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Brummie



 
 
Brummie (sometimes Brummy) is a colloquial term for the inhabitants, accent
Accent (linguistics)

In linguistics, an accent is a manner of pronunciation of a language. Accents can be confused with dialects which are varieties of language differing in vocabulary, syntax, and morphology , as well as pronunciation....
 and dialect
Dialect

A dialect is a variety of a language that is characteristic of a particular group of the language's speakers. The term is applied most often to regional speech patterns, but a dialect may also be defined by other factors, such as social class....
 of Birmingham
Birmingham

Birmingham is a city status in the United Kingdom and metropolitan borough in the West Midlands of England. Birmingham is the most populous of England's English Core Cities Group, and is the List of United Kingdom cities by population British city after London, with a population of 1,010,200 ....
, England
England

native_name =|conventional_long_name = England|common_name = England|image_flag = Flag of England.svg|image_coat = England COA.svg|symbol_type = Royal Coat of Arms...
, as well as being a general adjective used to denote a connection with the city, locally called Brum. The terms are all derived from Brummagem
Brummagem

Brummagem is the local name for the city of Birmingham, England, and the dialect associated with it . It gave rise to the terms Brum and Brummie ....
 or Bromwichham, historical variants or alternatives to 'Birmingham
Birmingham

Birmingham is a city status in the United Kingdom and metropolitan borough in the West Midlands of England. Birmingham is the most populous of England's English Core Cities Group, and is the List of United Kingdom cities by population British city after London, with a population of 1,010,200 ....
'.

Brummie accent is an example of a regional accent of English
English language

English is a West Germanic language that originated in Anglo-Saxon England and has lingua franca status in many parts of the world as a result of the military, economic, scientific, political and cultural influence of the British Empire in the 18th, 19th and early 20th centuries and that of the United States from the mid 20th century onwa...
.

Examples of celebrity speakers include comedian Jasper Carrott
Jasper Carrott

Jasper Carrott Order of the British Empire is a United Kingdom comedian , actor and TV presenter....
, historian and broadcaster Carl Chinn
Carl Chinn

Professor Carl Stephen Alfred Chinn Order of the British Empire is an English historian, writer, radio presenter, magazine editor, newspaper columnist, media personality, local celebrity, and famous Brummie, whose working life has been devoted to the study and popularisation of the city of Birmingham in England....
, the Goodies
The Goodies

:For information about the television series, see The Goodies The Goodies are a trio of United Kingdom comedians , who created, wrote, and starred in a surrealism British television comedy series called The Goodies during the 1970s and early 1980s combining sketch comedy and situation comedy....
 actor and TV presenter Bill Oddie
Bill Oddie

William Edgar Oddie, Order of the British Empire is an England author, actor, comedian, artist, naturalist and musician, who first became famous as one of The Goodies....
, rock musician Ozzy Osbourne
Ozzy Osbourne

John Michael "Ozzy" Osbourne is a Grammy Award winning England singer-songwriter, whose career has now spanned four decades. Osbourne rose to prominence as lead vocalist of pioneering English heavy metal music band Black Sabbath, and eventually achieved a multi-RIAA certification solo career which revolutionized the heavy metal genre....
 (and all other members of the original Black Sabbath
Black Sabbath

Black Sabbath are an English Rock music band. Formed in Birmingham in 1968 by Ozzy Osbourne , Tony Iommi , Geezer Butler , and Bill Ward , the band has since experienced multiple lineup changes, with a total of twenty-two former members....
), broadcaster Les Ross
Les Ross

Les Ross is a British disc jockey and long established personality in the West Midlands region.Ross always wanted to become a Disc jockey so at the age of 11, he wrote to the general manager of Radio Luxembourg ....
, politician Clare Short
Clare Short

Clare Short is a United Kingdom politician and a member of the British Labour Party . She is currently the Independent Member of Parliament for Birmingham Ladywood , having been elected as a Labour Party MP in 1983, and was Secretary of State for International Development in the UK Labour government from 3 May 1997 until her resignation o...
, SAS
Special Air Service

The Special Air Service is a special forces regiment within the British Army which has served as a model for the special forces of other countries....
 soldier and author John "Brummie" Stokes and rock musician Robert Plant
Robert Plant

Robert Anthony Plant Order of the British Empire , is an England Rock and Roll singer and songwriter, famous for his membership in the former rock band Led Zeppelin as the lead vocalist, as well as for his successful solo career....
.

