1976: NORTHUMBERLAND accents | Word of Mouth | Voice of the People | BBC Archive

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  • Опубліковано 22 лис 2024

КОМЕНТАРІ • 378

  • @PurplePassion332
    @PurplePassion332 2 роки тому +147

    Im from Northumberland as was my parents and most of my family, this is pure nostalgia for me, i have chatted to people who have exactly this accent, it's fantastic x

    • @maxwellarch
      @maxwellarch 2 роки тому +4

      do northumbrians nowadays still speak like that?

    • @PurplePassion332
      @PurplePassion332 2 роки тому +14

      @@maxwellarch sadly, fewer and fewer as the older ones pass on, another dying dialect

    • @heatherboardman7004
      @heatherboardman7004 2 роки тому +4

      @@maxwellarch some do.

    • @benfisher1376
      @benfisher1376 Рік тому +5

      ​@PurplePassion332 It's sad. I'm from Kent and the kentish accent has died, become more London. Alot of english accents and dialects are on the wane unfortunately. Btw I love Northumberland, its beautiful.

    • @OffGridInvestor
      @OffGridInvestor Рік тому +1

      It's incredibly fast talking

  • @paulaparker9577
    @paulaparker9577 Рік тому +51

    This filled my heart so much. It was like been back around my granda all over again. The broadness from our accent has been lost and I'm so devastated.

    • @dragoncaeli
      @dragoncaeli Рік тому +3

      Yeah, to me it takes me right back to the sheep pens and helping out with shearing with my neighbours

    • @KD400_
      @KD400_ 10 місяців тому +1

      The men have to maintain their culture if not everything gets lost

    • @minnroo
      @minnroo 7 місяців тому +6

      My family on both sides are from and still live in Northumberland, whereas I live in Cambridge. When I see my relatives they always joke that I sound posh because I lost my accent when moving away from Northumberland as a child. I miss living up north. 😌

  • @christopherscott2114
    @christopherscott2114 6 місяців тому +16

    1min 10 seconds in,is Ken armstrong (with large side burns) a true northumbrian,first met him in 1985 when i started as an apprentice mechanic at an Alnwick garage,he was a fence contractor working on some of the most remote farmland in northumberland,he was one of the funniest men i ever met, he had us all in stitches when he used to call into the garage for repair work,he worked in all weather on the cheviot hills a proper grafting canny man !

  • @Ant-Dj0nt
    @Ant-Dj0nt 11 місяців тому +63

    "Sometimes mistaken for Scottish, sometimes for Geordie" Yep, that was our life growing up. This video takes me back!

    • @CuFhoirthe88
      @CuFhoirthe88 4 місяці тому +1

      I grew up where the central Scottish dialect was dominant. I percieve it as closer to Welsh accents. Which makes sense it's further south in Yr Hen Ogledd than us. Am I making any sense?

    • @Geordielass1978
      @Geordielass1978 3 місяці тому +2

      @CuFhoirthe88 - As a Geordie (technically Northumbrian, but from the southern part (Morpeth) which sounds more Geordie, and with actual Tynesider parents) who has lived away from the region for many years, I had to tone the accent down (and speak more slowly) when I needed to be understood, and that led to me being asked a few times if I was Welsh, so I can get why this softer dialect could easily sound a little Welsh.

    • @Shinathen
      @Shinathen 3 місяці тому +1

      @@Geordielass1978we do not have an accent anymore in morpeth, if you listen to how all the school kids talk they all have a generic English accent

    • @Geordielass1978
      @Geordielass1978 3 місяці тому +1

      @@Shinathen Really? I haven't lived there for 30 years (moved away because of my dad's work in my early teens) but we definitely had an accent back then. What a shame the kids are losing it. I have to admit I looked at Morpeth house prices a few years back when I was looking at moving back to the NE and quickly ruled it out as unaffordable, so is the accentlessness a gentrification thing?

    • @Shinathen
      @Shinathen 3 місяці тому +1

      @@Geordielass1978 I’m sure because you lived here 30 years ago you must of been aware of the fact that the A1 was originally within morpeth, and because of that people travelling through the A1 saw Morpeth. So for instance southerners travelling north for holidays and thinking Morpeth was a pretty town and they decide to live there. That is why we don’t have an accent anymore, basically. And those families who had kids and raised them in morpeth obtained their parents accents and influenced other school kids accents. Nowerdays you usually get the same accent between everyone, with a few variations of some people. But sadly it’s so engraved to speak ‘properly’ in Morpeth now that it’s impossible to gain an accent or else you’d be ridiculed. In high school i said ‘bal’ for a ball and got told I’m stupid and should speak correctly. I see no future for an accent in morpeth and we are now mainly only southerners

  • @blooter6360
    @blooter6360 2 роки тому +40

    Brilliant as a proud Northumbrian
    This is class !

  • @micky8127
    @micky8127 Рік тому +16

    Love seeing my Great Grandad on this and his son Robert.

  • @hotspurhema5131
    @hotspurhema5131 2 роки тому +54

    I'm from Shilbottle. Understood every word. But this level of dialect is becoming rarer today as the older generation pass.

    • @Avradoorn
      @Avradoorn 2 роки тому +8

      I knew some of those lads from the accordion club days. Played in a band with one of them.

