Stephen Metcalfe what’s a pile of bs? That they were cheeky lads in the 90’s? They were haha do you not remember them on SM: TV live? Or CDUK? Or even on Byker Grove! Their thing was that they were a couple of cheeky lads from Newcastle
Our slang is just the best man! Lads you make us proud daily. I'm so proud to be a geordie. Wouldn't change it for the world. Love you both millions. Xxx
@@mylordandsaviourisjesuschr7577 If that's what you'd like to believe. I can tell your seething because it hurts you seeing the comments about those little jumped up pricks🤣
“If you wanted to tell haddaway to go away you’d say hadaway haddaway” Literally the phrase i’ve grew up hearing my whole life from teachers 🤣 but i still love being a geordie no matter what 🙌🏻
That's so good to hear. I'm 23 and moved away from NE when I was 19, but still make a proper effort to use local NE terms. Been worried about them potentially disappearing, so chuffed to see your comment.
Yeah, Canny is a strange word. You can tell someone to "gan canny" if they're going somewhere. Something can be canny. "Aye that's canny that" Someone can be canny. "Worra canny bairn" Something can also be canny good. "Aye, that's canny good that like, y' knaa".
We are the Geordies...the Geordie boot boys and we are mental and we are mad.......we are the loyalest football supporters the world has ever had!! I LOVE BEING A GEORDIE
As a nurse we use “TWOC” to mean “trial without catheter” 😂 When a doctor asks you to TWOC a patient it means to remove the catheter and see how they get on without it 😂
As a Nordic person it’s interesting to hear the words derived from Nordic language. Pretty sure nebby is one of those, but other examples could be yem and bairn… I wonder if there were even more similarities in the past
Another Geordie adjective is 'loppy'. It means something dirty that looks like it might have fleas. 'Wash your hair, you look loppy.' Not long ago I found out that loppa is Swedish for flea!
Absolutely, there was quite a bit of mutual ineligibility between speakers of old Anglo-Saxon English and the Danish invaders/settlers. So much so that, after a few generations, the Danes had a massive impact on the development of what we now know as modern English. I think the impact is more keenly felt in the North of England and some areas of Scotland as those regional dialects are very distinct and noticeable.
I as a northgerman girl love goergies slang , simply cos i think its much easier to undersand like the normal oxford english + our northgerman "Plattdeutsch" slang too ! Ps: I kive there in northgermany where i can watch over the northsea horizont to newcastle(britain/scotty) 😍 . Always when i trevel to the coast i wanna write a postpottle in hope everyone on your side the sea will find, whrite back & start a letterfriebdship with me ^^ .
Did a pretty good job at remembering Just sad they didn't finish hadaway The full expression is "hadaway and shite" often used to express disbelief... Believe it or not 😁
When I first started working in the care sector I came across Twoc and I couldn't understand Why they were using the word. I asked why and they said it stood for trial without catheter. I said oh I thought you meant twoc as in twoc a car 🤣🤣
Chucky Vicious then why did you watch this video and take the time to comment? I find it hilarious that people say they don’t like Ant and Dec, but still follow them and watch videos with them in it!
Us Scots do say Bonnie but not a lot. Certainly not as much as the Newcastle folk 😊 And erm.. i thought we had crazy words .. not anymore though after this 😂
A lot of these words are similar to Scots slang. Not 100% the same. Instead of a spelk, we call it a skelv. A radgie in Scotland means a temper-tantrum (The bairn's haein' a radgie = the kid's having a tantrum). A gadgie is a very poor, dirty, uneducated, and loutish person (i.e a ned/chav). We use nebby and napper in the exact same way though.
Hadaway - Go Away Spelk - Splinter Radgie - You’re going mad Bonnie - Good-looking, pretty Sneck - A Door Latch Gadgie - A Guy Radgie Gadgie - A mad man Nebby - Nosey Twoc - stands for “taken without owners consent” Kets- Sweets Nappa- Head Canny - Alright, good Ha’way - Come on or Come off it
I was born Newcastle, I dont remember most of these, some of them I do. I wish I still had my geordie accent, sometimes it comes out of me by accident and I laugh
Isolation is the reason: cut off from Scots by the border; cut off from English by the Danelaw. (That’s why Yorkshire is far more Nordic in influence than Geordie which is rooted more in Old English than Norse).
