Everything about Brummie totally explained
Brummie (sometimes
Brummy) is a colloquial term for the inhabitants,
accent and
dialect of
Birmingham,
England, as well as being a general adjective used to denote a connection with the city, locally called
Brum. The terms are all derived from
Brummagem or Bromwichham, historical variants or alternatives to 'Birmingham'.
Accent
Brummie is a prominent example of a
regional accent of
English.
Examples of celebrity speakers include comedian
Jasper Carrott, historian and broadcaster
Carl Chinn,
BBC financial presenter
Adrian Chiles, the
Goodies actor and TV presenter
Bill Oddie, rock musician
Ozzy Osbourne, broadcaster
Les Ross, politician
Clare Short, and
SAS soldier and author
John "Brummie" Stokes.
It isn't the only accent of the
West Midlands, although the term, Brummie, is often, erroneously, used in referring to all accents of the region. It is quite distinct, for example, from the traditional accent of the adjacent
Black Country, although modern-day population mobility has tended to blur the distinction. For instance,
Dudley-born comedian
Lenny Henry,
Daniel Taylor, and
Smethwick-born actress
Julie Walters are sometimes mistaken for Brummie-speakers by outsiders.
Birmingham and
Coventry accents are also quite distinct, despite the proximity of the cities. To the untrained ear, however, all of these accents may sound very similar, just as British English speakers can find it hard to distinguish between
Canadian and
USA accents, or Australian and New Zealand accents.
As with all English regional accents, the Brummie accent also grades into
RP English. The accent of presenter
Cat Deeley is listed by her voiceover agency, Curtis Brown, as "RP/Birmingham".
Pronunciation
It is a common misconception that people form Birmingham speak like those from the Black Country. (Wolverhampton, Dudley, Walsall etc) Brummies DO NOT say 'Yow' heavily pronunciating the 'ow' of 'You' (it is unlikely that people from the Black Country speak like that either). Noddy Holder is also not a Brummie.
Below are some common features of the Brummie accent (a given speaker may not necessarily use all, or use a feature consistently). The letters enclosed in square brackets — [] — use the . The corresponding example texts enclosed in double quotes (") are spelt so that a reader using
Received Pronunciation (RP) can approximate the sounds.
- The vowel of mouth (RP [aʊ]) can be [ɛʊ].
- The vowel of goat (RP [əʊ]) can be close to [ɑʊ] (so to an RP speaker, goat may sound like "go-t").
- Final unstressed /i/, as in happy, may be realised as [əi], though this varies considerably between speakers.
- The letters ng often represent /ŋɡ/ where RP has just /ŋ/ (for example singer as [siŋɡə]). See Ng coalescence.
- Both the vowels of strut and foot as [ʊ], as in northern England. See foot-strut split.
- Short 'a', [a] as opposed to [ɑː] in RP, in words like bath, cast and chance (but aunt and laugh both have [ɑː]). See trap-bath split.
- Final unstressed /ə/ may be realised as [a].
- In a few cases, voicing of final /s/ (for example bus as [bʊz]).
- Some rolling of prevocalic /r/ (some speakers; for example in "crime").
Recordings of Brummie speakers with phonetic features described in
SAMPA format can be found at the
Collect Britain dialects site referenced below.
Rhymes and vocabulary in the works of
William Shakespeare suggest that he used a local dialect (Birmingham and his birthplace,
Stratford-upon-Avon, are both in the English West Midland dialect area.)
Stereotypes
A study was conducted in 2008 where people were asked to grade the intelligence of a person based on their accent and the Brummie accent was ranked as the least intelligent accent. It even scored lower than being silent, an example of the stereotype attached to the Brummie accent.
According to
Birmingham English: A Sociolinguistic Study (
Steve Thorne, 2003), among UK listeners "Birmingham English in previous academic studies and opinion polls consistently fares as the most disfavoured variety of British English, yet with no satisfying account of the dislike".
Since, as he shows, overseas visitors in contrast find it "lilting and melodious", he argues that such dislike is driven by various linguistic myths and social factors peculiar to the UK ("social
snobbery, negative media
stereotyping, the poor public image of the City of Birmingham, and the north/south geographical and linguistic divide").
For instance, despite the city's cultural and innovative history, its industrial background (as depicted by the arm-and-hammer in
Birmingham's coat of arms) has led to a muscular and unintelligent stereotype: a "Brummagem screwdriver" or "Brummie screwdriver" is UK slang for a hammer.