    • @blooter6360
      @blooter6360 2 роки тому +3

      Also. And this dialect is more rothbury upper coquetdale

    • @johno4521
      @johno4521 2 роки тому +1

      ex Alamooth lad here....

    • @danorthsidemang3834
      @danorthsidemang3834 Рік тому +2

      Is your hometown actually called Shilbottle or is it spelled that way but pronounced "Shitbottle" or "Shitebottle"?

    • @hotspurhema5131
      @hotspurhema5131 Рік тому +5

      @@danorthsidemang3834 maybe worth asking that question in the Farriers on a Friday night.

  • @froggy8030
    @froggy8030 2 роки тому +57

    I'm Scottish and what they are saying makes total sense to me.

    • @connorsmith1797
      @connorsmith1797 Рік тому +5

      Aye ahd say we are more Scottish than English

    • @3xx948
      @3xx948 Рік тому +15

      Scots and Northumbrian dialect share the same root

    • @brettharter143
      @brettharter143 Рік тому +6

      Of course we can understand scots too the border is only a few miles away lol

    • @Leenufc
      @Leenufc 8 місяців тому +1

      As a geordie same

    • @TheGrmany69
      @TheGrmany69 7 місяців тому

      It's because it's anglicized Manx.

  • @painfulsilence316
    @painfulsilence316 2 роки тому +226

    It makes me sad that the diversity of accents, language and culture seems to be homogenizing in many, if not all, parts of the world. World leaders in Thailand, China, Russia, Angola, etc. dress like American Presidents. We adjust our speech to sound like people in big cities we might never even visit. Things change and I know these accents and ways of life couldn't last forever, but it feels like we've gone from eating well-spiced curry to white bread with unsalted butter. It's all a bit blander than it used to be. It's not all bad, but it would have been nice to see the world before mass media.

    • @j0nnyism
      @j0nnyism 2 роки тому +18

      Had away an shite ye wanna gan up to Blythe like

    • @themadplotter
      @themadplotter 2 роки тому +20

      It’s because we now all have to communicate with many more people with different backgrounds because of the advances of transportation and communications. This farmer never had to zoom call with a major supplier, but that’s not uncommon now.

    • @s.a.l948
      @s.a.l948 2 роки тому +15

      I agree. Smaller, local accents and languages are beeing forgotten forever. I live in Sweden and most young people here wants to pretty much speak English all the time.

    • @themadplotter
      @themadplotter 2 роки тому +11

      I was just thinking about the time Paul McCartneys dad wanted it to be "she loves you yes yes yes" because "yeah" was an Americanism.

    • @snorter9783
      @snorter9783 2 роки тому +8

      Canada will lose its last Canadian Gaelic speakers within a decade or two. Dozens of indigenous languages are moribund with no L1 speakers under the age of 60. It’s terribly depressing. Any traditional social institution that can’t turn a profit is being discarded in favour of making our culture and society maximally economically efficient.

  • @philipusher4282
    @philipusher4282 Рік тому +16

    In parts of the clip, it's not the dialect, it's the speed of their delivery that makes it slightly hard to hear every word. I find part of being able to understand an unfamiliar accent is reading people's lips as you follow the sounds they make. The man talking about the walking sticks is easy to understand, for instance as he is speaking slowly. Loved the story about eating mutton for every meal and bleating at the end of the day. Disclaimer: am originally from the North East so maybe have a slight advantage.

  • @Lyingleyen
    @Lyingleyen 9 місяців тому +2

    Absolutely awesome!!! One of my relatives was from Northumbria, although she moved to work in West London after going to Corden Bleu School of Catering in Paris. That must have been a real culture shock for her!!!

  • @smallbutjustright
    @smallbutjustright 8 місяців тому +9

    I’m from Northumberland. The accents vary quite a lot (to my ear at least) throughout the county. There are very different accents in this video alone, all are mid to north/north west Northumbrian and the older men have a lot more Scottish to their Northumbrian accents than the younger ones. I always think that Northumberland accents from those outside the Borders have gone more Geordie since this time, and Borders folk have taken on more of a Scottish accent, but there’s still a definite difference between relatively close places - there’s a word of difference between Ashington, Cramlington & Blyth accents for instance

    • @garbeal2397
      @garbeal2397 3 місяці тому +4

      I grew up in Amble and never noticed until I started working in Alnwick at 17 the differences in accent between Amble and Alnwick even though just 9 miles separate them.

    • @Amber-md8ut
      @Amber-md8ut Місяць тому

      Can’t forget Bedlington (always the forgotten place…). My grandmother and her friends all have a slight difference to their accent. She is from Bedlington, one from Cambois, and even with such a short distance there’s a difference.
      To me the Newbiggin accent is a bit similar to Ashington-my grandma’s friend (from Newbiggin) does the “phone” and “fern” pronunciation.

  • @NicUsher
    @NicUsher 2 роки тому +20

    I'm from Sydney and grew up in NZ. I understood the shearers.

    • @NR-st2pr
      @NR-st2pr 2 роки тому +5

      Maybe's they spent three months shearing the NZ flocks:)
      We used to get the lads from your part of the world up here at shearing time till quite recently

    • @berlinocelot
      @berlinocelot 2 роки тому +1

      @@NR-st2pr I'm from the UK and I got about 10% of it. Something about sheep, right?

