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Quiz about Some Quotes From Dialectal English
Quiz about Some Quotes From Dialectal English

Some Quotes From Dialectal English Quiz


In this quiz you get short fragments from dialectal dialogues, poems etc. Your understanding of the quotes is tested by means of multiple choice. Caps may mark beginnings of verselines.

A multiple-choice quiz by flem-ish. Estimated time: 5 mins.
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Author
flem-ish
Time
5 mins
Type
Multiple Choice
Quiz #
66,681
Updated
Aug 19 24
# Qns
10
Difficulty
Easy
Avg Score
8 / 10
Plays
6588
Awards
Top 35% Quiz
Last 3 plays: Guest 94 (9/10), oliviat (8/10), dolly_llama (5/10).
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Question 1 of 10
1. From a Lancashire poem: 'When I put little Sally to bed, Hoo cried 'cose her feyther weren't theer, So aw kiss'd little thing, an' aw said Thae'd bring her a ribbin fro' th'fair.'- What is meant by "Hoo" ? Hint


Question 2 of 10
2. From Dorset. 'Well we staggered whome at 'alf-past dree, A-zinging all the way. Me 'usband gi' I a kiss The vust since me wedding-day.' Which of these statements 'agrees' with a portion of what the text says? Hint


Question 3 of 10
3. From Northumberland. 'There idden many can sheary now' Which of these four options renders this line the most correctly? Hint


Question 4 of 10
4. From Lincolnshire. 'Cum in, lass. A'm real pleased to see ya, Yah're welcome as flowers in Maay. Cum an' sit yersen down on the soafy.'- Means? Hint


Question 5 of 10
5. From a poem by Samuel Laycock, born in Yorkshire but having lived in Cheshire and Lancashire. The poem is dedicated to a new-born baby. 'But tho' we've childer two or three We'll mak' a bit of reawm for thee, Bless thee, lad, Th'art prettiest brid we have in th'nest.' What is meant by reawm? Hint


Question 6 of 10
6. From 'Essex Ballads' by Charles Benham. 'There's olluz summat. When tha's wet The corn get laid, the hay git sp'iled And when th's dry the lan' get set.' What's the general gist of these lines? Hint


Question 7 of 10
7. From Norfolk dialect poet John Kett. 'Then there's the baads; they allus sing their best When I go paast the barn agen the wood. Ah, more'n once I'a stopped there jus' to hear Their lovely songs what fill the evenin' air. That don't corst naathin', and that dew yer good.' Baads means? Hint


Question 8 of 10
8. From Wiltshire: 'When I were jus' a leetle bwoy I met an old man in tha street 'Ee zeemed ta be quite pleasant enuff 'Is chat an 'iz zmyle wer sweet. But I 'membered wat me mum 'ad zed, "Never taa ztop an' talk to a stranger", But 'ee zeemed ta know wat I wer thinking 'Coz 'ee zed: "My bwoy, there is noa danger." Then 'ee put iz hand on my yarm, Az a smyle 'cross his face did zet, Zaying, "Ther' noa zich thing az strangers; Ther' only vrends you 'ave n't met."' What is the general message of this poem? Hint


Question 9 of 10
9. From Eastern Counties: I've lost my pal, 'e 's the best in all the tahn, But don't you fink 'im dead, becos 'e ain't. But since he's wed, 'e 'as ter nuckle dahn, It's enough ter wex the temper of a saint. 'E's a brewer's drayman, wiv a leg of mutton fist, An' as strong as a bullick or an horse. Yet in 'er 'ands 'e's like a little kid, Oh! I wish as I could get him a divorce. Hint


Question 10 of 10
10. From Lincolnshire: The Poacher But I'd rayther be down wheare th'fire An' brimstun foriver bo'ns, An' just go around wi' a bucket An give fook drink by to'ns- Then sit i' yon stright maade heaven Wheare saints and' angels sing', An' niver hear the pheasant craw, Nor th' skirr o' a partridge wing; Wheare ther' isn't a bank nor a plantin'-side Where rabbits cum oot an' play An' stamps wi'ther' feet o'un moonleet neet, Wheare it's warm o' the coudest day. Hint



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Quiz Answer Key and Fun Facts
1. From a Lancashire poem: 'When I put little Sally to bed, Hoo cried 'cose her feyther weren't theer, So aw kiss'd little thing, an' aw said Thae'd bring her a ribbin fro' th'fair.'- What is meant by "Hoo" ?

Answer: she

Hoo stems from Old English heo.
2. From Dorset. 'Well we staggered whome at 'alf-past dree, A-zinging all the way. Me 'usband gi' I a kiss The vust since me wedding-day.' Which of these statements 'agrees' with a portion of what the text says?

Answer: My husband gave me a kiss, my first since my wedding day.

The subject-form of the personal pronoun is used where standard English expects the object-form. A number of initial sounds are voiced. First becomes vust. Three becomes dree with initial d as in German drei, Dutch drie.
3. From Northumberland. 'There idden many can sheary now' Which of these four options renders this line the most correctly?

