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How to Pronounce UK Place Names
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Code:Acock’s Green, Worcestershire, UK Babes Well, Durham, UK Bachelors Bump, Essex, UK Backside Lane, Oxfordshire Balls Green, Kent, England Balls Cross, WestSussex Bareleg Hill, Staffordshire, UK Barking, Essex Beaver Close, Surrey Bedlam Bottom, Hampshire, UK Beef Lane, Oxfordshire Beer, Devon, UK Beggars Bush, Sussex passed her prime Bell End near Lickey End Bishops Itchington, Staffs, UK Bitchfield, Lincolnshire Boggy Bottom, Abbots Langley, Herts, UK Booty Lane, NorthYorkshire Bottoms Fold, Lancashire Broadbottom, Cheshire, UK Brown Willy, Cornwall,UK Bushygap, Northumberland, UK Catholes, Cumbria Catsgore, Somerset, UK Charles Bottom, Devon, UK Clap Hill, village in Kent, UK Clay Bottom, Bristol, UK Cock Alley, Calow, UK Cock Bridge, Hope, Derbyshire, UK Cock Green, nr Braintree Cock Lane, Tutts Clump, Berkshire, UK Cock Law, Northumberland, UK Cock and Bell Lane, Suffolk Cockermouth, Cumbria Cockernhoe, nr Luton, UK Cocking, Midhurst, West Sussex, UK Cockintake, Staffordshire, UK Cockpit Hill, Derbyshire, UK Cockplay, Northumberland, UK Cocks, Cornwall Cockshoot Close, Oxfordshire Cockshot, Northumberland, UK Cockshutt Wood, Sheffield, UK Cockup Lake District, Cumbria. UK Coldwind, Cornwall, UK Crackington Haven, Cornwall, UK Crackpot, North Yorkshire, UK Crapstone, Devon Crotch Crescent, Oxford Deans Bottom, Kent, UK Devil’s Lapful, Northumberland, UK Dicks Mount, Suffolk Drinkstone, Suffolk, UK Faggot, Northumberland, UK Fanny Barks, Durham, UK Fanny Avenue, Derbyshire Fanny Hands Lane, Lincolnshire Feltham Close, Hampshire Feltwell, Norfolk Fingringhoe, Essex Flesh Shank, Northumberland, UK Friars Entry, Oxfordshire Fruitfall Cove, Cornwall, UK Fudgepack upon Humber, Humberside Gay Street, Sussex. UK Gays Hill, Cornwall, UK Giggleswick, Staincliffe, Nth. Yorkshire, UK Golden Balls, Oxfordshire, UK Gravelly Bottom Road, nr Langley Heath, Kent, UK Great Cockup & Little Cockup, hills in The Lake District, UK Great Horwood, Bucks, UK Great Tosson, Northumberland Grope Lane, Shropshire Hampton Gay, Oxfordshire, UK Happy Bottom, Dorset Helstone, Cornwall, UK Hole Bottom, Yorkshire, UK Hole of Horcum, North Yorkshire Holly Bush, Ledbury, Herefordshire, UK Honey Knob Hill, Wiltshire Honeypot Lane, Leicestershire Hooker Road, Norwich Horncastle, Linconshire Horneyman, Kent, UK Hornyold Road, Malvern Wells, UK Horwood, Devon, UK Jeffries Passage, Surrey Jolly’s Bottom, Cornwall, UK Juggs Close, EastSussex Knockerdown, Derbyshire, UK Lacock, Wiltshire Letch Lane, Bourton-on-the-Water, The Cotswolds, UK Lickar Moor, Northumberland, UK Lickers Lane, Merseyside Lickey End, Worcestershire, UK Lickfold, West Sussex Little Horwood, Bucks, UK Little Bushey Lane, Hertfordshire Long Lover Lane, Halifax Lower Swell, Gloucestershire Menlove Avenue, Liverpool Minge Lane, Worcestershire Moisty Lane, Staffordshire Nether Wallop, Hampshire Nob End, South Lancashire, UK Nork Rise, Surrey North Piddle, Worcestershire Ogle Close, Merseyside Old Sodbury, Gloucestershire Old Sodom Lane, Wiltshire Over Peover, Cheshire, UK Pant, Shropshire Penistone, Sth Yorkshire, UK Piddle River, Dorset, UK Pork Lane, Essex Pratt’s Bottom, Kent Prickwillow, Cambridgeshire Pump Alley, Middlesex Ram Alley, Wiltshire, UK Ramsbottom, Lancs, UK Rimswell, East Riding of Yorkshire Sandy Balls, Hampshire Scratchy Bottom, Dorset, UK Shaggs, Dorset, UK Shingaycum Wendy, Buckinghamshire ****lingthorpe, Yorkshire, UK ****terton, Dorset ****tington,, Bedfordshire, UK Six Mile Bottom, Cambridge, UK Slackbottom, Yorkshire, UK Slag Lane, Merseyside Slip End, Beds, UK Slippery Lane, Staffordshire Snatchup, Hertfordshire Spanker Lane, Derbyshire. Spitalin the Street, Lincolnshire Splatt, Cornwall, UK Staines, Surrey Stow cum Quy, Cambridgeshire, UK Swell, Somerset The Blind Fiddler, Cornwall, UK