  • @frostylunetta
    @frostylunetta Рік тому +15

    Love the Northumberland accents most
    I would love to move to the North East (my parents thought I am crazy as all they could think of the UK was London or some parts in the South)

    • @Lat265
      @Lat265 Рік тому +1

      I've lived here all of my life, it would be nice to move to a different part of England.

  • @Geeraffe
    @Geeraffe 6 місяців тому +5

    Brings back memories of working in Wooler and Belford in the 80s thank you 👍

  • @emmanoble5498
    @emmanoble5498 2 роки тому +27

    My Granda and Gma moved to Australia
    From Morpeth and Ashington after the pit closed in the 70s.
    I've only just discovered how much their accents & dialect they spoke is so localized and dying oot.
    Keeping it alive here
    on the other side of the 🌎
    "Hoy that pinny owa here, it's on the cheble.I'm gaan byek a cyek"
    " I bloody teld ye ! Div'ent clart.
    Haaway man. Div'ent ye bowk mind, or I'll bloody brain yeh."

    • @blooter6360
      @blooter6360 Рік тому +2

      Aye that’s propa pit matic crack that

    • @bethanywilson2101
      @bethanywilson2101 Рік тому +6

      I was born in the old hospital (Ashington), lived in Morpeth as a child, then now married, and I'm trying to immigrate to america to be with my husband. A lot of Americans think I'm scottish, lol it's just an accident. I don't think they hear very much with it being the mid west of usa (Iowa). I will never get rid of my accident as proud of where I have come from. This makes me so happy to listen to this video. Hearing my dialect can't wait to visit back home like proper miss me sausage rolls and the lovely countryside! ❤

    • @blooter6360
      @blooter6360 Рік тому

      @@bethanywilson2101 brilliant !

    • @celiabarrett2107
      @celiabarrett2107 Рік тому +2

      Hoy meamss to throw right? Bowk means to vomit? These words I remember from growing up in Carlisle.

    • @JohnHonda101
      @JohnHonda101 10 місяців тому +3

      Ask ya Grandfatha aboot a Scullery, he should still say things like, Berb (Bob) Jern (John) and Derg (Dog)

  • @froggy8030
    @froggy8030 2 роки тому +32

    In fact being from the South West of Scotland. Weirdly often Northern English accents from that coast seem to be more on par with us and those in the North and East of Scotland. Than the dialects from the mid regions of Scotland like Ayrshire, Glasgow etc. Who are seen as the benchmark of Scots-ness but are barely the tip of the Country's dialects. I mean the guy doing the Northumberland poetry if you compared it to Burns Scots, there are many kinships. I think it proves that especially in working class culture between Northern English and Scotland as people we aren't so different after all.

    • @borderlands6606
      @borderlands6606 2 роки тому +1

      We're a' Jock Tamson's bairns, and hope to stay so.

    • @chrisstucker1813
      @chrisstucker1813 Рік тому +7

      Kingdom of Northumbria went as far north as Edinburgh

    • @Norse-Gael
      @Norse-Gael Рік тому +6

      The Danes that is why! The word bairn is not Gaelic. It is old Norse.

    • @JohnKobaRuddy
      @JohnKobaRuddy Рік тому +1

      ​​@@Norse-Gaelwe also have many german words. There is a nice video on UA-cam of a German professor talking about the Geordie accent and its origins.

    • @memofromessex
      @memofromessex 10 місяців тому +1

      Aye, Scottish accents are weird. I knew of some crofter from Outer Hebrides spoke very clearly - but then you go to Glasgow and it takes some time to understand - for both of us! I remember trying to speak in my Essex-accent (not Estuary English, more Cockney) and flattening 'o's and not saying my 'h's' and we confused each other!

  • @rskb1957
    @rskb1957 2 роки тому +57

    This is how my grandparents spoke to each other although with more of the dialect words thrown in. My grandfather was born in 1904 on a farm outside Morpeth and my grandmother was from Belsay. The shearers were harder to follow but the others not so. It's the speed of the speech that makes it hard to follow and you need to be in practice. Sadly, my grandparents are long dead but it's how they sound in my memory. It's always surprised me that people think it sounds like the Scottish accent. My mother's cousin was born on a farm opposite Holy Island and his accent was ever so slightly different; softer but still with the distinctive rolled 'R'.
    As for the Northumbrian 'R' the true test is if someone can say 'Rothbury' with the 'R' rolled in the back of the mouth near the ulvular. As for speed, it is fast, although it may be to do with the shortness of the words.

    • @janetgraham-russell4476
      @janetgraham-russell4476 2 роки тому +4

      My family are from east coast Northumberland. It has changed so much.

    • @emmanoble5498
      @emmanoble5498 2 роки тому +3

      Is there sometimes a bit of a whistle In pronouncing some words? or was that just my grandad?

    • @borderlands6606
      @borderlands6606 2 роки тому +5

      It has been said that one of the Northumbrian rulers was short-tongued (ankyloglossia), and to gain courtly favour it became fashionable to speak with a restricted R sound. This is probably apocryphal but who knows.

