The Black Country dialect

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  • Опубліковано 9 лют 2025

КОМЕНТАРІ • 60

  • @nickgrazier3373
    @nickgrazier3373 Рік тому +4

    Worro Aah Kid! “Arm gooin up the bonk”. Arm catchin the Buz to Swinvert (Kingswinford) or Swin (Swindon). Brumidgam (Birmingham).
    As for flurters I used to make my own because you could buy square section 1/4 in elastic. We used the wheels and axles off silver cross prams to make trollies NOT go carts and we used to lie on our bellies to make them go faster and using your trailing feet at the back to steer better. Marbles were popular or maybe botlies. In the winter using the old babies powdered milk tins and wire we used to make fire cans with wood and coke, kept them going until we were called in at about 7:30, started them off with paper and bits of stick stuck some coke in and then because we’d put holes around the sides and bottom we’d swing them around our heads to generate the heat. The games we used to play were kick the can and variations of it. Nesting for egg collection was Ok in them days because there was no scarcity of wild life then. We’d play in the sand quarry behind Wall Heath at the back of Blaze hill Rd. Where we used to live.
    Bloody hell yo’ve bought up memries !! Thanks for that I enjoyed it.
    Cheers Aah Kid!

  • @chrisjonesacoustic
    @chrisjonesacoustic 2 роки тому +8

    My mom used to buy the black country bugle every week. She still talks about Aynuk and Ayli now!

  • @tyneoharrow
    @tyneoharrow Рік тому +3

    You know, having been born and raised in the Black Country for many years and now living in Wales I understood everything you said. On one of my visits to Black Country museum I overheard a couple having a bit of a tiff . The chap said, if yow doe shur up I’ll bost yow faece and she retorted, ar’m more than a match fer yow ar’ll gi yow a good Thrairpin’ any day. She was,to all in tense and purposes a small and attractive woman, very pretty-with probably a useful right hook. Luv Black Country folk!

  • @keithbagshaw3146
    @keithbagshaw3146 2 роки тому +4

    cheers from a wednesbury boy now in Australia!

  • @ZachariahJ
    @ZachariahJ Рік тому +3

    I was born in Stourbridge maternity hospital 68 years ago, and was raised in Lye, by parents who both came from Lye families.
    But... I've been living down south in Brighton for about 45 years. I still sound Black Country to people down here, but when I go home for a visit, friends complain that I sound like a southerner. You can't win!
    TBF, I do have a glottal stop now, so I say 'waw'er' instead of 'water'. I have picked up a lot of southern speech along the way.

    • @gospelman7222
      @gospelman7222 11 місяців тому +1

      Same here! Born & bred in Smethwick (Smerrick), but have lived in the Portsmouth area for 54 years. Still have the accent, but have also picked up parts of the local accent. Curiously, speech in Portsmouth is different to the rest of Hampshire county - it's more akin to the London accent. Any road up, it's good to hear the Black Country accent again.

    • @ZachariahJ
      @ZachariahJ 11 місяців тому

      @@gospelman7222
      Yes, it's the same here in Brighton,
      Heading south from London, you get a soft London/estuary accent down past Croydon, but once you have reached Crawley, you are into a Sussex rural accent.
      But then you reach Brighton, and you are back to a London accent!
      (Sort of, anyway).

  • @dixieboy5689
    @dixieboy5689 Рік тому +1

    I love languages and dialects. Especially ones that are particular to an area or people.
    This was a great video. Id love to head over that way ... if for no other reason than to give the locals
    a few chuckles when I talk. Im an American ,from New England, through and through. And I sound like it. Thx.

    • @albiondp4488
      @albiondp4488 Рік тому +1

      It certainly turns heads. I know because I’ve been in a few local pubs to me in the Black Country with a female American friend lol

    • @Wherespaulbearer
      @Wherespaulbearer Рік тому

      black country born n bred me, gimme a message if ya fancy a lessn.