Dec's a wee bit older than me but we used to twoc stuff off each other's desks all the time at school. You'd nick something, yell "TWOCKED" and then chuck it across the room to someone else. Fun times :)
Most of the words discussed are local dialect, and dialect is not slang. Some, such as twoc and napper, are general terms found across the country and not specific to the North-East. The main influence is from the invading Angles coming to what became Northumbria, speaking their version of Old English. Hardly any Viking words came into Geordie and Northumbrian speech, as the Vikings didn't settle in modern Northumberland, although they did famously attack the area and settled in southern parts of County Durham..
It would be great to know exactly how the Angles pronounced their version of Anglo-Saxon and if this has affected how English in the north east is pronounced. As they mostly came from what became Denmark I wonder if their pronunciation influenced Danish, which although is a North Germanic accent has a very different pronunciation from Norwegian and Swedish. I've actually no idea to be honest, I'm just wondering.
I love Newcastle - I love Ant and Dec. Geordie accents are amazing. When I was in Newcastle, I got eargasims. I couldn’t always understand the Geordies and they couldn’t always understand me but boy, what an accent ❤❤❤❤❤❤
@@mylordandsaviourisjesuschr7577 If you keep putting lol on the end of every sentence it won't help you know. Another pointless comment. Maybe you should go to bed now.
I'm from the UK but i never spoke slang i was always quite a formal girl but the rest of the kids that i hung about round were always talking slang and i would never understood them haha.
I just answered this to somebody else. The Sydney Harbour bridge (opened 1932) was designed by the same Middlesborough engineers who designed the Tyne Bridge in Newcastle, which opened in 1928. They based in on the Tyne Bridge but made it bigger.
There's a canny few missed off. I recommend you getting a Geordie translate book if you're visiting us 😂You definitely would not understand the older generation of Geordie slang. My dad talks so fast and his accent is very strong.
I swear ant and Dec never age.
Promoting Young Talent it’s called Botox mate
Ikr
I mean they're only in their 40s it's not like they're 70
There both in there 70’s
Slip Stream132 40s actually
The way Dec laughed at twoc makes me think he was a cheeky lad in the 90s 😂
Definitely 😂
Ha he was. That was their thing
@@joshhunt4146 what a pile of bs😂😂😂 no such thing
Stephen Metcalfe what’s a pile of bs? That they were cheeky lads in the 90’s? They were haha do you not remember them on SM: TV live? Or CDUK? Or even on Byker Grove! Their thing was that they were a couple of cheeky lads from Newcastle
@@joshhunt4146 yes but they certainly weren't out thieving like the comment suggests. Twoccing only means one thing
When Dec nicked the piece of paper from Ant and was like “twoc” - oh my 😂
He's done that before... 🤣🤣 As a young'un of course!
yeah twoc if you take everything but like if your mate got some crisps and you take some you been "taxed"
anyone from newcastle get told “shy bairns get nowt” every day as a kid because you wouldn’t ask for a sweet?
Just down the road, but “shy bairns get nee toys” was another expression. I love our accent.
I got "shy bairns get nowt" but also ""I want" never gets". I was confused a lot.
Me friend always says that😂
Shy weans get no sweeties we call it in Glasgow
Yup all the time
Way aye Newcastle 👍🏼
HAWAY MAN
A Floating Pineapple Howay man*
A Floating Pineapple howay not haway
Mackems are better
Rah rah red and white army
I want Jerrie (Jade and Perrie) to just sit and chat with them in a room and have a convo. They'd all be epic together.
Perrie and jade aren't Geordies they're sand dancers
@@Geordiegirl36 Only north easterners are going to get this! 😂 Pair of Shields lasses!