    • @jasperD33
      @jasperD33 Рік тому +4

      So weird to find people in a comment section from Morpeth. We’re from pegswood!

    • @1paultay
      @1paultay Рік тому +3

      @@emmanoble5498 My Gran from Oakwood north of Hexham did just that

  • @onlinemusiclessonsadamphil4677
    @onlinemusiclessonsadamphil4677 2 роки тому +25

    I'm from north - east Scotland and it's so similar to some Aberdeenshire accents, very similar

    • @nutyyyy
      @nutyyyy 2 роки тому +2

      Aye was thinking that. Quite a bit easier to follow for us.

    • @froggy8030
      @froggy8030 2 роки тому +2

      I say it often. Us lot at the bottom (South West) and you guys up top and to the East have similar dialects. It's The Glaswegian and Ayrshire lot etc in the middle who are most recognised as Scots and sound nothing like the rest of us. I often wondered if it was a working class and rural thing? The Fisher folks etc

    • @Bella-fz9fy
      @Bella-fz9fy 6 місяців тому

      @@froggy8030I agree,I think you can see evidence of this with the rural people from the countryside who emigrated to America,taking with them their rolling rrr’s (rhotic).

    • @RMedich
      @RMedich Місяць тому

      I’m Northumbrian and moved to Aberdeen in 2010 and I’ve never struggled to understand the Doric. Makes sense to me! 😂

  • @timhawkins1493
    @timhawkins1493 2 роки тому +24

    North-Westerner here. Not far from Liverpool. This isn't too tricky to understand but I've got an interest in some of the more unique accents of the UK. Northumberland has something special about it in general. Unlike anywhere else in the country.

    • @chrisstucker1813
      @chrisstucker1813 Рік тому +3

      It really is a beautiful place, so much land has remained untouched and is bustling with history . God’s land

    • @benfisher1376
      @benfisher1376 Рік тому +2

      I love English accents.

  • @kipp1231
    @kipp1231 6 місяців тому +2

    I'm a broad speaking Geordie and this sounds like going to my nans house in the 80s.
    I had no problem whatsoever understanding their gib.
    There's something homely and welcoming about those great accents.

  • @chrisd5774
    @chrisd5774 8 місяців тому +10

    If you listen to Swedish/Danish/norse language, the lilt is the same, in the speech patterns.

  • @MofosOfMetal
    @MofosOfMetal Рік тому +31

    I'm from mid-Northumberland, along the coast, and it's a shame that this accent is fading away.
    You can hear a remarkable difference between older generations and younger ones - young people tend to sound more homogenized and Geordie-fied.
    Whereas older generations were more like this - especially in the land between Rothbury and Wooler.
    It's a wonderful accent to hear - and it's a shame that people get the narrow-minded impression that these farmers lack intelligence - listen to what they say and you'll realize how sharp their wit really is!
    I love Geordie and love Scots - but that special unique Northumbrian accent is getting lost generation by generation - I'm glad this video preserves it, and I hope young people make a conscious effort to keep it up too!

    • @connorsmith1797
      @connorsmith1797 Рік тому +11

      Aye I hate it inal, am frurm Northumberland and nae wun nahs how te speak proper Northumbrian. Am also a teacher and get told to speak properly. Nah Al keep me dialect and speak how the people of where ah teach and live should tahk

    • @Lat265
      @Lat265 Рік тому +1

      @@connorsmith1797 Speak the Queens English!!!!

    • @Tinker1950
      @Tinker1950 Рік тому +3

      ​@@Lat265 Don't you mean, 'the King's'. ☺️

    • @JohnKobaRuddy
      @JohnKobaRuddy Рік тому +1

      Many people around the North Tyneside area now sound like Mackems. It's only Gateshead where geordie exists in large numbers.

    • @Zultzify
      @Zultzify Рік тому

      ppl are quick to cast judgement, but a lot of those they think theyre smarter than have skills and knowledge rarely gained today.

  • @jeffmorse645
    @jeffmorse645 2 роки тому +14

    With the two elderly gentlemen making the walking sticks I had to pay close attention, but could understand them. Same with the last older man - no issues. The sheep shearers were almost impossible for this American to understand though. Could just catch a word here and there. I've been to Northern England, but never had any difficulty if I was standing in front of someone looking at them as they spoke. Those sheep guys though - wow!😮

    • @dragoncaeli
      @dragoncaeli Рік тому +4

      Aye, well see I have the opposite - I understood it all, but the shearers were the easiest, after a childhood spent in the sheep pens in Northumberland XD

  • @OscillatorCollective
    @OscillatorCollective 2 роки тому +77

    Wow, I’m familiar with a lot of British accents…but wow, this one blows me away.
    It’s so cool that a place as small as the British isles can have so much diversity of language, and it actually be the same language. (I’m from Texas by the way, with British ancestry).

    • @matthew-dq8vk
      @matthew-dq8vk 2 роки тому +5

      Kind of weird a Yank is fetishizing our country.

    • @OscillatorCollective
      @OscillatorCollective 2 роки тому +18

      @@matthew-dq8vk far from from being a “Yank”… I’m only second generation American, and I’m southern.

