Local
dialects and expressions are probably something we don't spend much time
thinking about.
But
the BBC recently ran a project in which they encouraged poets to write pieces
celebrating words specific to the areas from which they came.
'Mardy'
was the word for the East Midlands, of which Northamptonshire is a part. Mardy is one of those words that I didn't
think was specific to this area, but apparently further south they don't use
it. Just in case you're in any doubt, it
means sulky or moody.
Some
of you may remember 'Air Ada', the classic cartoon which ran in this paper for
many years, and was packed with Northamptonshire sayings and pronunciations.
I've
been thinking about words that I think are Northamptonshire-isms and I've
picked my favourites - I'm hoping Ada would approve:
M'duck
- a friendly moniker, suitable for people of all ages, and particularly helpful
if you can't remember somebody's actual name;
Jitty
- a small alley between rows of houses.
Sometimes used in the expression 'he/she couldn't stop a pig in a jitty'
if the person is bow-legged;
Keck
- I never knew the real name for keck until recently, it was something that
grew in hedgerows and of which my childhood rabbit was particularly partial;
its real name is apparently cow parsley.
Another
local word I particularly like is mackle - it means to try and repair something
using items easily at hand, although I tend to use it in a culinary sense (as
in 'I've mackled a meal together').
You
don't have to travel far to be confronted by new words either. Heading over the border to University in
Leicester I was confronted by 'cobs'.
Until this point I believed a cob to be a breed of horse, but over there
it's a bread roll, as explained to me by my friend who hailed from near
Wolverhampton, where good things were always described as bostin'.
What
are your favourite Northamptonshire words and sayings?
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