It is not the only accent of the West Midlands
West Midlands (county)

The West Midlands is a metropolitan county in West Midlands England with a population of 2,591,300. It came into existence as a metropolitan county in 1974 after the passage of the Local Government Act 1972....
, although the term, Brummie, is often, erroneously, used in referring to all accents of the region.






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Encyclopedia


Brummie (sometimes Brummy) is a colloquial term for the inhabitants, accent
Accent (linguistics)

In linguistics, an accent is a manner of pronunciation of a language. Accents can be confused with dialects which are varieties of language differing in vocabulary, syntax, and morphology , as well as pronunciation....
 and dialect
Dialect

A dialect is a variety of a language that is characteristic of a particular group of the language's speakers. The term is applied most often to regional speech patterns, but a dialect may also be defined by other factors, such as social class....
 of Birmingham
Birmingham

Birmingham is a city status in the United Kingdom and metropolitan borough in the West Midlands of England. Birmingham is the most populous of England's English Core Cities Group, and is the List of United Kingdom cities by population British city after London, with a population of 1,010,200 ....
, England
England

native_name =|conventional_long_name = England|common_name = England|image_flag = Flag of England.svg|image_coat = England COA.svg|symbol_type = Royal Coat of Arms...
, as well as being a general adjective used to denote a connection with the city, locally called Brum. The terms are all derived from Brummagem
Brummagem

Brummagem is the local name for the city of Birmingham, England, and the dialect associated with it . It gave rise to the terms Brum and Brummie ....
 or Bromwichham, historical variants or alternatives to 'Birmingham
Birmingham

Birmingham is a city status in the United Kingdom and metropolitan borough in the West Midlands of England. Birmingham is the most populous of England's English Core Cities Group, and is the List of United Kingdom cities by population British city after London, with a population of 1,010,200 ....
'.

Accent

The Brummie accent is an example of a regional accent of English
English language

English is a West Germanic language that originated in Anglo-Saxon England and has lingua franca status in many parts of the world as a result of the military, economic, scientific, political and cultural influence of the British Empire in the 18th, 19th and early 20th centuries and that of the United States from the mid 20th century onwa...
.

Examples of celebrity speakers include comedian Jasper Carrott
Jasper Carrott

Jasper Carrott Order of the British Empire is a United Kingdom comedian , actor and TV presenter....
, historian and broadcaster Carl Chinn
Carl Chinn

Professor Carl Stephen Alfred Chinn Order of the British Empire is an English historian, writer, radio presenter, magazine editor, newspaper columnist, media personality, local celebrity, and famous Brummie, whose working life has been devoted to the study and popularisation of the city of Birmingham in England....
, the Goodies
The Goodies

:For information about the television series, see The Goodies The Goodies are a trio of United Kingdom comedians , who created, wrote, and starred in a surrealism British television comedy series called The Goodies during the 1970s and early 1980s combining sketch comedy and situation comedy....
 actor and TV presenter Bill Oddie
Bill Oddie

William Edgar Oddie, Order of the British Empire is an England author, actor, comedian, artist, naturalist and musician, who first became famous as one of The Goodies....
, rock musician Ozzy Osbourne
Ozzy Osbourne

John Michael "Ozzy" Osbourne is a Grammy Award winning England singer-songwriter, whose career has now spanned four decades. Osbourne rose to prominence as lead vocalist of pioneering English heavy metal music band Black Sabbath, and eventually achieved a multi-RIAA certification solo career which revolutionized the heavy metal genre....
 (and all other members of the original Black Sabbath
Black Sabbath

Black Sabbath are an English Rock music band. Formed in Birmingham in 1968 by Ozzy Osbourne , Tony Iommi , Geezer Butler , and Bill Ward , the band has since experienced multiple lineup changes, with a total of twenty-two former members....
), broadcaster Les Ross
Les Ross

Les Ross is a British disc jockey and long established personality in the West Midlands region.Ross always wanted to become a Disc jockey so at the age of 11, he wrote to the general manager of Radio Luxembourg ....
, politician Clare Short
Clare Short

Clare Short is a United Kingdom politician and a member of the British Labour Party . She is currently the Independent Member of Parliament for Birmingham Ladywood , having been elected as a Labour Party MP in 1983, and was Secretary of State for International Development in the UK Labour government from 3 May 1997 until her resignation o...
, SAS
Special Air Service

The Special Air Service is a special forces regiment within the British Army which has served as a model for the special forces of other countries....
 soldier and author John "Brummie" Stokes and rock musician Robert Plant
Robert Plant

Robert Anthony Plant Order of the British Empire , is an England Rock and Roll singer and songwriter, famous for his membership in the former rock band Led Zeppelin as the lead vocalist, as well as for his successful solo career....
.