    • @borderlands6606
      @borderlands6606 2 роки тому +7

      The trend is for city accents to take over the surrounding area, and this has accelerated in the past few decades. TV and inward migration have also diluted many accents, which could often be narrowed down to an individual town. For example a 1970s murder case involved an audio tape (which turned out to be a hoax), and the perpetrator was tracked down to a specific area of a town by the way he spoke. The Home Counties (commuter counties surrounding London) had their individual accents, none of which resembled cockney, estuary English or received pronunciation, and these have all but vanished in the last 30 years.

    • @thedemongodvlogs7671
      @thedemongodvlogs7671 Рік тому +13

      @@OscillatorCollective In North America yank mean New Yorker, but in everywhere else in the english speaking world yank just means American. Also you can have British ancestry, but being a 2nd gen (presumably sole citizenship) American means you are an American.

    • @chrisstucker1813
      @chrisstucker1813 Рік тому +2

      This is a very old English dialect - probably the oldest to exist today. Quite remarkable that it has remained so untouched for so long; we’re talking over a thousand years.

  • @jdm65
    @jdm65 2 роки тому +9

    Very good. And a moment of appreciation for Mr Bragg's green period, with maximum respect for the velvet jacket. Nice.

  • @FallenAngel9979
    @FallenAngel9979 25 днів тому +1

    Wow-never heard a Northumberland accent before. (I’m from the South of England) and it’s fabulous! Reminds me of the Geordie accent.

  • @Peepsuk1234
    @Peepsuk1234 2 роки тому +15

    My grandad moved to Tyneside after serving in the Army during the war. Met my Grandma in the Army and they moved to south Tyneside. I remember him saying that he got a job in the pit and it was like having to learn a new language. Other grandparents born in Northumberland and talked much like the people in this video. Takes me back to being a bairn.

    • @froggy8030
      @froggy8030 2 роки тому

      Bairn, A word people from certain areas of Scotland use instead of Wean, which is more prominent in the mid and west.

    • @AethelwulfOfNordHymbraLand2333
      @AethelwulfOfNordHymbraLand2333 5 місяців тому

      'Bairn' is an Old Norse borrowing. It's not native to the Northumbrian dialect. Understand that Northumbrian has hardly even been influenced by Standard English never mind other languages.

  • @lornaburgess9762
    @lornaburgess9762 8 місяців тому +2

    I'm from Seghill, pitmans doughter and proud of it man.

    • @AcerJones21
      @AcerJones21 6 місяців тому +1

      Just saw this! My ancestors (also pitmen) were from Seghill. I was watching this trying to see how much I could understand. My grandmother could apparently put on the accent, but I never knew her (and we are down South now). We have photographs of her grandfather with his fancy waistcoat, pocket watch and so on. It blew my mind when I finally realised that Mr Fancy Coat must have talked with a thick Geordie accent.

  • @janetgraham-russell4476
    @janetgraham-russell4476 4 місяці тому +1

    I've always lived on Tyneside, but my family is from Northumberland. I only just followed.

  • @OffGridInvestor
    @OffGridInvestor Рік тому +3

    Nice to see the border collie there. The dog of the region. My family originated from down south. Crazy thing is in my area in Australia, MOST FAMILIES come from the same area. There's a family down the hill from me that we were friends with IN ENGLAND for generations.

  • @misterhamez
    @misterhamez Рік тому +8

    as an aussie, i picked up maybe 4 words in total from those shearers. that was something else. i love videos like this

  • @impalaman9707
    @impalaman9707 5 місяців тому +2

    Northumbrians are beautiful people---they have a twinkle in their eyes!🥰

  • @jaybenton7716
    @jaybenton7716 2 роки тому +21

    I divern't na wa' they're tarking aboot.

    • @smile768
      @smile768 2 роки тому +4

      There's a translate to English underneath your comment! Google doesn't realise that it is very good old English!

    • @emmanoble5498
      @emmanoble5498 2 роки тому +2

      Haddaway man!
      He just telt ye.
      I nivvor really knae, either mind.
      The pit taak cannit be aal ower. Can it?

    • @tomwilkinson392
      @tomwilkinson392 4 місяці тому

      @@emmanoble5498 Nur, hinney. Sum o’ wu still taalk like that, like😀.

  • @rustledjammies8769
    @rustledjammies8769 9 місяців тому +2

    The Northumberland shearers at the start sound like a Mix of Geordie, Scottish and Irish. The man being interviewed sounds Irish when he does the pronunciations. Northumbrian, Scottish (including Scots) and Hibernic (Hiberno and Ulster Scots) varieties of English all share similar vocabulary, but it seems that pronunciation is also a factor too. I've noticed that many Hebrideans sound very Irish, but this might be a migration thing, such as Manx and North Wales people tend to have mishmash accents of Northern England, Scotland and Ulster.

  • @northumberlandjo1666
    @northumberlandjo1666 Рік тому +9

    I am born & breed Northumberland & understand everything they say. We would call it pitmatic. But the way these men speak is dying out, which is a shame.

