted April 6, 2014 7/10 but i would not say I am a geordie I am a northumbrian.
Canny lass Posted April 8, 2014 Report Posted April 8, 2014 (edited) I Think you are confusing dialect with county, Adam. You are a Northumbrian but so is a Geordie. You both come from Northumberland. Nowadays you both speak Geordie. There are very few, if any, who speak Northumbrian. It's an archaic dialect. Edited April 8, 2014 by Canny lass
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