Exactly what I was thinking 🤣
@@Geordiegirl36 Dk if ur joking but mate they weren’t talking ab blooming east Enders 😂
Along with Cheryl Cole, Jimmy Nail and Ross Noble shouting Toblerone
Our slang is just the best man! Lads you make us proud daily. I'm so proud to be a geordie. Wouldn't change it for the world. Love you both millions. Xxx
Perv
Being from Newcastle and working away, this video made me smile
They both seem so much happier and more settled now. 🥰
Hopefully that'll change in the near future.
@@esme4590 No
@@mylordandsaviourisjesuschr7577 If that's what you'd like to believe. I can tell your seething because it hurts you seeing the comments about those little jumped up pricks🤣
@@mylordandsaviourisjesuschr7577 No you don't. Its obvious your crying.
@@mylordandsaviourisjesuschr7577 Constantly turning the comment doesn't achieve anything. Again your struggling behind those tears.
Omg I love it when Dec took the piece of paper from Ant and Dec was like “twocked” lol 😂
I grew up in the Midlands but I knew about half of these because my Mum was from Newcastle. She used to call us 'the bairns' (children).
My da did the same he was from Newsham Blyth 💕
I love that they tick it like they know more than ant and Dec about geordie slang 😂
Hannah Gibson they spelt it wrong it’s ‘Howay’ for Geordies.
I was really hoping they were gonna say hadaway n shite I'm from Newcastle and its one of my fave sayings
Just seeing their names simply bring so much joy to me it’s unreal
dec’s little “howay the lads” i love him
It made my day for some reason when the producer went "Wait, what's that?"
I love these two..
I prefer Peter Sutcliffe
I like these two. Very down to earth.
They spelled howay the Mackem way! Mackem’s spell it Ha’way and the Geordie spelling is Howay!
Josh Hunt cuz mackems are better aha
@@billymilton1999 mackems (sunderland) jordies (newcastle) ow did i know that been a brummie (birmingham) lol
@@billymilton1999 Better at drooling when you speak to them
I am a Mackem and I say spelk
Michael Killigrew it’s Geordie you radgie
“If you wanted to tell haddaway to go away you’d say hadaway haddaway” Literally the phrase i’ve grew up hearing my whole life from teachers 🤣 but i still love being a geordie no matter what 🙌🏻
Ha’way is Mackem.
Howay is Geordie
Ah way - Teesside
Yep
SabrinaSpellman howay= proper way of spelling it
@@howaymandan6624 Howay isn't a word you twat.
Tom Lynch I am a Mackem and I say ha’way
I love these lads and Geordie slang, first I hated it, because it was so hard to understand, but now I love it!!! Also it's catchy way to speak.....
The Geordie accent has watered down now since there’s a lot of southern people in the north east now.
Aye ya reet mate
Am Proud to be a Geordie
Why Aye
Alan Shearer Wey aye
Fisk Allure Well Aye
Same love Newcastle I live near
Same ⚫️⚪️⚫️⚪️
The north east is the best ngl🤘😂
Serena Owen I’m in NE😂👍🏻
Aye big up haha
Defo marra
It really is, Hartlepool born and raised
Serena Owen yup! So true. Mackems are the best tho
I'm so happy to see more of Ant and Dec I love them so much
Loved it Dec singing Cushy Butterfiled! Had to sing it in a play in the 80s. 1st play and painfully shy at the time. :-D
Say all of these and I’m 21 from Durham so when they were saying like twok was just a nineties thing, it’s not people still use it 😂
That's so good to hear. I'm 23 and moved away from NE when I was 19, but still make a proper effort to use local NE terms. Been worried about them potentially disappearing, so chuffed to see your comment.
@@oc4026 Howay man.
Yeah, Canny is a strange word.
You can tell someone to "gan canny" if they're going somewhere.
Something can be canny. "Aye that's canny that"
Someone can be canny. "Worra canny bairn"
Something can also be canny good. "Aye, that's canny good that like, y' knaa".
I love Ant and Dec but sick of seeing their coupons on my computer screen and across the Santander HQ 😂
We are the Geordies...the Geordie boot boys and we are mental and we are mad.......we are the loyalest football supporters the world has ever had!!
I LOVE BEING A GEORDIE
Or if you’re an NHS worker TWOC is Trial Without Catheter 😂
Literally came here to write this comment 😂
I thought spelk was just what it was called😂
same loll
I went until I was about 20 before even hearing the word splinter and I didn't know what they were talking about.
