A Beginner's Guide to the Dorset Dialect
Published: Wednesday 24th Jan 2018
Written by: The Original Cottages Team
Perhaps fuelled by renewed interest in the work of the poet William Barnes, or maybe on account of the rising numbers of so-called ‘in-comers’ to the county, Dorset’s centuries old dialect is enjoying something of a revival.
Although few people can still speak and understand fluent dialect, it is well preserved in Barnes’ poetry and in the comic verse of the lesser-known late Victorian tailor turned writer Robert Young, from Sturminster Newton.
Several books have been published that shed light on some of the more colourful words and phrases, but we thought we’d provide this condensed guide should you encounter some strange language during your next stay in Dorset.
- Annan? – Say that again. A handy word if you’re a bit dunch
- Aggy – To gather eggs
- Airmouse – A bat
- A-stooded – Sunk into the ground
- Bibber – Shiver with cold
- Blooth – Blossom
- Bruckly – Brittle
- Cradlehood – Infancy
- Chimp – To break the shoots off potatoes
- Cwoffer – Coffer
- Dead-alive – Apathetic
- Dewbit – A bite to eat before breakfast
- Drawlatchet – Someone who walks slowly and lazily
- Drinky – Drunk
- Dumbledore – A bee
- Emmets – Ants
- Empt – Empty
- Flummocks (flummox) – To frighten
- Footling – Beneath contempt
- God Almighty’s Cow – A ladybird (Absolutely no idea why!)
- Goo-coo – Cuckoo
- Gwains-on – Riotous behaviour
- Hag-rod – Bewitched
- Homble – A duck
- Hwome – Home
- Joppety-joppety – Nervousness
- Keep – Cattle feed
- Leery – Hungry
- Lippy – Rainy, stormy
- Litty – Graceful bodily motion
- Miff – A squabble between friends
- Mistructful – Suspicious, mistrustfrul
- Mixen – Dun heap
- Nesh – Tender
- Nuncheon – Food eaten in the fields between meals, from noon-meat
- Overright – Opposite
- Pelt – Angry fit
- Quob – To quiver
- Ramshacklum – Good for nothing
- Randy – Making merry
- Reddick – A robin
- Slommock – An untidy woman
- Span-new – Brand new
- Stud – Mystified
- Tinklebobs – Icicles
- Torrididdle – Out of your mind
- Turmit – Turnip
- Undercreepen – Hypocritical or sly
- Unray – To undress
- Upsides wi’ – To be even with
- Vitty – Proper
- Volly – To follow
- Wants – Moles
- Wopsy – A wasp
- Wrack – Consequences
- Yop – To speak quickly
- Yoller – Yellow
- Zummat – Something
- Zummerwold – Freckles