Welsh Zootographer
Well-Known Member
Think Paul O'Grady, he's Birkenhead.A Wirral accent? I’m currently Wirral based and even I don’t know what that sounds like!
Think Paul O'Grady, he's Birkenhead.A Wirral accent? I’m currently Wirral based and even I don’t know what that sounds like!
A Wirral accent? I’m currently Wirral based and even I don’t know what that sounds like!
Think Paul O'Grady, he's Birkenhead.![]()
Like I said, it's like a gentler Scouse but with Cheshire influences rather than the Lancashire influences found in, say, St Helens.
Travelodge recently had a vote for the Nations Favourite Scousers and the top 4 were used to name the 4 floors of their new hotel at John Lennon airport, numbers 5 to 7 were used to name their 3 meeting rooms.I'd say a Cheshire accent is relatively posh, yes.
Paul O'grady's accent is quite typical of Birkenhead I feel, however that is much more Scouse than most of the rest of the Wirral.
Perhaps the 'Wirral accent' is best viewed as a clinal intergrade zone rather than a distinct species of it's own![]()
Were they all the same person? The UK is confusing.
Travelodge recently had a vote for the Nations Favourite Scousers and the top 4 were used to name the 4 floors of their new hotel at John Lennon airport, numbers 5 to 7 were used to name their 3 meeting rooms.
Floor 4 is now the Paul O'Grady floor despite him not being a Scouser! (Also in the top 10 was John Bishop who grew up in Runcorn...)
I'd say a Cheshire accent is relatively posh, yes.
Paul O'grady's accent is quite typical of Birkenhead I feel, however that is much more Scouse than most of the rest of the Wirral.
Perhaps the 'Wirral accent' is best viewed as a clinal intergrade zone rather than a distinct species of it's own![]()
Speaking as a Wallaseyan (indeed an Old Wallaseyan), I had met some people who can detect the accent from that top corner of the Wirral. I have lived elsewhere for nearly 40 years, so I have lost most of mine, although I hope I am still mildly northern. People's sensitivity to accents varies considerably, the most sensitive can become dialect coaches for actors, although I don't think any real person can match the skills of Prof. Higgins in Pygmalion. I didn't think I had much of an ear, until I started to watch Bake-Off and quickly realised that Paul Hollywood is from Wallasey too![]()
So y’all just piss him off basically?Oh, there's no feudjust a healthy dose of good old fashioned British piss-taking.
Which is very appropriate, as @Brum is pissed quite often![]()
I believe this is an opportune time for a quick course in British dialect and slang:
Piss-taking = Teasing
Pissed = Drunk
Pissed off = Angry
So, we don't piss him off - we just take the piss, whilst coincidentally he is off getting pissed![]()