East Notts gets its own dictionary
IF someone invited you for a fuddle with the promise of some suckers, you may be a bit smockravelled unless you come from the east of Notts.
To help people understand what is being said, and to preserve the local dialect, libraries in that part of the county are putting together an East Notts dictionary.
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Celia Kinsella at Newark library
They have folders in which people can note down words from their area, or learn some of the more obscure words which have already been added.
Claire Brown, from Ollerton library, helped initiate the scheme.
She said: "Many of our local words originate from the Saxon and French languages but over the centuries have become uniquely Nottinghamshire – in pronunciation and meaning."
Whilst many people may agree on how to pronounce a word, agreement on the spelling has caused a few arguments.
Mrs Brown said: "There are words such as causey (or corsey), which mean pavement, where people can't agree on the spelling. It hasn't reached the stage of people hitting each other with newspapers just yet but people are certainly interested!"
Louise Mullany, lecturer in Socio-Linguistics at the University of Nottingham, said people often retain certain words and phrases to maintain an affinity with the community in which they live.
But regional dialects are not as pronounced as they once were. "What we are seeing is the prominence of 'Estuary English', that is, language from the Thames, having a greater influence on the way people speak.
"As people are working less in the areas they live in, and commuting more, they are being exposed to other dialects."
People from Newark, Ollerton, Southwell, Lowdham, Balderton, Edwinstowe, Dukeries and Sutton-on-Trent are asked to contribute at 11 libraries.
Let us know about your favourite Notts sayings at www.thisisnottingham.co.uk
In case you are smockravelled (confused), a fuddle is an indoor picnic and suckers are lollipops.







8 Comments
by michael, torrevieja
Friday, October 03 2008, 7:07PM
“Jiggy change. (You say this to a bus driver). I know this is only dialect, not a word, but it all stems from the same.”
by Albert, Bestwood Vilage
Friday, October 03 2008, 4:04PM
“ger up ger out and ger over. yu daft.”
by Bob, Nottingham
Friday, October 03 2008, 3:07PM
“This is funny.”
by S, Notts
Friday, October 03 2008, 2:59PM
“Great idea!”
by Tawkin Proper, Dahn Tahn
Friday, October 03 2008, 1:27PM
“If you should disagree with someones comments, then they would be "tapped in the ead". If you wanted someone to vacate your property, then your Dad would shout for them to "Bogger Off".”
by Frus Strated, Notts
Friday, October 03 2008, 1:00PM
“You must be a wassack to call a sucker a lolly pop”
by Tawkin proper, Dahn tahn
Friday, October 03 2008, 12:49PM
“Course a sucker is a iced lolly. We have cobs, a fuddle was a night in with your Mum and Dad with sweets and a bottle of Shipo's for me Dad, not an indoor picnic. Playing footie on the Rec.”
by inoff the red, peoples republic of sneinton
Friday, October 03 2008, 12:02PM
“Awwwerrr, Don't be a pie can, everyone knows a sucker is an ice lolly, not a lolly pop”