As a nurse we use “TWOC” to mean “trial without catheter” 😂
When a doctor asks you to TWOC a patient it means to remove the catheter and see how they get on without it 😂
Yeah.I thought of that as well.
looka av just pua twoc'd that gadgies catheter hew!
As a Nordic person it’s interesting to hear the words derived from Nordic language. Pretty sure nebby is one of those, but other examples could be yem and bairn… I wonder if there were even more similarities in the past
Definitely as most of our heritage is Nordic
Another Geordie adjective is 'loppy'. It means something dirty that looks like it might have fleas. 'Wash your hair, you look loppy.' Not long ago I found out that loppa is Swedish for flea!
@@barrysteven5964 and in Danish it’s loppe! But that’s so cool, I’ve never heard the word loppy before
Hjem or jem/yem is from Nordic as well but it’s from Dane’s transporting goods in the tyne
Absolutely, there was quite a bit of mutual ineligibility between speakers of old Anglo-Saxon English and the Danish invaders/settlers. So much so that, after a few generations, the Danes had a massive impact on the development of what we now know as modern English. I think the impact is more keenly felt in the North of England and some areas of Scotland as those regional dialects are very distinct and noticeable.
I as a northgerman girl love goergies slang , simply cos i think its much easier to undersand like the normal oxford english + our northgerman "Plattdeutsch" slang too !
Ps:
I kive there in northgermany where i can watch over the northsea horizont to newcastle(britain/scotty) 😍 . Always when i trevel to the coast i wanna write a postpottle in hope everyone on your side the sea will find, whrite back & start a letterfriebdship with me ^^ .
Did a pretty good job at remembering
Just sad they didn't finish hadaway
The full expression is "hadaway and shite" often used to express disbelief... Believe it or not 😁
I learnt Geordie slang from auf weidiershen pet, especially Oz...who affectionately called women boilers 🤣
When I first started working in the care sector I came across Twoc and I couldn't understand Why they were using the word. I asked why and they said it stood for trial without catheter. I said oh I thought you meant twoc as in twoc a car 🤣🤣
Brains of the department...
What I’d do without these lads, I don’t know.
LOVE THEM!!! I just can't wait for Saturday 🎉🎉
Oooh me too!!! Will they finally get their teeth kicked in!? That's the only thing entertaining they could possibly produce.
Chucky Vicious then why did you watch this video and take the time to comment? I find it hilarious that people say they don’t like Ant and Dec, but still follow them and watch videos with them in it!
@@beth1814 I didn't watch it. It spewed it's way in there for some reason then I commented. All there is to it really.
@@mylordandsaviourisjesuschr7577 That's something you'd be entertained by if you like Wank n Dec.
@@mylordandsaviourisjesuschr7577 Your going to have to do better than spell checking🤣 That's all you have.
I love these guys. Always will.
Us Scots do say Bonnie but not a lot. Certainly not as much as the Newcastle folk 😊
And erm.. i thought we had crazy words .. not anymore though after this 😂
@@tunnagx 😜
As a fellow Scot, do you also use the word ‘gadgie’ but not in the way Geordies use it ??
@@meganrmt haha yes i recognised that one ... lets put it this way... I'm not one 😂😉
Esther B . me neither 🙋🏻♀️🙋🏻♀️😂😅 surprisingly I have friends in Glasgow that don’t know that word. Or the word mink (not the animal lol)
@@meganrmt they don't? 🤔... I've lived in a few places I'm not sure where i know it from..
Maybe when i was in kiwinning. 🤔
I love Ant and Dec man
Oh dear....
Chucky Vicious just shut up and hadaway you only hate them cos you are a mackem
@@howaymandan6624 Go back to school and learn English.
Chucky Vicious what u even doing on this video if u don’t like them you sad fuck
@@howaymandan6624 Go back to school and learn English.
