If I offered you a croggy - would you know what I meant?

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ColinJ

Puzzle game procrastinator!
English dialects have so many unique terms for things. Just think of a bread roll, and how many terms there are for that - cob, bap, roll, barmcake, breadcake, breadbun spring to mind just off the top of my head.
They call them 'batches' in Coventry. When I first moved here I asked for a chip batch in the local chip shop and they didn't have a clue what I was talking about. When I worked in Burnley, our canteen used to sell what they called oven bottoms which are basically large barmcakes/cobs/batches ...
 

Maz

Guru
It always amazes me that so many English people are so ignorant of different words used in their country, I feel it is indicative of narrow-mindedness and the priority given to certain "large urban languages" within the media, but mostly narrow-mindedness.
Not sure it's ignorance or narrow-mindedness. There are far too many regional words in the English language to know them all, and the same word can have different meanings in different regions.
Until recently, I didn't know what a bawbag was, but I was told what it was by some Scots.
 

Maz

Guru
They call them 'batches' in Coventry. When I first moved here I asked for a chip batch in the local chip shop and they didn't have a clue what I was talking about. When I worked in Burnley, our canteen used to sell what they called oven bottoms which are basically large barmcakes/cobs/batches ...
Reminds me of when I went to a chippy at Ewood Park (Blackburn). Me and a dozen other Blades in the shop were winding up the assistant asking for Greasy Chip Butties (Sheff Utd song). I think he called them Barms or something.
 

top-tube

Über Member
Location
Leith, Edinburgh
I went to uni in Hull in the early 80's (I was a 'tefal' as opposed to a 'lerrrrcal'), and one of my abiding memories is boarding a corporation bus, sitting on the top deck on a hot summer's day - opposite me 2 teenage girls sat, with the windows open, and legs up on the seat in front. One said to the other 'Ee, I can really feel the wind on me' kippers now'. Always wondered what she meant.
 

gbb

Squire
Location
Peterborough
Croggy was widely used by kids in Notts in the 70s.
TBF i hadnt thought about exactly what a croggy is, a backie, bum over the handlebars, crossbar ride...but i seem to remember it was a bum over the handlebars ride.

Anyway. lots of things are regional. When i came from Notts to Cambs in the late 70s, i went into a chipshop in Peterborough and asked for chips and gravy. :blink:the girl looked at me like i was a moron ^_^ It was years before i saw it on any chippie menu.
 

byegad

Legendary Member
Location
NE England
Yes, born in 1951, I could tell the Stockton-on -Tees dialect/accent from Thornaby and that from the Middlesbrough one; and there's not 3 miles between them and Billingham is 4 miles from Middlesbrough and they had there own accent too!.

Now people are more mobile those differences are not there.
 

summerdays

Cycling in the sun
Location
Bristol
I think I would have guessed what a croggy was but round here its a backy.

I grew up always using the wrong colloquial terms as an incomer.
 

BigEvo

Active Member
Location
Teesside
I'm from Billingham and the wife's from Sunderland. Croggy in Billingham, a backer in Sunderland. Either way you gotta love it........
 

slowmotion

Quite dreadful
Location
lost somewhere
It always amazes me that so many English people are so ignorant of different words used in their country, I feel it is indicative of narrow-mindedness and the priority given to certain "large urban languages" within the media, but mostly narrow-mindedness.

And, yes, I would have known what you were speakng about on this occassion. Or at least have been able to work it out in the context of the conversation had I not, or enquired as to what it was...rather than to feign horror at using a quirkly word, or tried to ridicule it's use, as I feel a lot of people from other English regions would have done.

You are Flying Monkey and ICMFP.:bravo:
 

Mad Doug Biker

Just a damaged guy.
Location
Craggy Island
Not quite ther same but when I was in Italy last year, I asked for a Latte. The guy just looked at me like I was a Moron and gave me a Cappucino instead. :blush:

Anyway, Croggy?? I have never heard of it, but on reading this thread, I now know what it is along with the other terms given.
It would be called a Backie here, but I don't know what the handlebar ride you describe would be called.
A Frontie?? ^_^
 
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