Cockney

I’ve bin sat ‘ere

all on me Jack Jones

Overview

► Introduction

Ø Getting started...

Ø Sociolinguistic aspect

Ø What is rhyming slang?

► Morphology

► Phonology

► Idioms

Where is Cockney spoken?

Bells of St. Mary le Bow

East End, Stepney, Hackney, Shoreditch Poplar and Bow

Etymology

► Cock’s egg

► Cockaigne

► Introduction

Ø Getting started...

Ø Sociolinguistics

Ø What is Cockney rhyming slang?

► Morphology

► Phonology

► Idioms

Sociolinguistic aspect

► basilectal end of the London accent

► broadest form

► “popular London” is not the same as Cockney

► Stigmatized

► Working class accents

► East Enders

► TV shows (EastEnders BBC)

What is Cockney rhyming slang?

► Pair of associated words

► Rhymes

Morphology

► Use your loaf (of bread) [head]

► Can you lend me your dog and bone? [phone]

► I can smell a raspberry (tart) [fart]

► Are you still having problems with your trouble (and strife)? [wife]

► I’m ironing my uncle (bert) [shirt]

A bit of grammar

► Examples:

ü It’s me book you got ‘ere

ü You ain’t seen nothing yet

ü I didn’t see nuffink

Remember?

► I’ve bin sat ‘ere all on me Jack Jones

► I’ve been sitting here on my own

Phonology: introduction

► Non-rhotic (English R)

► tuner [ˈtjuːnə] vs. tuna [ˈtjuːnə]

► Pronounced /ə/

TH-fronting

► TH-sound

► /θ/ -> [f]

► Examples:

Ø thin = fin

Ø three = free

Ø /ð/ -> [v] (most cases)

Ø /ð/ -> [d] (beginning of words)

Ø Examples:

Ø brother [brʌvə]

Ø bother [bɒvə]

Ø this : ðis -> [dis]

Ø This maths thing is a lot of bother

Ø /dis mafs fing iz ə lɒɁ ə bɒvə/

TH-sound

► English: very narrow mouth

► Cockney: much wider

► Another example:

Ø bath

Glottal stop

► T-sound, especially in the ends of words or in the middle between two vocals

► “Oh owwwwwwwww”

► Examples:

► bitter – [bɪʔə]

► butter – [bʌʔə]

► betting – [bɛʔɪŋ]

► pity – [pɪʔi]

► “What a lot of bother”

► /wɒɁ ə lɒɁ ə bɒvə/

► /p,t,k/ is almost invariably glottalized in final position

► Examples:

► cat =
up =
sock =

H-dropping

► omission of initial /h/

► Examples:

ü harm /ɑːm/

ü heart /ɑːt/

ü hand /ænd/

ü hate /eɪt/

Vowels

► “aɪ” – sound è “ɒɪ”

► like /lɒɪk/ (“oil”)

► nice /nɒɪs/

► tides /tɒɪdz/

Monophthongization

► aɪ (diphthong) -> monophthongized

► Example:

► Window /wɪndoʊ/ -> /wɪndə/

► = diphthong -> low vowel monophthong

Quiz

► She has such long bacons !

► A. Hair

► B. Legs

► C. Holidays

► What beautiful minces !

► A. Stars

► B. Eyes

► C. Flowers

► I don't know what she's rabbiting about.

► A. Talking

► B. Worrying

► C. Thinking

► Hand over the bees.

► A. Money

► B. Salt

► C. Book