uTalk - Cockney Market Talk

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  • Опубликовано: 19 июл 2016
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Комментарии • 27

  • @mitslaiqlima2461
    @mitslaiqlima2461 6 лет назад +13

    I don't even understand what they said ... i usually hear some British .. rp, scotish, Irish but cockney is the only one that made me feel stupid

    • @EriAirlangga
      @EriAirlangga 6 лет назад

      Just some passersby challenging street vendors if they're true londoners with cockney rhyming slangs e.g.: weasels and stoats means coats, peckham rye: tie, dog and bone: phone, trouble and strife: wife, ones and twos: shoes, mince pies: eyes, etc.

    • @krishanuchatterjee1765
      @krishanuchatterjee1765 5 лет назад +1

      Mitsla Iqlima its easy. Just focus on pronunciation, and their H sound is silent. T is under the throat, th sounds as v and f. And rhymes. Like apple & pears for stairs, plate of meats for feet, Uncle Ned for head, uncle dick for sick, etc.

  • @petermallia558
    @petermallia558 3 года назад +13

    Plates of meat - Feet,
    Apple and pairs - Stairs,
    Mince pies - Eyes,
    Boat race - Face,
    The thing is most if is Cockneys only use the first word not the while slag combination, because we obviously know what one another is talking about, so we only need to use the first, for eg, person one says " Where you goin' ",
    Person two says " I'm just going up the apples ", P1 asks "what for"
    P2 says "I'm gonna ask me mum, see.if I can nick a score(£20), of her til nex week" P1, "Don't be long then, I need to pop back to see the old "trouble[and strife = wife], she needs some money outta the old Sky (Sky Rocket = Pocket) mate"......

    • @astrazenica7783
      @astrazenica7783 3 года назад

      Slang should shorten things. Cockney rhyming code adds more time or has zero efficiency. I get it if you're locked up but come on now, it's kinda dumb

    • @marksadventures3889
      @marksadventures3889 3 года назад

      That's if she's got any bees and even then you still might be out on your bottle for 'aving a tin, my mum would've given me a right earache for asking. That said we never went without even at the wrong end of the week.

    • @munterboy1744
      @munterboy1744 5 месяцев назад

      They don't shorten anything

    • @SeeYouEnTee666
      @SeeYouEnTee666 5 месяцев назад

      And you are sooo not a Londoner 😂😂😂😂😂😂😂 that comments laughable

  • @henrysmith883
    @henrysmith883 Год назад +2

    The geezer said a dog and bone is a bone lol 😀😀😀😀

  • @astrazenica7783
    @astrazenica7783 3 года назад +5

    They all live in Essex now

  • @michaelmorrisson7730
    @michaelmorrisson7730 2 года назад +1

    She’s making these up

  • @whomagoose6897
    @whomagoose6897 6 лет назад +7

    This is why I will always say that American English is not the same as British English. When I hear Cockney and Scouse, I just give up.

  • @petermallia558
    @petermallia558 3 года назад +2

    Does anyone know money £'s £1-2-3-10-25-50-100-250-500-1000?
    I'll start you off with a couple,
    £1 - A Nicka
    £2 - Bottles
    £3 - Carpet
    £4 - Rouf
    £5 - A Glove,
    I know to £6 - Half a Stretch (because 12yrs in prison was called a stretch so 6 is half of),
    £7 - Neves,
    £8 - T-eigh pronounced T-H but you say it like T-AYCH.
    £9 - Nervo,
    £10 - A Cockle £20 - A Score or an Apple (core) which is a further derivative of Score, as in 20 score which came from Germanic Skur or Norse word Skor meaning a mark, a Notch used to mark a Stick when counting large numbers also used in old English,
    £25 - Pony,
    £50 Bullseye or a Megarot as in Steve Megarot from Hawaii 50,
    £100 - a Ton, or a longon as in "Long Ton" naval term for weight measurements for a ships weight,
    £250 a Horse( a big pony), very unknown to Many, many just say £250 squid, and of course,
    £500 is a Monkey.

  • @RobHealy1
    @RobHealy1 Год назад

    That one mademoiselle has been blessed from above

  • @annoyingbstard9407
    @annoyingbstard9407 5 лет назад

    Shoes are Rhythm 'n blues.

  • @MrDaveyboy125
    @MrDaveyboy125 7 месяцев назад

    Bushell & Peck? Neck? No it's Gregory Peck!

  • @marksadventures3889
    @marksadventures3889 3 года назад

    I fink someone's having a Turkish 'ere. If you open your north in Befnall you are going to look like a right cream and butter. That geezer on the market looks like a bubble or maybe a four be two, either way he still came over a bit of a merchant. All that was a bit basic, septic tackle.

  • @debsmostexcellentadventure5353

    Love the new cockney thats coming out dot cotton = rotton =new cockney theres alot crap cockney about.and this is doing it no favours debs xx

  • @percysjohnsonmwapemukubwe.3705

    Funny accent

  • @instrumentalplay8098
    @instrumentalplay8098 3 года назад +2

    I was born in Lambeth I come to Australia when I was 5 in 1969 . I went back in 2010 went to the elephant and Castle . Not 1white person to be seen. It was hilarious I was speaking to people in the market and they said you Aussie I said nah and pointed across the road and Sai I was born down that street

    • @henrysmith883
      @henrysmith883 Год назад

      Who gives a toss what you think, you racist mug. Plus its all made up anyway.

  • @SeeYouEnTee666
    @SeeYouEnTee666 5 месяцев назад +2

    Lovely jubbly has to be the most irritating bloody saying known to man…

    • @Unicysis
      @Unicysis 3 месяца назад

      If it’s good for Del Boy…..

  • @StevenLissner
    @StevenLissner 6 лет назад +1

    Disappointing.