Answer: There aren't many that can shear sheep these days.

It's a peculiarity of these dialects that the infinitive of the verb gets an additional -y when there follows no object. 'Can you zew up thease zeam' has no -y ending. But 'Can you zewy', gets the y-ending. It means can you sew ? EN plays the role of NOT.Another typical phenomenon is that initial voiceless hissing sounds are voiced: zew, zeam.
4. From Lincolnshire. 'Cum in, lass. A'm real pleased to see ya, Yah're welcome as flowers in Maay. Cum an' sit yersen down on the soafy.'- Means?

Answer: Come in, pretty one, and make yourself comfortable on that sofa.

A good example of contraction: yourself is reduced to 'yersen'. This sounds a bit like the Lincolnshire style of making passes at au-pairs!
5. From a poem by Samuel Laycock, born in Yorkshire but having lived in Cheshire and Lancashire. The poem is dedicated to a new-born baby. 'But tho' we've childer two or three We'll mak' a bit of reawm for thee, Bless thee, lad, Th'art prettiest brid we have in th'nest.' What is meant by reawm?

Answer: room

A brid is not a brat but a bird. R changing its position within the syllable is called metathesis. Second person singular is thou, thee as in older forms of English. The plural of child is not a double plural yet as in child- (e)r-en. Compare German Kalb Kaelber (single plural) and Dutch kalf kalv-er-en (double plural).
6. From 'Essex Ballads' by Charles Benham. 'There's olluz summat. When tha's wet The corn get laid, the hay git sp'iled And when th's dry the lan' get set.' What's the general gist of these lines?

Answer: There always is something that goes wrong. It's either too wet or too dry.

Tha stands for: it. Sp'iled= spoiled. Laid= flattened. When the land gets 'set' it's probably too hard and dry for digging.
7. From Norfolk dialect poet John Kett. 'Then there's the baads; they allus sing their best When I go paast the barn agen the wood. Ah, more'n once I'a stopped there jus' to hear Their lovely songs what fill the evenin' air. That don't corst naathin', and that dew yer good.' Baads means?

Answer: birds

what = that; corst is an example of epenthetic r, an r that is inserted in the middle of a syllable. Standard English would have: cost.
8. From Wiltshire: 'When I were jus' a leetle bwoy I met an old man in tha street 'Ee zeemed ta be quite pleasant enuff 'Is chat an 'iz zmyle wer sweet. But I 'membered wat me mum 'ad zed, "Never taa ztop an' talk to a stranger", But 'ee zeemed ta know wat I wer thinking 'Coz 'ee zed: "My bwoy, there is noa danger." Then 'ee put iz hand on my yarm, Az a smyle 'cross his face did zet, Zaying, "Ther' noa zich thing az strangers; Ther' only vrends you 'ave n't met."' What is the general message of this poem?

Answer: Don't mistake a friendly old man for an assaulter

Plural forms of the verb 'to be' are used as singular 3rd person: were = was. Initial hissing sounds are often voiced: ztop; zmyle; zeemed; zich; zaying. Some short vowels are lengthened: leetle. Initial h is often dropped.
9. From Eastern Counties: I've lost my pal, 'e 's the best in all the tahn, But don't you fink 'im dead, becos 'e ain't. But since he's wed, 'e 'as ter nuckle dahn, It's enough ter wex the temper of a saint. 'E's a brewer's drayman, wiv a leg of mutton fist, An' as strong as a bullick or an horse. Yet in 'er 'ands 'e's like a little kid, Oh! I wish as I could get him a divorce.

Answer: Though my pal is as strong as an ox, since his marriage he has become a hen-pecked hubby.

drayman = the driver of a dray-cart, which is a low cart without sides used by brewers for carrying heavy loads; a fist as heavy and strong as a leg of mutton tahn= town originally same word as German Zaun a fence; to knuckle down: to give in; acknowledge oneself beaten; fink = think; bullock = originally a young bull; now a bull after castration
10. From Lincolnshire: The Poacher But I'd rayther be down wheare th'fire An' brimstun foriver bo'ns, An' just go around wi' a bucket An give fook drink by to'ns- Then sit i' yon stright maade heaven Wheare saints and' angels sing', An' niver hear the pheasant craw, Nor th' skirr o' a partridge wing; Wheare ther' isn't a bank nor a plantin'-side Where rabbits cum oot an' play An' stamps wi'ther' feet o'un moonleet neet, Wheare it's warm o' the coudest day.

Answer: The poacher considers heaven cannot be very nice if there are no pheasants, partridges or rabbits.

bo'ns= burns fook= folk (just as wold becomes wood , olk becomes ook here) by to'ns= by turns sright made: made according to strict rules craw = crow, song skirr= rapid flight cum oot= come out.
Source: Author flem-ish

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