Love how Ha’way is spelt the mackem way as the Geordie way is Ho’way. I’ve had so many arguments over which is the right way. It’s definitely Ha’way
Our version of sneck in Northern Ireland was snib. Left the door on the snib lol
@Tia Jones you will...as lots of Irish settled in liverpool xxx
North Wales and we say snib too or snake for some reason
We say it in north east England as well
I love our Geordie language
Love so much that they were reminiscing about using twoc at school and I still do this with my mates now 😂😂
I wouldn’t mind meeting them one day.
@@mylordandsaviourisjesuschr7577 That's probably turning you on.
@@mylordandsaviourisjesuschr7577 How do you know I'm a dirty tosser? Oh you fantasising aren't you?
@@mylordandsaviourisjesuschr7577 what makes you think I'm old? Are you fat?
@@mylordandsaviourisjesuschr7577 Oh dear, poor little fatty.
@@mylordandsaviourisjesuschr7577 Fart features? Oh dear you do have it bad dont you lardy?
I adore them to bits they need their own show or RUclips channel
Lone Note they have their own show...
In Yorkshire, a splinter is called a spell.
Gaynor and in Scotland, a skelf
I’ve never heard that in South Yorkshire. We just say splinter I think 🤔
@@emmajp_9385 it's a North Yorkshire thing.
we needed jade thirlwall to teach them and also jade in the jungle that would be such a blast lol and hilarious xx
“Does Sunderland exist?”
“Unfortunately, yes.”
Love seeing them happier :)
I honestly didn't know "sneck" wasn't common down South until my twenties, when my mates looked at me blankly after I used it.
Ant sure knows his Geordie history
Sneck is used in Lancashire.When I moved there from Eire,it was like learning another language 😲
I've met ant and gotten a picture with him, very nice in person as well as on tv
at 0:18 the subtitle says "howay" when in fact Dec says "way aye"
this is why i love being geordie
A lot of these words are similar to Scots slang. Not 100% the same. Instead of a spelk, we call it a skelv. A radgie in Scotland means a temper-tantrum (The bairn's haein' a radgie = the kid's having a tantrum). A gadgie is a very poor, dirty, uneducated, and loutish person (i.e a ned/chav). We use nebby and napper in the exact same way though.
I’m ganna start using ‘twoced’ at school 😂😂😂😂😂😂👍👍👍👍 love it! They are amazing ❤️
I’m from Hartlepool just below Newcastle and we use some of these 😂
Using the Mackem spelling of ha’way 😂
Its how the majority of the north spell it you big dosser not just sunderland
Toast- FUT in newcastle is howay
Sunderlands shits mate.
@@barry_b_benson2089 true that
Er wouldn't dare be from Sunderland, Hilton castle's wank
Bonnie is a Yorkshire thing too
Hadaway - Go Away
Spelk - Splinter
Radgie - You’re going mad
Bonnie - Good-looking, pretty
Sneck - A Door Latch
Gadgie - A Guy
Radgie Gadgie - A mad man
Nebby - Nosey
Twoc - stands for “taken without owners consent”
Kets- Sweets
Nappa- Head
Canny - Alright, good
Ha’way - Come on or Come off it
I’m from the west end of Newcastle and me parent went to your school mint hearing
I was born Newcastle,
I dont remember most of these, some of them I do. I wish I still had my geordie accent, sometimes it comes out of me by accident and I laugh
Put a reet smile on me face because it was the fog video I saw in suggestions before.
Seeing this makes me miss hyem man
Proud to be a Geordie 💕
Geordie is definitely a different language I didn't have a clue? I love Ant and Dec #nationaltreasures
Isolation is the reason: cut off from Scots by the border; cut off from English by the Danelaw. (That’s why Yorkshire is far more Nordic in influence than Geordie which is rooted more in Old English than Norse).
@@ne_one Actually geordie is more anglo saxon than anything else
Dec's a wee bit older than me but we used to twoc stuff off each other's desks all the time at school. You'd nick something, yell "TWOCKED" and then chuck it across the room to someone else. Fun times :)
They look so young these two. I still love them.
Why is "howay" spelt the way Mackems spell it?
