Subject: RE: BS: People from your town called? From: bobad Date: 15 Feb 08 - 07:17 PM Or the folks from this town in Newfoundland? |
Subject: RE: BS: People from your town called? From: Gene Burton Date: 15 Feb 08 - 07:24 PM People from Southampton, like myself, are known across the south coast as "Scummers"...I've been told that this dates back from a time when the Portsmouth dockers were on strike and dockers from Southampton were drafted in to blackleg; and "scummer" is either a corruption or variant of "scab". A moderately interesting titbit, if true. |
Subject: RE: BS: People from your town called? From: Bee-dubya-ell Date: 15 Feb 08 - 07:26 PM People who live in Pensacola are called "Pensacolians", but people who live at Pensacola Beach are called either "Drunks" or "Parrotheads". Or both. |
Subject: RE: BS: People from your town called? From: Gurney Date: 15 Feb 08 - 08:26 PM In the rest of the country, we're called JAFAs. Just Another Fucking Aucklander. |
Subject: RE: BS: People from your town called? From: Padre Date: 15 Feb 08 - 10:15 PM In the town of Eagle Rock, they're 'Eagle Rockers' Padre, who really lives closer to Lick Run and the Runners |
Subject: RE: BS: People from your town called? From: Bert Date: 15 Feb 08 - 11:42 PM People from the city of London and nearby are called Cockneys. Everyone in the Greater London Area is a Londoner. And we have our own song. "Maybe it's because I'm a Londoner" Are there songs for people from other places which mention them by name? |
Subject: RE: BS: People from your town called? From: M.Ted Date: 16 Feb 08 - 01:38 AM Thanks for the heads-up, BillD. Escalator/Elevator. Two different things, apparently. I'll remember that. |
Subject: RE: BS: People from your town called? From: Bert Date: 16 Feb 08 - 01:59 AM We were listening to Frank Muir one time on "My Word". They were playing an answer/question game. The answer was "Blemish" What was the question? . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . What language do they speak in Felgium? |
Subject: RE: BS: People from your town called? From: Mr Red Date: 16 Feb 08 - 08:44 AM Well people from Wedgebury (Wednesbury to those wot doh spake Black coontry) call themselves Wodensburgians or Wodensbergers. It has something to do with the name Wednesbury being derived from the god Woden (similar to Wednesday) and presumably a Tumuilous there. Though the Church is most definitely built on the site of an Opidum (Iron Age Hill Fort to you). I would assume the Woden connection comes from the years of Dane Law. |
Subject: RE: BS: People from your town called? From: theleveller Date: 16 Feb 08 - 09:03 AM "are people from Wetwang -Wetwangers or Wetwangites?" Linda, when I was at school in Bridlington, we just used to call them "Wangers"...or something very similar! |
Subject: RE: BS: People from your town called? From: Les from Hull Date: 16 Feb 08 - 09:50 AM I feel that I have to make a correction. theleveller says that people from Hull are called Codheads. That is the name for people from Grimsby. Hull people are properly called 'Hullensians', but are more colloquially known as 'Hullkids', as in the expression 'Hullkids against the World'. |
Subject: RE: BS: People from your town called? From: goatfell Date: 16 Feb 08 - 10:08 AM people frae Glasgow and called Glaswegians, people frae Aberdeen are called Aberdoians and people frae Dundee are Dundonians (sorry for the spelling). I'm from Saltcoats which is on the west coast of Scotland and we don't have anything yet. |
Subject: RE: BS: People from your town called? From: Alice Date: 16 Feb 08 - 10:13 AM Bozemanites (not Bozos) |
Subject: RE: BS: People from your town called? From: Mrs.Duck Date: 16 Feb 08 - 05:37 PM People where I live, Pontefract, are called Pomfresians. |
Subject: RE: BS: People from your town called? From: GUEST,Art Thieme Date: 16 Feb 08 - 11:43 PM A town close by us here is named OGLESBY. I do suspect most anyone from there of any gender at all are OGLESBIANS. |
Subject: RE: BS: People from your town called? From: Amos Date: 17 Feb 08 - 12:49 AM "Not nearly as interesting, but this is how the town Arab, Alabama got it's name. The Postmaster sent in three names: 1. Bird 2. Ink 3. Arad (his name) They couldn't read his hand writing and named the town Arab. It's pronounced A-rab. Accent on A. The postmaster was too lazy to write in and have it changed so Arab it was. Tualatin where I live now is an Indian name meaning lazy river. The area of Tualatin Valley which became Beaverton was originally the home of a Native American tribe known as the Atfalati which settlers mispronounced as Tualatin. The river earned its name, which means "lazy river," from the Atfalati people who lived in the Tualatin Basin. Basically, it is more like a long skinny lake than a river and has very little current, particularly in the summer months. " (From a friend) A |
