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A Mag is never correctCorrect
What about choss ?
For that matter, what about GITT CHOSS AS OWT laah?
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It might just be a false memory but I'm sure I saw in Roy of the Rovers (probably in the 1980's) a Scottish chant of "Ca'way" which I presumed was Come Away.Think there was a debate on here a while back as to where this came from.
Personally, I have moaned about the apostrophe in the seats for some years as I could not work out what it could be for. Looks like I was wrong and it really should be there.
A Mag historian mate (sorry) prompted me to have another rake around.
All of these from Sunderland Echo reports:
April 1890
Sunderland Reserves are playing Sunderland Olympic at Newcastle Road, someone encourages the reserve left winger with "How way Ledger".
May 1890
Sunderland are playing Bolton at Newcastle Road just prior to gaining entry to the football league. Our famous centre forward Johnny Campbell is egged on: "How way, Johnny, man!".
September 1894
Sunderland are playing Derby in the infamous game of 3 halves. The encouragement is now more general: "How way my lads".
So it goes goes right back to the early days of the club, and "how way" was a general term of encouragement in those days. Easy to see how it morphed from that to ho'way and ha'way, and the apostrophe lives...
The move to ha rather than ho probably just our mackem accents.
This is what I understood it to be.Though ha'way the lads came from halfway the lads when the miners had to get out of the cage before the bottom of the pit when working a coal seam that was half way down.
Or if my memory serves, "Ca'wa"It might just be a false memory but I'm sure I saw in Roy of the Rovers (probably in the 1980's) a Scottish chant of "Ca'way" which I presumed was Come Away.
Though ha'way the lads came from halfway the lads when the miners had to get out of the cage before the bottom of the pit when working a coal seam that was half way down.
The journalists in the 1890s will have just written down what they heard, it’s no indication of a correct spelling or where the phrase comes from. Even surnames back then still got written down in various spellings.
In one of The Broons comic strips years ago the men were at a match and shouted ‘Come away the lads!’.
This must be the basis of it as The Broons is practically science. And the fact it’s a derivation of ‘away’ means, unsurprisingly, that our spelling is right.
They were all misheard as a mag was reporting. It was definetly HAWAY.Think there was a debate on here a while back as to where this came from.
Personally, I have moaned about the apostrophe in the seats for some years as I could not work out what it could be for. Looks like I was wrong and it really should be there.
A Mag historian mate (sorry) prompted me to have another rake around.
All of these from Sunderland Echo reports:
April 1890
Sunderland Reserves are playing Sunderland Olympic at Newcastle Road, someone encourages the reserve left winger with "How way Ledger".
May 1890
Sunderland are playing Bolton at Newcastle Road just prior to gaining entry to the football league. Our famous centre forward Johnny Campbell is egged on: "How way, Johnny, man!".
September 1894
Sunderland are playing Derby in the infamous game of 3 halves. The encouragement is now more general: "How way my lads".
So it goes goes right back to the early days of the club, and "how way" was a general term of encouragement in those days. Easy to see how it morphed from that to ho'way and ha'way, and the apostrophe lives...
The move to ha rather than ho probably just our mackem accents.
They were all misheard as a mag was reporting. It was definetly HAWAY.
WEARSIDE accentsThink there was a debate on here a while back as to where this came from.
Personally, I have moaned about the apostrophe in the seats for some years as I could not work out what it could be for. Looks like I was wrong and it really should be there.
A Mag historian mate (sorry) prompted me to have another rake around.
All of these from Sunderland Echo reports:
April 1890
Sunderland Reserves are playing Sunderland Olympic at Newcastle Road, someone encourages the reserve left winger with "How way Ledger".
May 1890
Sunderland are playing Bolton at Newcastle Road just prior to gaining entry to the football league. Our famous centre forward Johnny Campbell is egged on: "How way, Johnny, man!".
September 1894
Sunderland are playing Derby in the infamous game of 3 halves. The encouragement is now more general: "How way my lads".
So it goes goes right back to the early days of the club, and "how way" was a general term of encouragement in those days. Easy to see how it morphed from that to ho'way and ha'way, and the apostrophe lives...
The move to ha rather than ho probably just our mackem accents.
A shortening of ‘hadaway’?
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