It is not the only accent of the West Midlands
West Midlands (county)

The West Midlands is a metropolitan county in West Midlands England with a population of 2,591,300. It came into existence as a metropolitan county in 1974 after the passage of the Local Government Act 1972....
, although the term, Brummie, is often, erroneously, used in referring to all accents of the region. It is markedly distinct from the traditional accent of the adjacent Black Country
Black Country

The Black Country is a loosely defined area of the English West Midlands conurbation, to the north and west of Birmingham, and to the south and east of Wolverhampton, around the South Staffordshire coalfield....
, although modern-day population mobility has tended to blur the distinction. For instance, Dudley
Dudley

Dudley is a large town in the West Midlands , England, with a population of List of English cities by population. Since 1974 it has been the administrative centre of the wider Metropolitan Borough of Dudley; the original County Borough had undergone a lesser expansion in 1966....
-born comedian Lenny Henry
Lenny Henry

Lenworth George Henry Order of the British Empire is an England actor, writer and comedian....
, Daniel Taylor, and Smethwick
Smethwick

Smethwick is a town in the Birmingham, in the West Midlands of England. It is situated on the edge of the city of Birmingham, within the Historic counties of England of Staffordshire....
-born actress Julie Walters
Julie Walters

Julie Walters, Order of the British Empire is an Academy Award-nominated, Golden Globe Award- and British Academy of Film and Television Arts-award winning England actor and novelist....
 are sometimes mistaken for Brummie-speakers by people outside the West Midlands county.

Birmingham
Birmingham

Birmingham is a city status in the United Kingdom and metropolitan borough in the West Midlands of England. Birmingham is the most populous of England's English Core Cities Group, and is the List of United Kingdom cities by population British city after London, with a population of 1,010,200 ....
 and Coventry
Coventry

Coventry is a City status in the United Kingdom and metropolitan borough in the county of West Midlands in England. With a population of 303,475 at the United Kingdom Census 2001 , Coventry is the 9th largest city in England and the 11th largest in the United Kingdom....
 accents are also quite distinct in their differences, despite the close proximity of the cities. To the untrained ear, however, all of these accents may sound very similar, just as British English speakers can find it hard to distinguish between Canadian
Canada

Canada is a country occupying most of northern North America, extending from the Atlantic Ocean in the east to the Pacific Ocean in the west and northward into the Arctic Ocean....
 and American
United States

The United States of America is a Federal government constitutional republic comprising U.S. state and a federal district. The country is situated mostly in central North America, where its Contiguous United States and Washington, D.C., the Capital districts and territories, lie between the Pacific Ocean and Atlantic Oceans, Borders of the U...
 accents, or Australian and New Zealand accents.

As with all English regional accents, the Brummie accent also grades into RP English
Received Pronunciation

Received Pronunciation is a form of pronunciation of the English language which has long been perceived as uniquely prestigious amongst British Accent ....
. The accent of presenter Cat Deeley
Cat Deeley

Catherine Elizabeth "Cat" Deeley is an English disc jockey, television presenter and former fashion model, who at 21 co-hosted the children's series SMTV Live, alongside Anthony McPartlin and Declan Donnelly....
 is listed by her voiceover agency, Curtis Brown, as "RP/Birmingham".