Steve Thorne also cites the mass media and entertainment industry where actors, usually non-Birmingham, have used inaccurate accents and/or portrayed negative roles. Examples include Benny from the soap
Crossroads, a feckless character played by
Paul Henry with a hybrid Birmingham-
Worcester accent many viewers assumed to be Birmingham because of the setting, and characters played by
Battersea-born actor
Timothy Spall: for instance, the boring Barry Taylor in
Auf Wiedersehen Pet (The character Taylor was actually supposed to be from
Tipton) and Andy, the sarcastic
virtual reality attendant in the
Red Dwarf episode "
Back to Reality". The actor
Mark Williams also specialises in amiable but stupid Birmingham characters. One of
Harry Enfield's comedy characters, portrayed an exaggerated Brummie (actually "Yam Yam"), whose catchline was "we are considerably richer than yow".
Lennie Godber is a criminal from Birmingham in the Television series,
Porridge
Advertisements are another medium where many perceive stereotypes. Journalist Lydia Stockdale, writing in the
Birmingham Post ("Pig ignorant about the Brummie accent", December 2, 2004), commented on advertisers' association of Birmingham accents with pigs: the pig in the ad for Colman's Potato Bakes,
Nick Park's
Hells Angel Pigs for
British Gas and
ITV's "Dave the window-cleaner pig" all had Brummie accents. More recently, a
Halifax bank advertisement featuring
Howard Brown, a Birmingham- born and based employee, was replaced by an animated version with an exaggerated comical accent overdubbed by a
Cockney actor.
The
BBC has alleged that intonation and rhythm is unvaried and that most sentences end with downward intonation. This can give a false impression of despondency and lack of imagination. Apart from intonation “Brummie” resembles other Midlands dialects.
(External Link
) Steve Thorne disagrees. Thorn insists that no accent is a monotone. If an accent lowers logically it varies. Thorn claims further that typical Birmingham speech frequently rises in tone.
Thorn recorded samples of similar people speaking with different English accents. One was Brummie. About a hundred native speakers and another hundred non-native English speakers rated the recordings. British listeners who didn't distinguist between Brummie and
Black Country accents rated Brummie higher than Black Country. Foreign speakers rated Brummie highly.
(External Link
)
Dialect
According to the
PhD thesis of
Steve Thorne at the
University of Birmingham Department of English, Birmingham English is "a dialectal hybrid of northern, southern,
Midlands,
Warwickshire,
Staffordshire and
Worcestershire speech", also with elements from the languages and dialects of its
Asian and
Afro-Caribbean communities.
Traditional expressions include:
"A bit black over Bill's mothers" ... Likely to rain soon (now widespread). [Commonlyattributed to Black Country dialect: "Bill's mothers" features in a variety of forms - such as the reference to any obscure location being "the back of Bill's mothers".]
"Babby" ... Variation of baby.
"Go and play up your own end" ... Said to children from a different street making a nuisance. It has been used as the title of the autobiographical book and musical play about the Birmingham childhood of radio presenter and entertainer Malcolm Stent.
"Gunter" ... to fix, work on or repair, mainly used a verb (example usage "I'm gonna gunter the car" equates to "I'm going to repair the car"), other forms include 'guntered' (example usage "the cars guntered" equates to "the car is fixed", alternate usage "I guntered the tele, but it still doesn't work" equates to "I worked on the television, but it's still broken").
"Keep away from the 'oss road" / "mind the 'orse road"/ "Kip aert th'oss road" ... An admonition to travel safely, originally a warning to children in the days of horse-drawn traffic.["Th'ossroad" may also have referred to the towpath alongside the canals found throughout the region - which presented the additional hazard to the unwary of falling into the canal. These expressions too, are commonly attributed to Black Country dialect rather than that from Birmingham.]
"Rock" ... a children's hard sweet (as in "give us a rock").
"Snap" ... food, a meal, allegedly derived from the act of eating itself (example usage "I'm off to get my snap" equates to "I'm leaving to get my dinner").
"Trap" ... to leave suddenly, or flee.
"Up the cut" ... Up the canal (not uniquely Birmingham).
"Yampy" (often "dead yampy") Mad, daft, barmy (also used is the word "Saft", as in "Yow big saft babbie") - Although, many Black Country Folk believe yampy is a black country word originating from the Dudley/Tipton area and has been stolen and claimed as their own by both Birmingham and Coventry.Further Information
Get more info on 'Brummie'.
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