Subject: RE: BS: People from your town called? From: catspaw49 Date: 17 Feb 08 - 01:29 AM Jackasses. Spaw |
Subject: RE: BS: People from your town called? From: GUEST,Tunesmith Date: 17 Feb 08 - 11:03 AM I live in Liverpool, UK, and some 20 miles north of here is the seaside town of Southport ( which boasts the Bothy Folk Song Club - over 40 years old and still going!). Now, people born in Southport are called Sandgrounders. The area, I believe, has the longest, continous expanse of beach/sand-dunes in the country. |
Subject: RE: BS: People from your town called? From: Ernest Date: 17 Feb 08 - 11:26 AM I grew up in Giessen, Hesse, Germany. Giessener are also known as "Schlammbeisser", which translates to "Mudbiters". Try to beat THAT. ;0) Ernest |
Subject: RE: BS: People from your town called? From: Bert Date: 17 Feb 08 - 12:36 PM No songs yet guys? Come on you're not trying. |
Subject: RE: BS: People from your town called? From: Little Hawk Date: 17 Feb 08 - 12:52 PM You want a song? Look up "Welcome to Orillia" on YouTube. |
Subject: RE: BS: People from your town called? From: Mr Happy Date: 17 Feb 08 - 01:06 PM .............& then there's how people in other countries are called by others, as opposed to how they refer to themselves. Germans call themselves Deustch, English speaking nations call them Germans, & the French nations refer to them as Allemande. I've heard that the indigenous peoples of the polar regions don't like to be known as Eskimos, preferring Inuit or some other native name. Similarly with aboriginals around the world being unhappy by being called 'Indians' or 'abos'. The only Indians are from India, for English speakers – the inhabitants of the subcontinent referring to it as Hindustan or Burrat (sp?) depending of their ethnicity. There's lots've suffixes attached to land/country names to describe their respective inhabitants, but again seems no rationale to this labelling. As in English, Polish etc, but not Americ-ish or Peruv-ish. A rule which does seem to emerge is that generally, countries whose names end in 'ia' or 'a' simply have an 'n' tagged on to form Canadian, Italian, Bolivian etc But why not Canadonian, Maltian etc? Anyone know? |
Subject: RE: BS: People from your town called? From: Little Hawk Date: 17 Feb 08 - 02:10 PM Yes, the Germans call themselves the Deutsch (similar to "Dutch"?) and they live in Deutchsland....while the Dutch call themselves Nederlanders (I think so, anyway), and they live in Nederland, which we call Holland or The Netherlands. Mysterious, isn't it? I wonder what the Chinese really call themselves? Or the Japanese? |
Subject: RE: BS: People from your town called? From: Bert Date: 17 Feb 08 - 03:03 PM That's about the town LH, I want songs about the inhabitants. |
Subject: RE: BS: People from your town called? From: Mr Red Date: 18 Feb 08 - 08:13 AM Maybe its because I'm a Londoner - that I love London town. Will of Winsberry I belong tae Glasga, dear old Glasga toon. Liverpool Loo OK not much in the noun posessive dept but it should get folks thinking. Mutton Chops & I started a song "I'm Orilla Bound" but never got it finished. |
Subject: RE: BS: People from your town called? From: Santa Date: 18 Feb 08 - 11:13 AM People from Blackpool are described as being "sandgrown". Both my kids were born in Blackpool but disclaim the name, having been brought up on the Fylde. Prestonians come from Preston. I was born in Newcastle upon Tyne, and am happy at being called a Geordie, as most know what that means. But having spend most of my youth on the Durham coal field makes me a Pityakker - those who talk the language of the pits - pitmatic. Those from Sunderland call themselves Makkems, but that's something that's appeared in the 40 years since I left the area. Anyone from the Tees is a southerner. Anyone from south of the Tees is either a Tyke (Yorkshireman) or a bloody southerner. My wife is from south Birmingham but is not a Brummie (from brumagem, said to match the local pronunciation). |
Subject: RE: BS: People from your town called? From: Mr Red Date: 18 Feb 08 - 01:09 PM How con yoh be frum Sowf Brum and not a Brummie - by osmosis at least? |
Subject: RE: BS: People from your town called? From: Snuffy Date: 18 Feb 08 - 01:22 PM Depends which part of South Brum you mean: Balsall Heath or Stirchley yes, but Shirley or Hollywood? |
Subject: RE: BS: People from your town called? From: meself Date: 18 Feb 08 - 01:29 PM "Halifax West Yorkshire, generally known as morons." "Avonmore - Avonmorons of course." Hmmm - there's a neighbourhood in Halifax, NS, called 'Jollimore' - its inhabitants are, of course, 'Jollimorons'. |