  • @MaddiSlater-xs1bo
    @MaddiSlater-xs1bo 22 дні тому

    amazing video. learnt so much from this video x

  • @jemetoumi7304
    @jemetoumi7304 2 роки тому +6

    Im from libya . I hv freinds from dudley ... i hv learned some of black country accent

    • @colinafobe2152
      @colinafobe2152 2 роки тому +2

      I am from Serbia and have friends from Wolverhampton. Love accent

  • @louiselester5754
    @louiselester5754 5 місяців тому

    Love this, my dad was from Tipton and supported West Brom!

  • @tvilkov
    @tvilkov 2 роки тому +3

    How are you - how bin yer? That's what i've heard of in my 2 years in Dudley

    • @angw77
      @angw77 2 роки тому +1

      And ‘awroit mate’

  • @TheEyez187
    @TheEyez187 2 місяці тому

    Born in Wordsley Hospital, a minute from the Wordlsey cone. Brierley Hill, Stourbridge, K'ford (Crestwood school) and Dudley; Black Country B & B, born and bred! >XD when I went to Oldswinford boys school sounded like, as a local, my accent was always well understood by a number of other students, not only from other places of the UK but as a boarding school the rest of the world.!. That was 80's/9o's though. 20-odd years out of the BC my accent is far less broad; will admit, even I struggled with the pre 1960's accent; a step closer to olde English Anglo-Saxon that I understand!

  • @alangriffiths2100
    @alangriffiths2100 Рік тому +1

    I am a Brummie and the two glossaries do coincide sometimes( much to the disgust of some yam-yams) but one comment still makes me smile today. I had, together with my Black Country partner, a small joinery company. We bought an Italian machine that proved to be useless so the suppliers swapped it for a new one. That machine burned out in a week and that too was swapped together with an apology from the manufacturers and a promise that an Italian rep from the company. I explained this to a Black Country chap who was a sometimes customer.
    This is what he said,’ well Al if he cossant understond ya, yow send for we’. You had to be there to here the accent.

    • @macjam9090
      @macjam9090 Рік тому

      Don't forget that you would get different words and phrases common to a particular town or area. Also what you call Brum now was not over 150 years ago. Places like Handsworth, Perry Barr, Great Barr, Quinton were not part of Brum and would have been considered Black Country so that's probably were you get that convergence. It was never properly defined but the four Boroughs are where you would call it. Back in the 19th century Southerners even included places like Cannock(and why not) and as far as Stoke as the Black Country because of the industries. They always used to say when I was a kid that the Brummies knew where the Black Country was because they did not want to be associated with it.

  • @monteceitomoocher
    @monteceitomoocher 2 роки тому +1

    Just for a few minutes I was home at 232 Birmingham road, it's now in the black country museum, a cast iron house that would freeze the nuts off a brass monkey in winter, my accent has softened a bit since i last walked them streets up until 1970 and the dudley i knew is long gone, must get back for a look round, bit of a trip up from the cotswolds.

  • @paulbates8817
    @paulbates8817 Рік тому +1

    Well if them bay winders. Wot bin um. Black country mon born and bred. Live in Scotland now. But i always miss the place i couldn't get away from fast enough. Never thought i would long for the smell of foundries long gone. DARTMOUTH AUTO CAST. THOMAS DUDLEY.AND A THOUSAND MORE. 😢

  • @Ben-fg2hu
    @Ben-fg2hu Рік тому

    haha bostin video mate, from greets green me and my family. However grew up in Australia important for me to keep my dialect

  • @karlkuttup
    @karlkuttup Рік тому +1

    the old uns would say the blackcountry was 30 min walk from the bottom of dudley castle hill ,in each direction that was it ,alot say the boarder of smethwick up to sedgley across to stourbridge n bridgenorth ,across to nearthrton and boader to wolverhampton, not walsall,i was born n beed in tipton aka the lost city,the dialect is held from old small villages at the time no need to change from old middle english folks didnt travel very far so it held the dialect, and when heavy industry came in was a way to spake without outsiders uderstanding it combined with hand signs because of loud factories allso lip movement without spaken er al git muo sense ot er wammel

