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The Likely Lads was written by Dick Clement & Ian La Frenais (they also wrote Porridge and most of Auf Wiedersehen Pet).Maybe the answer is in old TV series " The Likely Lads" Sit Com . With Sunderland Born James Bolem as Terry Collier . Sure you will find some Haways or howays somewhere in the script ,,
Haddaway and shite was quite common.My dad was a miner for forty years at Easington Colliery. He often used ‘haddaway’, or ‘haddaway man’ to mean something like ‘no way‘, or ‘get lost’.
He never swore at home, or when women or children were about, but he was at work his language was more “salty”
I'm a bit older... in junior school in the '60s it was "chossy".Aye, everything was choss at school in the 70's![]()
I’m 73 from the collieries. We never used the term ‘ chossy ‘ as younguns. It was always ‘ choss ‘. Eg a good film “ It was git choss la “.I'm a bit older... in junior school in the '60s it was "chossy".
I'm from the collieries, too...Seaham. And it was chossy when I was a kid. Of course "choss" was also heard.I’m 73 from the collieries. We never used the term ‘ chossy ‘ as younguns. It was always ‘ choss ‘. Eg a good film “ It was git choss la “.
Seaham was not classed as the Collieries. The term was used by bus conductors leaving Sunderland.It was referred to the old mining towns and villages. Mainly Penshaw to South Hetton and Murton. Here the dialect is different to Seaham. The coastal collieries were sunk around 1900 and people moved there from the rest of Co Durham and Northumberland and other parts of UK. I had relations who worked at The Knack, Vane Tempest and Dawdon and they didn’t talk Pitmatic, like folk in Houghton, Hetton and Murton. They used to say they talk Seaham Harbourish. No offence marra but I’ve never heard of chossy. A Sunderland born mate told me his wife was from Murton and when he first went to her house , he thought it was a different language .I'm from the collieries, too...Seaham. And it was chossy when I was a kid. Of course "choss" was also heard.
I'm from the collieries, too...Seaham. And it was chossy when I was a kid. Of course "choss" was also heard.
That not @hank williams ??There used to be a bloke in the main stand at Roker Park ( in the seats) who used to to stand up and shout "haway... haway haway ...haway... haway.. Haway me bonny lads. Everyone could hear him ... He was louder than a fog horn tbh
I was always roker endThat not @hank williams ??
Choss,choller,custy when I was a ladI'm a bit older... in junior school in the '60s it was "chossy".
Howay also associated with Horse Bothering apparentlyHoway is a term for execution, slaughter and unethical behaviour by football fans
Haway is a term used by genuine working class football fans