The place where everyone hangs out, chats, gossips, and argues
User avatar
By Boboff
#444672
Sally A wrote:
boboff wrote:And Scone Ryhmes with Gnome, and home if you ask me. If you say scone rymes with gone, you probably say Bath not Baff, and get out of the Baff to have a piss, just saying.


I'm Bath (Baaatthh) born and bred, and am a scone to rhyme with gnome, cone, stone type of person.



How do you do.

I like Bath, it's nice.

I have a house in Chilcompton you know. It's up for sale if you know anyone?
User avatar
By MK Chris
#444674
Bath clearly has an extended A. It's pronounced bahth.
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By Boboff
#444679
Well given it's in Somerset, you say that with a Worzel accent and you know how wrong you are.

Baff, I can live with, BAHHTH is really what the people from London who live there call it.
User avatar
By Munki Bhoy
#444689
Shower > Bath.

Even when talking about pronouncing things. Get someone with an Ulster access to say "Power Shower", it's class.
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By Boboff
#444727
Well I had a mate from Arbroath, and he said Worrum, and it was really funny trying to get him to say worm, it came out as kind of woooomb, which was obviously * hilarious!
User avatar
By Yudster
#444729
I liked it on Top Gear when Clarkson got the Glaswegian to say "burglar alarm".
User avatar
By foot-loose
#444736
Bonanzoid wrote:I think you're thinking of Glaswegian 'worm', they say it like "wurum". Cos they're fools. Ask Foots.

Munki Bhoy wrote:Yeah, we do. It's more or less a two syllable word here.

I've just said "wurm" about ten times to check. As far as I can tell, it's only got one syllable.
User avatar
By a-moron
#444745
That must've got you some odd looks. Got to agree with you though, my wurm is only one syllable long. A girl in the office does, however, pronounce warm with 2 syllables. Never tried her worm but I assume it would produce the same outcome.
User avatar
By Yudster
#444835
boboff wrote:Try getting a Yorkshire man to say "Please"


Or anything that might be construed as manners.

Won't * happen![/quote]

Too right. Whoever started this myth that people in the north are friendly is a bloody liar. Either that or he had conveniently missed Sheffield from his travels.
User avatar
By Yudster
#444968
Ha - no its not, I always wind up my Sheffield relatives by referring to it as Midlands - you have NO idea how much they hate that! But it is in Yorkshire, which is what Boboff was actually talking about. It was me that wrongly introduced the Northern element.
User avatar
By Munki Bhoy
#444982
Actually, I genuinely don't know how you judge "up north" and "down south" in England. It probably is because you're all down south to me, but I've never been able to figure out where the line is.
User avatar
By foot-loose
#445011
Bonanzoid wrote:Isn't anywhere north of London more or less North? I feel proud to possibly be the only member further north than yourself Munki!

Pfft. I run the Caithness franchise.
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