  • @angw77
    @angw77 2 роки тому +2

    Wednesbury wench now living in Wiltshire, I’m still Black Country ay I.
    Can you do a slot on the I am, you am, we am, they am 😀 when I first left Wednesbury to go abroad a southerner said what the hell is that language 😂

  • @benitagannuccifeil7042
    @benitagannuccifeil7042 Місяць тому

    Thank you for that. I would need an interpreter I'm afraid. 😅😅

  • @roztaylor927
    @roztaylor927 2 роки тому +3

    My favourite sayings-
    There's a jed oss in the cut!
    I woz wellie clommed ter jeth!
    Can you translate please grandad?
    Also, if you took sandwiches to work for lunch you took your "snap"

    • @Wherespaulbearer
      @Wherespaulbearer Рік тому

      'There is a dead horse by the pond/lake/river.'
      'I was full to death' eg im full.

  • @SystemOfStrings
    @SystemOfStrings 9 місяців тому

    Why do they need a slang term for a catapult? This place must be awesome

  • @offal
    @offal 2 роки тому +3

    you need to explain YamYam is it because you say howam ya?

    • @atik-rgt-uk
      @atik-rgt-uk 3 місяці тому

      It's from ' yam mad yoe am' means you're mad you are,or yam doing it wrong,we say yam meaning 'you am' instead of ' you are' a lot or 'yome' meaning same thing lol so 'yam welcome' to me wednesbury explanertion x

  • @nicholasgargano7396
    @nicholasgargano7396 Рік тому

    Ow bin ya, bin ya know

  • @billybooger1
    @billybooger1 Рік тому

    Parts of Halesowen???

  • @geoffadams5537
    @geoffadams5537 2 роки тому +2

    My moms aunties would say ooh yow Cor do that ar kid, this came about when we as a family decided to up sticks and move to new Zealand. I sometimes use black country lingo when I talk to my kiwi mates. I would use the black country lingo when I would get a bit kalied, my missus and her mom would start laughing. One day I told one of my gaffers at the fish factory he was "cowin yampy and I was going to lump him one in the fizhog he looked at me as if I was dead yampy

  • @atik-rgt-uk
    @atik-rgt-uk 3 місяці тому

    Me jor it the flewer ter hear a proper axunt x might be me but if i dont cut a samwich i call it a piece lol

  • @KevinYeomans
    @KevinYeomans 8 днів тому

    Gorra goo shappin

  • @vtbn53
    @vtbn53 Рік тому

    Where yo bin? I bin cooming

  • @Andrew-ce3xc
    @Andrew-ce3xc Рік тому

    You slipped up there ,,,heavy hammers is evy ommers

  • @TheJimGrist
    @TheJimGrist 2 роки тому +4

    It's not wash! It's swill! I'm gewin for a swill

  • @albiondp4488
    @albiondp4488 2 роки тому +3

    wammell

  • @grahamhall8249
    @grahamhall8249 Рік тому

    Yo forgot YOOM and WEEM

  • @victoralexander123ordonez8
    @victoralexander123ordonez8 2 роки тому +1

    Metropolita est dialectus, quae Italica est

  • @СергейСемёнов-м2г
    @СергейСемёнов-м2г 2 роки тому +2

    How about words fayture and nayd for feature and need? Still in use in spaych?

  • @OldWolflad
    @OldWolflad 4 місяці тому

    The Wolves av scooed fower

  • @robbo1258
    @robbo1258 3 місяці тому

    To be fair, this is DIALECT not accent. Good stuff though.🙂

  • @Andrew-ce3xc
    @Andrew-ce3xc Рік тому +1

    Git som ommer

  • @daveEmartin
    @daveEmartin 7 місяців тому

    Yow spake loik me mom n dad.

  • @nicholasgargano7396
    @nicholasgargano7396 Рік тому

    I've fun a fiver on the floher

  • @petesmoth6320
    @petesmoth6320 Рік тому

    Who da fuck am yo ?

  • @mikeford5106
    @mikeford5106 Рік тому

    must be the worst accent in the known universe !