Pronunciation


Despite there being marked differences between Brummie and Black Country dialects, there appears to be confusion by people outside the West Midlands county when it comes to distinguishing between the two. Impressions of a Brummie will often contain vowel pronunciations that belong to the Black Country
Black Country

The Black Country is a loosely defined area of the English West Midlands conurbation, to the north and west of Birmingham, and to the south and east of Wolverhampton, around the South Staffordshire coalfield....
. A common example is when a Brummie impersonator will pronounce 'money' as 'mun-ay',which is a Black Country
Black Country

The Black Country is a loosely defined area of the English West Midlands conurbation, to the north and west of Birmingham, and to the south and east of Wolverhampton, around the South Staffordshire coalfield....
 pronunciation; Brummies actually pronounce 'money' in the same way conventional English speakers do. This is not to say that the impersonator is doing a Black Country
Black Country

The Black Country is a loosely defined area of the English West Midlands conurbation, to the north and west of Birmingham, and to the south and east of Wolverhampton, around the South Staffordshire coalfield....
 accent instead of a Brummie one when this occurs; it is entirely possible that they are just doing an inaccurate Brummie stereotype which makes the mistake of adding Black Country dialect.

Below are some common features of the Brummie accent (a given speaker may not necessarily use all, or use a feature consistently). The letters enclosed in square brackets use the International Phonetic Alphabet. The corresponding example texts enclosed in double quotes (") are spelt so that a reader using Received Pronunciation
Received Pronunciation

Received Pronunciation is a form of pronunciation of the English language which has long been perceived as uniquely prestigious amongst British Accent ....
 (RP) can approximate the sounds.

  • The vowel of mouth (RP ) can be .
  • The vowel of goat (RP ) can be close to (so to an RP speaker, goat may sound like "go-t").
  • Final unstressed , as in happy, may be realised as , though this varies considerably between speakers.
  • The letters ng often represent where RP has just (e.g. singer as ). See Ng coalescence
    Phonological history of English consonants

    The phonological history of English consonants is part of the phonological history of the English language in terms of changes in the phonology of consonants....
    .
  • Both the vowels of strut and foot as , as in northern England. See foot-strut split.
  • Short 'a', as opposed to in RP, in words like bath, cast and chance (but aunt and laugh both have ). See trap-bath split
    Phonological history of English short A

    The pronunciation of "short A" varies in English language....
    .
  • Final unstressed may be realised as .
  • In a few cases, voicing of final (e.g. bus as ).
  • Some rolling of prevocalic (some speakers; e.g. in "crime").


Recordings of Brummie speakers with phonetic features described in SAMPA
SAMPA

The Speech Assessment Methods Phonetic Alphabet is a computer-readable phonetic script using 7-bit printable American Standard Code for Information Interchange characters, based on the International Phonetic Alphabet ....
 format can be found at the Collect Britain dialects site referenced below.

Rhymes and vocabulary in the works of William Shakespeare
William Shakespeare

William Shakespeare was an English people poet and playwright, widely regarded as the greatest writer in the English language and the world's preeminent dramatist....
 suggest that he used a local dialect (Birmingham and his birthplace, Stratford-upon-Avon
Stratford-upon-Avon

Stratford-upon-Avon is a market town and civil parish in south Warwickshire, England. It lies on the River Avon, Warwickshire, south east of Birmingham and south west of the county town, Warwick....
, are both in the English West Midland dialect area.)

Stereotypes

A study was conducted in 2008 where people were asked to grade the intelligence
Intelligence

Intelligence is an umbrella term used to describe a property of the mind that encompasses many related abilities, such as the capacities to reason, to plan, to problem solving, to think abstraction, to comprehend ideas, to use language, and to Learning....
 of a person based on their accent and the Brummie accent was ranked as the least intelligent accent. It even scored lower than being silent, an example of the stereotype
Stereotype

A stereotype is a preconceived idea that attributes certain characteristics to all the members of class or set. The term is often used with a negative connotation when referring to an oversimplified, exaggerated, or demeaning assumption that a particular individual possesses the characteristics associated with the class due to his or her me...
 attached to the Brummie accent.

According to Birmingham English: A Sociolinguistic Study (Steve Thorne
Steve Thorne

Steve Thorne is a United Kingdom linguist and writer.Born in Birmingham, England, Thorne graduated from the University of Birmingham with a First Class Honours degree in English studies in 2000 and a PhD in Linguistics in 2003....
, 2003), among UK listeners "Birmingham English in previous academic studies and opinion polls consistently fares as the most disfavoured variety of British English, yet with no satisfying account of the dislike".

