May Un Mar Lady

A 10-minute extract from Inspired Film and Video's documentary about the Potteries dialect and Dave Follows, cartoonist and creator of the long-running cartoon strip May Un Mar Lady

Пікірлер: 44

  • @alrafter1593
    @alrafter1593Күн бұрын

    May and Mar lady was a cartoon in the Sentinel newspaper. It was written by Wilf Bloor who was an expert on dust control at the BCRA (British Ceramic Research Association) at Penkhull.He lived a Scot Hay and later Audley. He wrote under the name of Jabez and also said his surname was Scot . I worked in the Ceramics Industry in the 1960's and often went to the BCRA where I once remember him giving a talk on Dust Control. I also lived at Audley and knew his son who was my age and we went to the same Grammar school. You could tell within a couple of miles where a person came from a Tunstall accent was a lot different from a Longton one.

  • @SIMON8958
    @SIMON895810 ай бұрын

    Love the people of the Potteries and the dialect, having lived there for a few years in the 1980s. It’s a tragedy that so many industries were allowed to disappear there- it didn’t have to be that way

  • @markc6318
    @markc63186 жыл бұрын

    you can take our industry, our dialect and our accent.........but you will never take our oatcakes

  • @SeeDaRipper...

    @SeeDaRipper...

    5 жыл бұрын

    Fuckin nora kidda, that made me laugh... :)

  • @chitownsteve68

    @chitownsteve68

    3 жыл бұрын

    I'm American and my wife is stoke. So I understand the special need for oatcakes. She won't eat my flapjacks. lol

  • @tonyb8157

    @tonyb8157

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@chitownsteve68 - A dunner blame er mayt. Tell er try meckin er own oatcakes. Tha cos get recipe on t' internet an eets ded eesy. Thee onner as nace as rayl uns but theer better thn flapjacks.

  • @pagangamer87

    @pagangamer87

    2 жыл бұрын

    I don't even like oatcakes... used call'em OAKcakes as a kid LOL...

  • @user-tz7xn6rp9i

    @user-tz7xn6rp9i

    9 ай бұрын

    Going back hundreds of years my family lived in the area around Stoke-on-Trent and worked in the mines and the potteries. I must be one of the first to have never lived there but I still grew up eating oatcakes. I need to go get some I never see them in the shops these days

  • @bigoldgrizzly
    @bigoldgrizzly Жыл бұрын

    I came from Sussex to the Potteries in 1973 to work down the pit and had to learn a whole new language ! The dialects [more than one] was ever present and strongest down the pit - happy days ! I found potteries folk the friendliest in the country and after 17 years there, I was sorry to have to leave for Yorkshire.... and a new language to learn.

  • @jsbart96
    @jsbart964 жыл бұрын

    Excellent film, really appreciate being able to learn about working peoples history Thanks

  • @harrybeau1712
    @harrybeau17127 жыл бұрын

    Well, not many examples of actual dialect here. My father was born in 1913 in Longton. He lived in Uttoxeter Rd. near to the Gladstone Potter. His mother and father both worked in potteries. Everyone spoke in dialect, even the mayor! This, my father told me. He had to adopt standard English when he went into the army. In WW2, when he was in Belgium he was spoken to by a lad in Flemish - my father was amazed that he could understand him - the lad was using words straight from Potteries dialect. ....Flemish weavers who came to the town hundreds of years ago, before pottery - that's where you should be looking with your research.Uttoxeter - how is it pronounced in Stoke today? 'Uch'tter'- that's how it was pronounced in my dad's time. ..and he told a popular joke about a man from London arriving at the station and asking where he was and not understanding the local's speech - 'Oh, ask me foot!' says the frustrated porter, after being asked several times to repeat the station's name.

  • @abenodyuo87
    @abenodyuo874 жыл бұрын

    I’m from India and I met a great friend from Stoke-on-Trent through periscope like 5 years ago and when we speak on phone i can’t understand like 50% of his words. I always insist on texting instead.

  • @smithkennedy1444
    @smithkennedy14442 жыл бұрын

    Proud to be a stokie ❤️

  • @mitchl5220
    @mitchl52203 жыл бұрын

    3:23 "why? what's up with the way I speak? everyone know what I'm talkin' bout don't they?"

