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Suffolk News
เข้าร่วมเมื่อ 31 ก.ค. 2020
Prime Minister Boris Johnson apologises as he admits attending Downing St garden party
Prime Minister Boris Johnson has apologised after admitting going to the Downing Street garden party while the country was in lockdown in May 2020. Video: ParliamentLive.TV
มุมมอง: 70
วีดีโอ
Delighted mum wins Ed Sheeran's guitar after worldwide auction
มุมมอง 1202 ปีที่แล้ว
The winner of a 'one-of-a kind Ed Sheeran guitar has been announced after a GeeWizz auction.
Suffolk man sentenced for his part in ram-raid burglaries at luxury London stores
มุมมอง 2432 ปีที่แล้ว
A Suffolk man who was part of a gang who stole more than £465,000 worth of designer items in a series of ram-raid burglaries in London has avoided jail. Video: Metropolitan Police
Watch the moment vandals are caught damaging football pitches in Suffolk
มุมมอง 3612 ปีที่แล้ว
Watch the moment vandals were caught damaging pitches used by Stowupland Falcons Football Club. Credit: Stowupland Falcons
Lakenheath mum reveals how she transformed kids' old playhouse into gingerbread grotto for £50
มุมมอง 4103 ปีที่แล้ว
A savvy DIY mum from Suffolk has revealed how she transformed her kids' old playhouse into an incredible gingerbread grotto for £50. Video: SWNS
13-year-old metal detectorist found a "once in a lifetime" Bronze Age axe hoard on third dig
มุมมอง 9K3 ปีที่แล้ว
Credit: SWNS
Ipswich 'fundraising hero' determined not to let his disability stop his sponsored walks
มุมมอง 483 ปีที่แล้ว
Video credit: EACH
Banksy artwork removed from Lowestoft building
มุมมอง 2033 ปีที่แล้ว
Banksy artwork has been removed from a Lowestoft building. Picture: SWNS.
Sudbury fan Ben Davies previews FA Cup clash with Colchester United
มุมมอง 1613 ปีที่แล้ว
Sudbury fan Ben Davies previews FA Cup clash with Colchester United
A 60-foot-high mountain of shipping containers has appeared close to Eye.
มุมมอง 4223 ปีที่แล้ว
Hundreds of the steel containers are being stored on a former airfield site off the A140 near Eye, in Suffolk, just 26 miles from Britain's biggest freight port at Felixstowe.
Little girl born without bones in legs takes first steps on new prosthetic limbs
มุมมอง 24K3 ปีที่แล้ว
Posie-Aurora Sadler-Smith was born without bones in her legs but has now taken her first steps on her new prosthetic limbs
Toothless in Suffolk rally
มุมมอง 1603 ปีที่แล้ว
Campaigners took to the streets of Bury St Edmunds in support of improving NHS dentistry in Suffolk.
Overall winner announcement - Bury Sound
มุมมอง 1733 ปีที่แล้ว
Overall winner announcement - Bury Sound
Songwriter award announcement - Bury Sound
มุมมอง 363 ปีที่แล้ว
Songwriter award announcement - Bury Sound
Stewart White leaves BBC Look East after 37 years
มุมมอง 2.8K3 ปีที่แล้ว
Stewart White leaves BBC Look East after 37 years
Police on scene of Feltwell hit and run which left man with serious injuries
มุมมอง 2843 ปีที่แล้ว
Police on scene of Feltwell hit and run which left man with serious injuries
Olly Murs stops mid-show to help collapsed woman and thank loyal fan with Down syndrome
มุมมอง 9753 ปีที่แล้ว
Olly Murs stops mid-show to help collapsed woman and thank loyal fan with Down syndrome
Pilot rushed to hospital following plane crash
มุมมอง 1803 ปีที่แล้ว
Pilot rushed to hospital following plane crash
How to feed a family of four on £40 per week: Spag bol recipe
มุมมอง 203 ปีที่แล้ว
How to feed a family of four on £40 per week: Spag bol recipe
How to feed a family of four on £40 per week: Turkey burger recipe
มุมมอง 133 ปีที่แล้ว
How to feed a family of four on £40 per week: Turkey burger recipe
Wow, this guys knowledge is insane. I hear some similarities between Australian accent and this, and he mentions the similar phrase. Is this because it was settled by people from Suffolk?
Wonderful man. I've learned SO much in one short video! Thank you!
Every Suffolk household should own a copy of at least one of his books.
I’m American but I was influenced by an Aunt and Uncle that were both English teachers and were also Anglophones. Charlie reminds me so much of them. Brilliant.
What a wonderful video! 🙂
Absolutely riveting!
If you listen to his accent though, its gone, it’s infiltrated with what’s generically heard as London, if you listen to the documentary from The Story of English its far stronger and his accent is completely gone, sadly
Ive heard a bit of suffolk before. " Ai ruyd muy trackurr ai dew" I wish you all talked like that down there. It would feel like time travel
Well I’m having none of it!.
Very dutch Frieslanders
Very interesting
I was at school in Framlingham, easterly, so definitely 'bor'!
I met Charlie in a Beccles bookshop 11 years ago, when he did a book signing. He signed my copy of his first book “do yew keep a troshin” and I went on to buy several more of his books. A wonderful man and historian, and a caretaker of the East Anglian dialects
small example of hoard shown at 30 seconds in.
Lovely to see you again. I miss the Laxfield singing afternoons :)
Throughly enjoyed this, what a knowledgeable man.
Absolutely fascinating.
Strange how it goes from Suffolk to Norfolk but apparently doesn’t go south into Essex.