Since, as he shows, overseas visitors in contrast find it "lilting and melodious", he argues that such dislike is driven by various linguistic myths and social factors peculiar to the UK ("social snobbery, negative media stereotyping, the poor public image of the City of Birmingham, and the north/south geographical and linguistic divide").

For instance, despite the city's cultural and innovative history, its industrial background (as depicted by the arm-and-hammer in Birmingham's coat of arms
Coat of arms of Birmingham

Birmingham's Coat of Arms is a Coat of arms for Birmingham, England. It changed as the former town grew and developed into a city....
) has led to a muscular and unintelligent stereotype: a "Brummagem screwdriver" or "Brummie screwdriver" is UK slang for a hammer.

Steve Thorne
Steve Thorne

Steve Thorne is a United Kingdom linguist and writer.Born in Birmingham, England, Thorne graduated from the University of Birmingham with a First Class Honours degree in English studies in 2000 and a PhD in Linguistics in 2003....
 also cites the mass media and entertainment industry where actors, usually non-Birmingham, have used inaccurate accents and/or portrayed negative roles. Examples include Benny from the soap Crossroads
Crossroads (TV series)

Crossroads was a United Kingdom television soap opera set in a fictional motel near Birmingham, England. Originally broadcast on the commercial television ITV television network between 1964 and 1988, it was produced by Associated TeleVision until the end of 1981 and then by Central Independent Television....
, a feckless character played by Paul Henry
Paul Henry (actor)

Paul Henry, , is a United Kingdom actor. Henry trained at the Birmingham School of Speech and Drama. After eight years at the Birmingham Rep, he started his best-known role, Benny Hawkins, a bumbling semi-rustic handyman he played from 1975 to 1988 in the soap opera Crossroads ....
 with a hybrid Birmingham-Worcester
Worcester

Worcester is a City status in the United Kingdom and county town of Worcestershire, in the West Midlands of England. Worcester is situated some 30 miles southwest of Birmingham, 29 miles north of Gloucester, and has an estimated population of 94,300 people....
 accent many viewers assumed to be Birmingham because of the setting, and characters played by Battersea
Battersea

Battersea is a place in the London Borough of Wandsworth. It is an inner-city district located 2.9 miles south west of Charing Cross. It has a population of 75,651 people ....
-born actor Timothy Spall
Timothy Spall

Timothy Leonard Spall Order of the British Empire is a BAFTA award-nominated English people actor....
: for instance,Barry Taylor in Auf Wiedersehen Pet (The character Taylor was actually supposed to be from Tipton
Tipton

Tipton is a town in the Sandwell borough of the West Midlands , England, with a population of around 47,000.Tipton is located about halfway between Birmingham and Wolverhampton....
) and Andy, the sarcastic virtual reality
Virtual reality

Virtual reality is a technology which allows a user to interact with a computer-simulated environment, whether that environment is a simulation of the real world or an imaginary world....
 attendant in the Red Dwarf
Red Dwarf

Red Dwarf is a United Kingdom science fiction television situation comedy Media franchise, primarily comprising eight series of a television sitcom that ran on BBC Two between 1988 and 1999 and gained a cult following....
 episode "Back to Reality
Back to Reality (Red Dwarf episode)

"Back to Reality" is the sixth, and final, episode of science fiction sitcom Red Dwarf Series V and the 30th in the series run. It was first broadcast on the United Kingdom television channel BBC2 on 26 March 1992....
". The actor Mark Williams
Mark Williams (actor)

Mark Williams is an England actor, comedian, scriptwriter and presenter. He is known as one of the stars of the popular BBC sketch show, The Fast Show as well as for the role of Arthur Weasley in the Harry Potter ....
 also specialises in amiable but stupid Birmingham characters. One of Harry Enfield
Harry Enfield

Harry Enfield is an United Kingdom comedian, actor and writer, as well as working small-time as a Television director....
's comedy characters, portrayed an exaggerated Brummie ,whose catchline was "we are considerably richer than yow". Lennie Godber
Lennie Godber

Leonard 'Lennie' Arthur Godber was a character in the popular BBC sitcom Porridge . He was played by Richard Beckinsale.Godber is from Birmingham and has an O Level in geography ....
 is a criminal from Birmingham in the Television series, Porridge
Porridge (TV series)

Porridge is a British sitcom that was broadcast on BBC One from 1973 to 1977, running for three series, two Christmas specials, as well as a Porridge ....
.