  • @harrybeau1712
    @harrybeau17127 жыл бұрын

    an if eh tha doost owt f'nowt, tha do't f'tha sen

  • @Fenditokesdialect

    @Fenditokesdialect

    2 жыл бұрын

    An if ivver da does owt for nowt, da does it for disen

  • @SeeDaRipper...
    @SeeDaRipper...5 жыл бұрын

    Dunna fret, "Arayte ode, where thee goin to? oh ah i'm going wom duck...oh ah going to ave thee snappin? aye." (i'm a meir lad) i still keep the Stoke dialect alive even though i now live in Bristol, it's fun to educate people on what the fuck i'm going on about ;) x

  • @Fenditokesdialect

    @Fenditokesdialect

    2 жыл бұрын

    Dun't freat, oreight cock, wheare-ta gooin til? Oh I'm gooin hoäme duck, oh are-ta gooin to have dee snap?

  • @aboutthemetal8783
    @aboutthemetal87836 жыл бұрын

    Ah jam landers and neck Enders , Shame it means nothing to most

  • @X3rCobraz
    @X3rCobraz7 жыл бұрын

    It's truly a shame that the diallect is dying :(

  • @bertvsrob

    @bertvsrob

    7 жыл бұрын

    ill make it the sole purpose of my linguistics degree to document everything i can about stokey

  • @X3rCobraz

    @X3rCobraz

    7 жыл бұрын

    bert vsrob you should. it's interesting how much us stokies differ from the norm

  • @bertvsrob

    @bertvsrob

    7 жыл бұрын

    learned a lot despite it only being my first year. always been aware of the difference and the decline; i used to deliver papers to the owd gents and never understood a word they were saying haha. check back here in three years. my dissertation will be on it dying out/converging. but as with some languages, dialects can be revitalised and even revived =]

  • @X3rCobraz

    @X3rCobraz

    7 жыл бұрын

    Let's hope :)

  • @reginaldedgararthurcyrilba7952

    @reginaldedgararthurcyrilba7952

    6 жыл бұрын

    Bert vsrob Godspeed to you young man, I wish you the best of luck in your academic pursuits.

  • @richardpedley6291
    @richardpedley6291 Жыл бұрын

    I rember me nan yoused read them comic strips out paper

  • @aboutthemetal8783
    @aboutthemetal87836 жыл бұрын

    Cos kick a bow agen a wow

  • @invectra3219

    @invectra3219

    4 жыл бұрын

    ah cost thay?

  • @davidrayner9376

    @davidrayner9376

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@invectra3219 Her sut theer, doin' a birra nossin'.

  • @ftumptch86
    @ftumptch86 Жыл бұрын

    Arfur towcrate in staffy cher

  • @RSR423
    @RSR4232 жыл бұрын

    Stoke On Trent, nowhere else like it. Sadly nothing more than a ghost of its former self. Pits gone, pot banks gone, steelworks gone. Not many real Stokies left anymore, most have moved away because there is nothing to stay for. In 2022 over 70% of the people are now immigrants from Romania, Poland, Africa, Pakistan and the countries of the Middle East. The dialect is almost gone now, just a few of us older ones still speak it, anyone under 50 years of age hasn't got a clue.

  • @peterhigginsson9875

    @peterhigginsson9875

    Жыл бұрын

    I checked and the population of stoke is like 88% white..? I have lived there myself for a few years, my granddad was from tunstall

  • @RSR423

    @RSR423

    Жыл бұрын

    @@peterhigginsson9875 Checked what, where? For your information Polish, Romanian etc etc are white last time I looked.

  • @peterhigginsson9875

    @peterhigginsson9875

    Жыл бұрын

    @@RSR423 the demographics for stoke. You make it sound like the locals are way outnumbered, i imagine so in a few parts of town.

  • @RSR423

    @RSR423

    Жыл бұрын

    @@peterhigginsson9875 I've lived here 60 yrs, and there are very few locals left. Official demographics are complete bull.

  • @brianjones9345

    @brianjones9345

    Жыл бұрын

    @@RSR423 My neighbour was a Pole and we always spoke pottery together because he worked down the pit when he fists came over and that's where he learned his "English"

  • @samnicholson5051
    @samnicholson50512 жыл бұрын

    So this must what my great-great-grandparents talked like.

  • @mikemcguinness1304
    @mikemcguinness13044 жыл бұрын

    Fred Hughes is NOT AN HISTORIAN