I seem to be the last person in Essex to used the verb 'puggle', is that still alive and well up there in Suffolk?
my family use it ... not sure its suffolk tho ... what does it mean for you
@@michelefrancis4720 well you could puggle a wasps nest with a stick or you could puggle your ear with your little finger
This is fantastic-fascinating. I'm from West Yorkshire, but briefly lived in Bury St Edmunds, and could move back. I've family in Norfolk, and the accent here, sounds very similar, to my ears
Can;t hear,
Dad, a West Bridgford man, used "that'll larn you", but probably didn't realise the derivation; he also used "black ovva Bill's mothers" (which I used today when I spotted the dark clouds not far away) with the 'o' in "mother's" sounded like the 'o' in "moth". And I was introduced to "shew" by my Saxmundham-born old boss; I eventually got used to it...
My mother uses Black over back of Bill's mother and she was from Birmingham, which doesn't seem to be a Brummie phrase. Anyone heard of a "Bobowler" for a moth?
I love watching these videos about local dialects, my grandad was from Kent but sounded just like Charlie, thanks mate, we need to protect our language and dialects by keeping them in use. Love from Wiltshire.
Looks like Anthony Hopkins lol
The way this man says the word 'tide' is exactly the way Newfoundlanders in Canada say it. The Newfoundland dialect is believed to be at least partly influenced by the West Country dialect, and from this video, I'm getting the sense that it might also be influenced by the Suffolk dialect.
What an amazing chap. What a captivating lesson on the origins of words and phrases embedded the English language . What a brilliant reminder of the richness of English culture. Let’s never forget where we came from. Let’s never allow the currently fashionable suppression of Englishness to prevail. Let’s be proud of who we are, not be made to feel ashamed of our own diverse history in the rush to celebrate the diversity of other cultures.
Most of this is Tommy rot. Dialect words in Norfolk and Suffolk could differ from village to village. This goes for the rest of the ZK as people rarely left theor villages from the time they were born to the time they took up residence in the local churchyard. Dialect words began to spread when people either went in to service with the gentry or military service.
Crinkle crankle walls were all over the country. To save as he claimed bricks. Over time most were pulled down . We presevered ours.
Thankyou so much, this was so enlightening,, wonderful.
I found this fascinating. Never been to the UK but it’s on my list😬
I noticed you snuck another one in without realising it coupla’three. Didn’t even see it did you haha! It means several. Couple or three. Two or three. But it’s a phrase unto itself and means a few haha! Not the number itself. So more like 5-10 😂
Get wrong about learning for teaching. I think that’s across the UK as far as I know. Definitely can say it across Cornwall.
8:18 Dutch and English oo and oe are more or less swapped in pronunciation so Dutch stroop is pronounced strope, and boek hoek and boer are pronounced book hook and boor.
I’m from east Suffolk and it was always hayoroit buh, not questioning his knowledge but thats what that was.
Suffolk =Südvolk...... Norfolk =Nordvolk that's old Saxon and Angles legacy...... I am a native Saxon from Westphalia northwest Germany and a great adorer of England..... our closest in this world..... ❤
I have spent quite a bit of time working in Germany and we are very similar indeed. If we stand in a room together we have speak before it’s clear where we are from 👍🏻
@@Poorlybobsdad yes.... Indeed... I've been many times in England.... it's like a second home for me.... we have many things in common..... we are connected with our DNA and ancestry ♥️
Haven’t we got a brilliant English language so full of history bravo 👏
What a rich tapestry the English language is. So much history is contained in our words. Words we use without thinking about. Even the names of many of our villages, towns and cities have the language of history embedded in them.
That explanation of the word Mawther - I do wonder if it's not the origin of the word "mither" - to annoy or pester someone, as its other etymological explanations seem to be rather wanting and uncertain.
"Shew" is used by VC Herschell in the Privy Council case of Bank of England v Vagliano Bros (1900). So, reckon "shew" was used by all for longer than this charming gent says.
So is windey (wall) from windy?
No a windy is an ole in a Wall were a door should ave been just ask an old bricklayer
I'm from Notts, and we say 'It's black oar Bills' but will use it to say rain on the horizon from whatever direction it's from, not just the East. Loved this video.
I'm just down the road in Leicestershire, and for that phenomenon we - older people in particular, but not exclusively; I don't think I'm that old! - say: "It's black uvver Bill's mother's", where mother rhymes with bother.
I recognised words that we use when speaking Afrikaans today. The meanings also match.
My granddad was from Ipswich. He died years before I was born. It’s nice to know how few might have sounded. ❤
Livfen, larfen, lovfen.
When I was but a boy, I stayed with my old Grandma on many occasions in Clare, Suffolk. She was born in Poslingford. On one occasion we were out & about in Clare, and I was watching a couple of girls across the the street, she said to me "yew garpin' at the mawthers, boi?". I dont think I'll ever forget that.
in yorkshire we say bills mother, well people of a certain age
I imagine this culture will never feature on country file, msm or history channels. Not that ‘diverese’ is thousands of years of white history…
"That'll larn yer!" Great! I love the West Country accent too, as shown by Phil Harding in "Time Team". "'Ere's LOADS of arrrrrchaeology there, look!" I'm a NZer and I *love* the wonderful accents in the UK!
Fascinating. Shew makes so much sense now.
I really enjoyed this video Charlie. In the north east of Scotland, we speak Doric which shares a lot of words with Cumbrian and Geordie dialects. We also say 'That'll learn ye' ! With a rolled rrrrr. Our dialect is very germanic in nature and often people will say it's sloppy speech but your video disproved that so thank you