Advertisements are another medium where many perceive stereotypes. Journalist Lydia Stockdale, writing in the Birmingham Post
Birmingham Post

The Birmingham Post newspaper was originally published under the name Daily Post in Birmingham, England in 1857 by John Frederick Feeney....
 ("Pig ignorant about the Brummie accent", December 2, 2004), commented on advertisers' association of Birmingham accents with pigs: the pig in the ad for Colman's Potato Bakes, Nick Park
Nick Park

Nicholas Wulstan "Nick" Park, Order of the British Empire is a four-time Academy Awards-winning England filmmaker of stop motion animation best known as the creator of Wallace and Gromit....
's Hells Angel Pigs for British Gas
Centrica

Centrica plc is a large multinational utility company, based in the United Kingdom but also with interests in North America and Europe. It is listed on the London Stock Exchange and is a constituent of the FTSE 100 Index....
 and ITV
ITV

ITV is a public service broadcasting in the United Kingdom television network of British television broadcasters, set up under the Independent Television Authority to provide competition to the BBC....
's "Dave the window-cleaner pig" all had Brummie accents. More recently, a Halifax
Halifax (bank)

Halifax is a brand name of Bank of Scotland, a subsidiary of the Lloyds Banking Group. In the United Kingdom, the Halifax is used as brand for Bank of Scotland branches in England, Wales and Northern Ireland and for savings and mortgages in Scotland....
 bank advertisement featuring Howard Brown
Howard Brown

Howard Brown is an employee of HBOS plc, which owns both Bank of Scotland and Halifax in the United Kingdom. He is known for his appearances in Halifax television advertisements, often singing and dancing....
, a Birmingham- born and based employee, was replaced by an animated version with an exaggerated comical accent overdubbed by a Cockney
Cockney

The term Cockney has both geographical and linguistic associations. Geographically and culturally, it often refers to working class Londoners, particularly those in the East End of London....
 actor. The BBC has alleged that intonation and rhythm is unvaried and that most sentences end with downward intonation. This can give a false impression of despondency and lack of imagination. Apart from intonation “Brummie” resembles other Midlands dialects. Steve Thorne disagrees. Thorn insists that no accent is a monotone. If an accent lowers logically it varies. Thorn claims further that typical Birmingham speech frequently rises in tone.

Thorn recorded samples of similar people speaking with different English accents. One was Brummie. About a hundred native speakers and another hundred non-native English speakers rated the recordings. British listeners who did not distinguist between Brummie and Black Country
Black Country

The Black Country is a loosely defined area of the English West Midlands conurbation, to the north and west of Birmingham, and to the south and east of Wolverhampton, around the South Staffordshire coalfield....
 accents rated Brummie higher than Black Country. Foreign speakers rated Brummie highly.

Dialect

According to the PhD
PHD

PHD may refer to:* Parisada Hindu Dharma, an Indonesian reform organization* PHD, a track on The Crystal Method album Tweekend* PHD finger, a protein sequence...
 thesis of Steve Thorne
Steve Thorne

Steve Thorne is a United Kingdom linguist and writer.Born in Birmingham, England, Thorne graduated from the University of Birmingham with a First Class Honours degree in English studies in 2000 and a PhD in Linguistics in 2003....
 at the University of Birmingham
University of Birmingham

The University of Birmingham is a United Kingdom 'Red brick universities' university located in the city of Birmingham, England. Founded in Edgbaston in 1900 as a successor to Mason Science College, and with origins dating back to the 1825 Birmingham Medical School, it was the first of the so-called Red brick universities to receive a Royal...
 Department of English, Birmingham English is "a dialectal hybrid of northern, southern, Midlands, Warwickshire
Warwickshire

Warwickshire is a landlocked non-metropolitan county in the West Midlands of England. The county town is Warwick, although the largest town is Nuneaton in the far north of the county....
, Staffordshire
Staffordshire

Staffordshire is a landlocked Counties of England in the West Midlands region of England. The county town is Stafford. Part of the National Forest, England lies within its borders....
 and Worcestershire
Worcestershire

Worcestershire is a county located in the West Midlands of central England. From 1974 to 1998 it was administered as part of Hereford and Worcester....
 speech", also with elements from the languages and dialects of its Asian
British Asian

The term British Asian is used to refer to British nationality law who are immigrants or descendants of immigrants from South Asia, or the Indian subcontinent....
 and Afro-Caribbean communities.