Subject: RE: BS: People from your town called? From: Lonesome EJ Date: 18 Feb 08 - 03:12 PM Broomfield, CO. So we sound like defensive players on a curling team...Broomfielders. |
Subject: RE: BS: People from your town called? From: Mrrzy Date: 18 Feb 08 - 09:16 PM Abidjanaises, if you're female, Abidjanais, if you're male. And I think people from Baltimore are Baltimorons. Charlottesvillians have no good nickname, unfortunately. The Enlightened? |
Subject: RE: BS: People from your town called? From: Mr Happy Date: 19 Feb 08 - 05:36 AM .......& them from South Shields are known as 'Sand Dancers' - dunno why though? |
Subject: RE: BS: People from your town called? From: Mr Happy Date: 19 Feb 08 - 05:39 AM 'Abidjanaises, if you're female, Abidjanais, if you're male.' Is 'Abidjan' a country or a town? |
Subject: RE: BS: People from your town called? From: The PA Date: 19 Feb 08 - 06:10 AM Bromsgrove - Swedes. |
Subject: RE: BS: People from your town called? From: theleveller Date: 19 Feb 08 - 06:27 AM "theleveller says that people from Hull are called Codheads. That is the name for people from Grimsby." Well, Les, I've always called them Codheads and I've got the scars to prove it (mostly acquired in Humber Street pubs in the late 1960s)... Actually, I recently discovered that one side of my family hails from Hull - greatx5 grandfather was a whaler who was lost in Baffin Bay in the 1830s and great x3 grandfather was a sea captain. Really very embarrassing! |
Subject: RE: BS: People from your town called? From: GUEST,ibo Date: 19 Feb 08 - 08:12 AM we are known as smoggies in middlesbrough,because of our industrial heritage,although the death of heavy industry now means the air pollution is no problem now.Smoggie is less offensive than being called a geordie. |
Subject: RE: BS: People from your town called? From: Mr Happy Date: 19 Feb 08 - 10:06 AM .........& those from Hamburg, Beefburgers? |
Subject: RE: BS: People from your town called? From: The Fooles Troupe Date: 20 Feb 08 - 09:43 AM I grew up in Bundaberg - home of the Rum. At one time there was a debate whether local people should be called Bundabergians, or Bundaburgundians. The latter seemed to be more favoured, as there was some dislike of sounding like some form of Hamburger... I'm not making this up you know... |
Subject: RE: BS: People from your town called? From: Mr Happy Date: 20 Feb 08 - 10:13 AM Bundaberg? If you rearrange the letters, you get some quirky anagrams: badger bun bug brenda begun drab bung bread |
Subject: RE: BS: People from your town called? From: Mr Red Date: 20 Feb 08 - 01:26 PM Shirley is Solihull which aye Brum thems posh. An Hollywood aye Brum, 'sover the border and thems pays rates tew Bromsgrove. Ar shud no - I married a wench frum theer and we had tew goo tew the reg office theer. Wished I didn't. Owr Kid. |
Subject: RE: BS: People from your town called? From: Gurney Date: 21 Feb 08 - 01:32 AM Mr Red, I thought all Black Country folk were called Am Yo's? "Am yo gewin to see owr muther this week?" |
Subject: RE: BS: People from your town called? From: Rowan Date: 21 Feb 08 - 11:07 PM People from your town called? I wish they'd left a note to say why! But, more to the point, people from Armidale (in the Oz New England) are frequently called Armadilians. It confuses herpetologists. Cheers, Rowan |
Subject: RE: BS: People from your town called? From: Rowan Date: 22 Feb 08 - 12:32 AM Q.: What do they call people who live in Antarctica? A.: Cold. True, and "Blasted" in those parts where the average windspeed every night over summer is 30 knots. Those of us who've been expeditioners (there's one of the terms used to describe us; another is "winterers" if you stayed there over winter) with Australia's Antarctic Division, were sometimes called "Sharp Anaries" (pronounced "anahries"). We were members of the Australian National Antarctic Research Expedition (to whichever base in the relevant year) and this was known as ANARE. At the time I was there (1968-70 for the 1969 Mawson ANARE) each of us was issued with personal clobber which included clothing, both domestic and protective, first aid kit and a foldup pocket knife with one blade (straight edge as used in the days of sail), marlinspike and a short tab that could be used as a lever or screwdriver. The blade, as issued, was invariably blunt so the knives were routinely known as "Sharp Anaries" and the same put-down was applied to many of the items or systems routinely used "down south"; eg, the boots were "sharp anare boots" and the summer jackets were "sharp anare jackets". They were, however, perfectly adequate to their tasks and mine are still functioning quite well, thank you. The appellation worked with people at Australian stations but I don't know what personnel at other nationalities' stations called themselves. Cheers, Rowan |