  • @rgarlinyc
    @rgarlinyc 2 роки тому +6

    "Muttin' fer yor BREKkus, muttin' fer your lun', muttin' fer your tee an' muttin' fer yor SUPPah."
    That was the only sentence I understood, until the linguist explained more at the end.👏🏻😀

    • @chrisstucker1813
      @chrisstucker1813 Рік тому +3

      What he said afterwards was “by the end of the third day you were nearly bleating!”

  • @iainhardy1312
    @iainhardy1312 10 місяців тому +3

    That is my relative in the video the gentleman smoking is my great grandfather

  • @andyturnbullguitarteacher
    @andyturnbullguitarteacher 5 місяців тому +1

    Loved this. Proud geordie here

  • @pl443
    @pl443 2 роки тому +1

    I just love that uvular R, the Northumbrian burr.

  • @videogamebookreviews
    @videogamebookreviews 2 роки тому +15

    If you click the auto-generated subtitles on, you'll see it's not just humans who can have a tough time making out certain words. :-)

    • @benji.B-side
      @benji.B-side Рік тому +1

      One line was "Soft ass baptized flavor, it was' WTF? 😅

    • @benmaharaj6854
      @benmaharaj6854 Рік тому

      It got at least some of it right. It wasn't until I turned it on that I realized they really were speaking English and I could half follow their words 🤔

  • @inkedbhudda85
    @inkedbhudda85 2 роки тому +5

    I understood every word that was spoken

  • @jamesmoore4397
    @jamesmoore4397 7 місяців тому +2

    I don't know how but I understood every word...

  • @LauraC-ek4wd
    @LauraC-ek4wd 3 місяці тому

    Gorgeous accent, I'm from Northern Ireland and I've heard a similar accent here in some country areas.

  • @1magnit
    @1magnit 2 роки тому +8

    My grandads family were farmers in Teesdale, the accent isn't far off.

  • @JaneSmith-y5c
    @JaneSmith-y5c Рік тому +2

    We used to go out there with our parents in the 60s and 70s into the utter wilds, some of the best parts of the UK, no one around, only sheep and our father would us of the even older language, never mind dialect if we left Northumberland and went to the North York moors- the old Celtic language to count the sheep preserved even then from our Celtic forefathers - Yan tan tether mether pip. All these decades later despite speaking standard English at home even the 1960s I can understand everything the shepherds said.

  • @1258-Eckhart
    @1258-Eckhart 2 роки тому +8

    The Google subtitling made a dog's dinner out of this.

  • @mollysmith1748
    @mollysmith1748 Рік тому +3

    My great grandad and uncle are in this video

  • @Norse-Gael
    @Norse-Gael Рік тому +1

    My Clark family from South Ronaldsay Orkney and The Scottish Highlands were Shepards.

  • @UncleNewy1
    @UncleNewy1 4 місяці тому +1

    Yorkshireman here, born in 70.
    I had to slow it down to .75 but then I could pretty much understand 90% of it.

  • @JohnKobaRuddy
    @JohnKobaRuddy Рік тому +3

    Theirs still a few people near me with the auld Northumbrian burr.

    • @MofosOfMetal
      @MofosOfMetal Рік тому +1

      How old are they and what are of Northumberland are they from? I'd good to hear it's not extinct yet!

  • @lordwalker71
    @lordwalker71 10 днів тому

    I pride myself being able to understand most UK accents since I grew up with Scottish parents even though I grew up in Canada and my brothers and I were exposed to alot of UK shows growing up but I struggled understanding these men.

  • @Geordielass1978
    @Geordielass1978 3 місяці тому +2

    I know I've lived away from Northumberland too long when I really had to concentrate hard to understand that. 😞

  • @uofapunk
    @uofapunk 2 роки тому +20

    As an American from Arizona I'm lost

    • @Rick-wk7hr
      @Rick-wk7hr 7 місяців тому +1

      Lok😂

    • @StillAliveAndKicking_
      @StillAliveAndKicking_ 6 місяців тому +2

      As an Englishman from the midlands, so am I.

    • @rossco12
      @rossco12 5 місяців тому

      I'm from Northumberland and I'm lost too 😂

    • @rossco12
      @rossco12 5 місяців тому

      But I can say it is a beautiful accent and not this harsh anymore

  • @steveforster9764
    @steveforster9764 Рік тому +2

    Been a Northumberland born (Newbiggin by the Sea) lad living in Canada for 23 years I struggled to understand this

    • @JohnHonda101
      @JohnHonda101 10 місяців тому

      I've drank many pints in the Central Clurd and Ship. Gets canny windy at Church Point in the winta mind.

  • @JohnHonda101
    @JohnHonda101 10 місяців тому +1

    Little known fact: Melvyn Bragg used to do the Vicks Sinus Inhaler voice overs.

  • @petercannon6906
    @petercannon6906 7 місяців тому +1

    Superb photography. Me Nan Was from East Bolden. I'm London. I get it.

  • @SuperJal1979
    @SuperJal1979 2 роки тому +5

    I'm from county Durham and had to listen very closely to understand.

    • @darkwave9345
      @darkwave9345 2 роки тому +2

      thats because you speak mackem....the devils tongue

    • @Biggles2666
      @Biggles2666 2 роки тому

      @@darkwave9345 true.