Traditional expressions include:

A bit black over Bill's mothers : Likely to rain soon (now widespread). Commonly attributed to Black Country dialect: "Bill's mothers" features in a variety of forms - such as the reference to any obscure location being "the back of Bill's mothers". Babby : Variation of "baby". Go and play up your own end : Said to children from a different street making a nuisance. It has been used as the title of the autobiographical book and musical play about the Birmingham childhood of radio presenter and entertainer Malcolm Stent. Gunter : To fix, work on or repair, mainly used a verb (example usage "I'm gonna gunter the car" equates to "I'm going to repair the car"), other forms include 'guntered' (example usage "the car's guntered" equates to "the car is fixed", alternate usage "I guntered the tele, but it still doesn't work" equates to "I worked on the television, but it is still broken"). Keep away from the 'oss road / Mind the 'orse road / Kip aert th'oss road : An admonition to travel safely, originally a warning to children in the days of horse-drawn traffic. "Th'oss road" may also have referred to the towpath alongside the canals found throughout the region, which presented the additional hazard to the unwary of falling into the canal. These expressions too, are commonly attributed to Black Country dialect rather than that from Birmingham. Rock : A children's hard sweet (as in "give us a rock"). Snap : Food, a meal, allegedly derived from the act of eating itself (example usage "I'm off to get my snap" equates to "I'm leaving to get my dinner"). May also refer to the tin containing lunch, a "snap tin", as taken down the pit by miners. Trap : To leave suddenly, or flee. Up the cut : Up the canal (not unique to Birmingham). Yampy : (often "dead yampy") Mad, daft, barmy (also used is the word "Saft", as in "Yow big saft babbie"). Many Black Country folk believe "yampy" is a Black Country word originating from the Dudley/Tipton area and has been stolen and claimed as their own by both Birmingham and Coventry.

See also


Other Midlands English dialects
  • Black Country
    Black Country

    The Black Country is a loosely defined area of the English West Midlands conurbation, to the north and west of Birmingham, and to the south and east of Wolverhampton, around the South Staffordshire coalfield....
  • Potteries dialect
    Potteries dialect

    The Potteries dialect is a dialect found in the northern West Midlands of England, almost exclusively in and around Stoke-on-Trent.A popular cartoon called May un Mar Lady, created by Dave Follows, appears in The Sentinel newspaper and is written in the Potteries dialect....
     (North Staffordshire)

External links

  • On 20 July.
  • - A wiki-based Birmingham dialect dictionary.
  • Dr Steve Thorne's website devoted to the study of Brummie, including a dictionary, MP3 speech samples, discussion of his research on stereotypes, etc. No Longer Online.
  • using a test paragraph including most English sounds: George Mason University . Compare a (Black Country
    Black Country

    The Black Country is a loosely defined area of the English West Midlands conurbation, to the north and west of Birmingham, and to the south and east of Wolverhampton, around the South Staffordshire coalfield....
    ) sample.
  • Listen to examples of regional accents and dialects from across the UK on the British Library's 'Sounds Familiar' website
  • , British Library website features samples of Birmingham speech (wma format, with annotations on phonology, lexis and grammar): , , and .
  • Etymological article by Dr Carl Chinn
    Carl Chinn

    Professor Carl Stephen Alfred Chinn Order of the British Empire is an English historian, writer, radio presenter, magazine editor, newspaper columnist, media personality, local celebrity, and famous Brummie, whose working life has been devoted to the study and popularisation of the city of Birmingham in England....
  • University of Birmingham press release about Dr Steve Thorne's PhD thesis, Birmingham English: A Sociolinguistic Study.
  • Noele Gordon and Crossroads Appreciation Society interview
  • Guardian January 20, 2003
  • , Warwickshire
    Warwickshire

    Warwickshire is a landlocked non-metropolitan county in the West Midlands of England. The county town is Warwick, although the largest town is Nuneaton in the far north of the county....
     speakers - of Hockley Heath, of Aston Cantlow, of Lighthorne, and of Shipston-on-Stour - show progressive accent change moving south-east from Birmingham across isogloss.