Standing there like a tin of milk

Status
Not open for further replies.


Like a few others on here, I didn’t find out that “getting wrong” was northeastern slang until I left the region for uni and got the blank faces.

I don’t think I ever heard a few of these terms before, like; they must not have got as far south as Shildon/Bishop. What the hell is a topper?
 
Learned this at school when the new lad from Essex asked what it meant and the teach had to explain it means absolutely nothing outside of an SR postcode.



The past tense of treat is treated. I’ve not said “tret” since I was about 12.

Thought you still were.
 
Like a few others on here, I didn’t find out that “getting wrong” was northeastern slang until I left the region for uni and got the blank faces.

I don’t think I ever heard a few of these terms before, like; they must not have got as far south as Shildon/Bishop. What the hell is a topper?


Getting wrong is a thing all over the north east , every fucker says it in bishop man :lol:

Even people in darlo understand it
 
My German mate is absolutely besotted with the word claggy. I explained what it meant when he first heard me saying it and he now uses it at every opportunity. He also has a Mackem Dictionary so could be the first German with a townie accent.
 
well go to the foot of our stairs!

Most amusing as my Grandma used to say it and they lived in a bungalow.
 
My Dad used to threaten to fist (punch) me and my brother when we were acting up downstairs while he was asleep after night shift.

I have a mental image of him running into the garden wearing me and my brother like a pairs of mittens.
:lol::lol::lol::lol:
Proper lol'd at that.
 
Getting wrong. It's apparently bizarre to southerners.
:lol:
Years ago I was helping to investigate a massive fraud at work and we were interviewing loads of staff who were suspected of involvement. One lass was clearly guilty and I was saying as much to my boss as she left the office, then she stuck her head around the door and said "I'm not going to get wrong, am I?":lol::lol:

Innocently discussing narkie bashing nearly resulted in a HR incident once.
 
Last edited:
This has turned from sayings/phrases that make my way sense to listing local words.

Monkeys blood and getting wrong are our two classics.
 
Whenever with Newcastle natives I always get told I say "curry" differently , it amuses them, yet I cant hear it myself, not even the way they it , strange .

When young I was always pleased that Bryan Ferry had included "all of a sudden" and "ta ra" in his and Roxy songs .
 
Status
Not open for further replies.

Back
Top