    • @dunelmian-slinger
      @dunelmian-slinger Рік тому +1

      I'm from County Durham, the accent is different to ours but the dialect words they use are practically the same. Though it depends on where ye're from, the dialect south o Blackhall is mair wattered-down.

    • @JohnHonda101
      @JohnHonda101 9 місяців тому +1

      Skewl (School) Bwoook (book) Rwlerr (ruler) (You tak em, we'll mak em)

    • @EtherealSunset
      @EtherealSunset 5 місяців тому

      ​@@darkwave9345Mackems don't sound the same as the rest of County Durham. I'm south County Durham and understood pretty much everything that was said in this. I guess age and where exactly you grew up makes a difference.

  • @leedobson
    @leedobson 6 місяців тому +2

    A lad from Bedlington was in the swimming baths, he saw a nice looking lass and asked "do ye come here often" ?
    She said "eee are yee flirting" ?
    "naa burth me feets touchin the bottom"

  • @markusass
    @markusass 2 роки тому +6

    I know the Anglian variant of Old English used in East Anglia and there are a lot of similarities. Brilliant.

    • @jimboll6982
      @jimboll6982 Рік тому +4

      Northumbria was an Anglian kingdom.

    • @Norse-Gael
      @Norse-Gael Рік тому

      The influence is more because of Dane Law.

    • @SandileNgwenya-gv7nx
      @SandileNgwenya-gv7nx Рік тому +2

      ​@@Norse-GaelAnglo Saxon more than Norse but Norse has had more influence in Yorkshire

    • @AethelwulfOfNordHymbraLand2333
      @AethelwulfOfNordHymbraLand2333 5 місяців тому

      ​@@SandileNgwenya-gv7nxNorse in reality has had little influence on English. Even the Yorkshire dialect is still rooted in Northumbrian Old English and could very well develop back that way.

  • @NorthEastMick
    @NorthEastMick 9 місяців тому +3

    People think Rothbury has a think Northumberland accent? Try going to Red Row and listen to some of the old fellas from there. Unless you’re local you’d be hard pushed to understand them.

  • @richardmullins1883
    @richardmullins1883 Рік тому +1

    Reminds me of Michael Palin's Gumby character LOL

  • @wuwie83GT
    @wuwie83GT 8 місяців тому +2

    Real men,great men hail hail

  • @davidkemp4212
    @davidkemp4212 Рік тому +1

    Whey man that was champion Born a Geordie but holidaying on a farm in north Northumberland regularly aa understodd ivvory word. The nearest dialect to Old English in the English speaking world . We haven't moved away from proper English pronunciation, it's

  • @chrisstucker1813
    @chrisstucker1813 Рік тому +4

    4:50 “we had a clipping gang we used to gan away with, gan away on the Monday and come back on the Saturday night. We’d kill a sheep and ya would have mutton for ya breakfast, mutton for ya bloody dinner, mutton for ya tea and mutton for ya supper. After aboot 3 days ya were nearly bleating!”

  • @xanderside8899
    @xanderside8899 Рік тому +1

    Nice showcase of North-Northumbrian and Pityakka/South East Northumbrian :D

  • @furytash
    @furytash Рік тому +2

    Beautiful

  • @raymartin7172
    @raymartin7172 11 місяців тому +2

    All gone. Even in Ashington the young ones just sounds like Newcastle Geordies

  • @celiabarrett2107
    @celiabarrett2107 Рік тому

    Gan used in Carlisle and bait too. My dad used those words.

  • @peteratkinson922
    @peteratkinson922 9 місяців тому +1

    My next door neighbour from back in the sixties onwards must have been from this neck of the woods. He rolled his rs and the rreest.

  • @dawnguy842
    @dawnguy842 3 місяці тому +1

    I'm Scottish and my neighbour is a Northumbrian, this accent is probably the most Scottish "English" accent there is

  • @hanifleylabi8071
    @hanifleylabi8071 3 місяці тому +1

    Id love to know if some of those younger ones are still around and how they talk now

  • @edwardmiessner6502
    @edwardmiessner6502 11 місяців тому +1

    I'm better able to understand this Northumberland accent than I can understand the Okracoke-Tangier-Smith Islands accent. Their ancestors came from the UK's English South-West, I have learned. And I live across the pond!

  • @jibjab351
    @jibjab351 2 роки тому +3

    Its that bloke off Alan Partridge

  • @Itsembish.
    @Itsembish. Рік тому +3

    I lived in Northumberland 12 years of my life and I go to school in Northumberland but I have never heard this accent

    • @blooter6360
      @blooter6360 Рік тому +1

      It’s more upper valleys rothbury onwards
      Depends where in Northumberland you lived ?

    • @MofosOfMetal
      @MofosOfMetal Рік тому +6

      Yeah this accent is more like the area from Rothbury to Wooler, particularly the older generations. You won't hear it in Blyth and Cramlington.

    • @blooter6360
      @blooter6360 Рік тому +3

      @@MofosOfMetal correct it’s upper couqetdale crack that old hill valley speech

    • @dragoncaeli
      @dragoncaeli Рік тому

      As an upper coquetdale kid can confirm it's generally spoken around where I'm from but as soon as you get out of Rothbury it's just the Morpeth accent

    • @JohnHonda101
      @JohnHonda101 10 місяців тому

      @@MofosOfMetal and Ashington, did ya not hear the gadgie at the end? I think you need some new Geps.