Most of the words discussed are local dialect, and dialect is not slang. Some, such as twoc and napper, are general terms found across the country and not specific to the North-East. The main influence is from the invading Angles coming to what became Northumbria, speaking their version of Old English. Hardly any Viking words came into Geordie and Northumbrian speech, as the Vikings didn't settle in modern Northumberland, although they did famously attack the area and settled in southern parts of County Durham..
It would be great to know exactly how the Angles pronounced their version of Anglo-Saxon and if this has affected how English in the north east is pronounced. As they mostly came from what became Denmark I wonder if their pronunciation influenced Danish, which although is a North Germanic accent has a very different pronunciation from Norwegian and Swedish. I've actually no idea to be honest, I'm just wondering.
That explains why Durham is the way it is 😂
At 4:15 Sorry guys but the police use twoc but use the long version when arresting people
proud to be from Newcastle
rupaul should watch this for reference, in case there's a geordie queen on drag race UK series 2!
It’s weird how right now this video says 5 days ago but one day it’ll say 10 years ago
I love Dec’s laugh
I love the “twocked” one! Lol 😂
I love Newcastle - I love Ant and Dec.
Geordie accents are amazing. When I was in Newcastle, I got eargasims. I couldn’t always understand the Geordies and they couldn’t always understand me but boy, what an accent ❤❤❤❤❤❤
Aye that does happen up in Newcastle, we do have one of the hardest accents to understand in the country
Damn I LOVE this Geordie accent. Id have no idea wat they were sayin esp if they talked fast, but id love to listen to em speak anyway 😍😍😍
@@mylordandsaviourisjesuschr7577 Not going to happen. Why dont you tune into those two ponces instead.
Are you 5?
@@mylordandsaviourisjesuschr7577And another witty comment. Your struggling aren't you.
@@mylordandsaviourisjesuschr7577 If you keep putting lol on the end of every sentence it won't help you know. Another pointless comment. Maybe you should go to bed now.
@Lancashire Lass Again thank you!! I was only messing but yeah it seemed to get dead serious really fast!! Take care!!
I’ve lost count how many times I’ve watched this 💀
I'm from Scotland and I use the Bonnie one the daily but up here gadgie is a slag name for a "mink" or someone that's not well off
I'm from Scotland too!
Ant n dec are the best thing us brits have to offer 😂
Lived in newcastle for 29 years now. Would never of knew these words when i moved up from london! But i knew all of those..even say a few.
I'm from the UK but i never spoke slang i was always quite a formal girl but the rest of the kids that i hung about round were always talking slang and i would never understood them haha.
I was born in Scotland but moved to the north east when I was little. In Scotland it’s skelf in north east it’s spelk.
ive always said “ill leave the sneck on” wow
I'm using this to quiz myself and see if I know it all.... I'm not from Newcastle but I know people who live there.....
Why’s the Sydney Harbour Bridge on the thumbnail??
It's the Tyne Bridge
I just answered this to somebody else. The Sydney Harbour bridge (opened 1932) was designed by the same Middlesborough engineers who designed the Tyne Bridge in Newcastle, which opened in 1928. They based in on the Tyne Bridge but made it bigger.
@@blotski The Sydney Harbour Bridge was actually moddled on the Hell Gate Bridge in NYC which was built some years before the SHB and the Tyne Bridge.
My step mums geordie and I use so much more slang than I realised I did 😂😂
Is it or does their accent come out more in this #lovethem
The cutest duo ever 😍😍😍
YES THE KINGS OF THE NORTH EAST
jennjepnks your forgetting buzzcocks?
Loads of these I didn’t know were geordie, like spelk and nebby I just thought everyone knew!
Gadgie means something very different in Scotland
There's a canny few missed off. I recommend you getting a Geordie translate book if you're visiting us 😂You definitely would not understand the older generation of Geordie slang. My dad talks so fast and his accent is very strong.
Same thing with my da his accent was very strong I love the Geordies best people🖤🤍❤️
i always wanted to learn Newcastle's British accent because i have many online friends from Newcastle
North eastern English*
can’t believe they said “hadaway” without “hadaway and shite man”
I was confused I always thought spelk was a proper word so I didn’t think of a splinter
It IS a proper word! Geordie is closer to original English than pretty much anything else in the world!