The Bush, Buckinghamshire The Furry, Cornwall The Knob, Oxfordshire Thong, Kent Tinkerbush Lane, Oxfordshire Titcomb, near Inkpen, Berkshire, UK Titlington Mount, Northumberland Titty Hill, Sussex, UK Titty Ho, Northamptonshire Tosside, Lancashire Turkey Cock Lane, Colchester, Essex, UK Ugley, Essex Upper Bleeding, Sussex, UK Upper Chute, Hampshire, UK Upper Dicker & Lower Dicker, East Sussex, UK Upperthong, West Riding, Yorkshire, UK Wash Dyke, Norfolk, UK Weedon Lois, Northampton Weedon, in the Parish of Hardwick, Buckinghamshire, UK Weeford, Staffordshire, UK Wet Rain, Yorkshire, UK Wetwang, East Yorkshire WhamBottomLane, Lancashire Wideopen, Newcastle, UK Willey, Warwickshire Winkle Street, Southampton Wormegay, Norfolk, UK Wyre Piddle, Worcestershire
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Believe it or not
'Dick Intake'
lol.
http://tinyurl.com/dickintake
https://www.housepricesintheuk.co.uk...RMERE-LA23+3LTkubuntu 20.10
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Between the North and the South in the USA:
A small stream is a "crick" down South and a "creek" up North.
It's "ya all" down South and "you all" up North
It's a "tank" down South and a pond up North.
And the list goes on. Basically, the less you move your tongue while speaking the more Southern your speech will sound.
I attended a college in Abilene, TX and my two children were born there. When I moved back to Nebraska to teach at York College, my kids were put into a speech remedial class to "correct" their southern accents. It's been 50 years and all traces of that lingo are gone and forgotten in their every day speech, but we still get a kick out of remembering it and they can slip back into it instantly when they want."A nation that is afraid to let its people judge the truth and falsehood in an open market is a nation that is afraid of its people.”
– John F. Kennedy, February 26, 1962.
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People are more and more speaking hollywood. What they hear from tv and movies. Some differences still exist. Such as 'front room' vs 'living room' and 'pop' vs 'soda'. I grew up in Oregon and say the latter 2. Wife grew up mostly in California and uses the first 2. Before we docked in Fremantle, Australia, we (sailors on a carrier) were told not to punch someone who said, "Got a fag I can blow?" cuz they just wanted to bum a cigarette
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I went to a college in the Midwest and Everybody assumed that I had come from "back east", probably Boston, etc.
Because I spoke "precisely" and "fast", and did not end sentences with a preposition when speaking.
I was blown away, really, just astounded.
I discussed it with my mother upon returning home for semester break and she opined that it was because I read all of the old "British novels" when I was a kid, obsessed on Sherlock holmes, and also obsessed on the old black and white films of Karloff, Lugosi, Laughton, etc.
And, even though the "inflection" has gone away, the rapidity of speech and not ending sentences with "of" and such remain, and the students find it interesting.
And, my classes always fill and nobody drops, I think in part because I try my very best to be very efficient in my instruction in biology, making my own "powerpoints" and in physics wherein I use the "Socratic Method" and "Dialectic", much bastardized of course, but not just "lecturing".
There was an English prof who taught at one of the local private universities who would get on a regular rant on the telly wherein he ranted that "the Midwesterners" don't talk Midwestern they talk a derivative of middle English because the people who came from Britain, Ireland, Europe etc. and "were aghast at how many people were on the coast", and just kept travelling on to settle in the Midwest. Just his rant, don't know.
woodsmoke
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