  • @notmissingout9369
    @notmissingout9369 Рік тому +5

    I’m a Yorkshire lad and I go up to amble on holiday when I can I love the Northumberland delict and folk up there like my accent also you should head to upper swaledale if like accents

    • @AethelwulfOfNordHymbraLand2333
      @AethelwulfOfNordHymbraLand2333 5 місяців тому

      The Yorkshire accent, like all English accents subject to the Standard English received pronunciation(except Northumbrian), sounds awful.

  • @StillAliveAndKicking_
    @StillAliveAndKicking_ 6 місяців тому +1

    I didn’t understand much. They speak fast like the rural French. Quite pleasant to hear though. Not keen on Bragg’s accent though, he has the condescending tone that was so common among the elite of that era.

  • @JimJim-kh8rw
    @JimJim-kh8rw 2 роки тому +7

    This is how the police caught and located the Yorkshire ripper hoaxer by their accent.

    • @borderlands6606
      @borderlands6606 2 роки тому +2

      @@Tom-uv7ry The point is the police isolated his exact location on Wearside from his accent.

  • @paulgerhard5170
    @paulgerhard5170 Рік тому +1

    Went straight for the comments

  • @FrithonaHrududu02127
    @FrithonaHrududu02127 8 місяців тому +1

    To be honest i had an easier time understanding the sheep. Seriously though even though as an American I only understand one word of five I love how it sounds.

  • @andyszlamp2212
    @andyszlamp2212 Рік тому +1

    shepherd with mutton chops, ram horns, mutton fo' ya tae and mutton fo'' ya' supper or mutton in a battie wi' some chips.

  • @annetaylor9493
    @annetaylor9493 2 роки тому

    Just so beautiful...

  • @johnmc3862
    @johnmc3862 2 роки тому +2

    Melvyn Braggs voice would put me aslee

  • @jamalcayman589
    @jamalcayman589 8 місяців тому +1

    The last man sounded almost a bit New York.

  • @philipscott2025
    @philipscott2025 2 роки тому +5

    This is the accent of the border reviers both side of the borders.

  • @lewishealey713
    @lewishealey713 2 роки тому +4

    I understand the sheep more than them

  • @johng1216
    @johng1216 8 місяців тому +2

    It's half not known the language and half the speed that are talking at. Apart from that it's Geordie.

  • @swaneknoctic9555
    @swaneknoctic9555 2 роки тому +17

    The Northumberland accent is not to be confused with the Geordie accent.....Here man here man, ye ye, how man, how, howay then ye, ah nargh ah nargh - i'll batta ye ya little radgy.....

    • @darkwave9345
      @darkwave9345 2 роки тому +1

      and the point of you saything this what was exactly?

    • @swaneknoctic9555
      @swaneknoctic9555 2 роки тому +2

      @@darkwave9345 sorry, can you write this in English please?

    • @brettharter143
      @brettharter143 Рік тому +1

      Not really.
      Both use the word gan
      Both use the words oot
      There is alot of crossover, i guess your not a geordie lol

    • @swaneknoctic9555
      @swaneknoctic9555 Рік тому

      @@brettharter143 I was being sarcastic, more like the 90s in Newcastle and it’s you’re not your.

  • @72vince27
    @72vince27 Рік тому

    Very interesting

  • @deanstanley5799
    @deanstanley5799 2 роки тому +3

    Bet the lads are long gone !

    • @coltonconner782
      @coltonconner782 2 роки тому +1

      Long gone! it was only a week ago it was filmed lol

    • @chrisstucker1813
      @chrisstucker1813 Рік тому

      How? Few young lads in that video. If this was in 1976 some of those lads could still be in their 60s.

  • @anthonyleighton4754
    @anthonyleighton4754 2 роки тому +2

    Any of the shearer s called Alan?

  • @xxjoeyladxx
    @xxjoeyladxx 8 місяців тому +1

    Definitely where a lot of American accents came from

  • @roy_for_real2674
    @roy_for_real2674 Рік тому +3

    Sounds very Dutch and French.

  • @guywilliamallison688
    @guywilliamallison688 Рік тому +1

    I am from there in Berwick and i can't understand them!

  • @patrickr6505
    @patrickr6505 Рік тому

    Im Irish and could understand almost everything..To my ears it sounds like a milder form Geordie accent...

    • @johnkelly3549
      @johnkelly3549 Рік тому

      Same. The older lads had a lilt that sounded a bit Irish.

  • @douglasboylan3477
    @douglasboylan3477 Рік тому +1

    I got about 7% of that

  • @Jay_Pegg
    @Jay_Pegg 2 роки тому +2

    A divvn't naa aboot that like.

  • @chrisnewman7281
    @chrisnewman7281 3 місяці тому +1

    The accents too thick for me to follow I pick up about half of it.

  • @BCH-hy4gp
    @BCH-hy4gp 11 місяців тому +1

    I feel like this is what English sounds like to non-English speakers

  • @NightimeInDeepSpace
    @NightimeInDeepSpace Рік тому

    I turned on the subtitles... I have to assume they're accurate somewhat but who really knows lol