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Happy Yorkshire Day

ProfilePosted byOptionsPost Date

Merlin

Merlin Report 1 Aug 2009 14:48

Linda, This ones a `Magician" so pops would be no good,He,s pretty good at sticking Pins In Efigys So be careful,you may find you sit on something sharp.**M**.:o)>.pmsl

LindainHerriotCountry

LindainHerriotCountry Report 1 Aug 2009 14:37

GLOSSARY: R
Yorkshire term Definition
radged Angry
ratty grumpy/gross
(it) reeks (it) smells horrible
reet right
Rum'n Cheeky/bit of a character e.g. "He's a rum'n"

GLOSSARY: S
Yorkshire term Definition
sam/ sam up collect together/ tidy away
sarnies sandwiches
Scotch yows ewes
scran food
seethee do you see? (often used at the end of a sentence)
sh' in't in she isn't in
shoon, shooin shoes
side/ side the pots clear/ clear the table
siling down raining heavily
sithee goodbye (see thee)
(have a) skeg (have a) look
skell over fall over, tip over
skip ship
skrike cry, scream
slape slippery
snap food
snicket small alleyway or footpath
spanish licqourice - apparently because Spanish monks bought a licquorice tree to Rievaulx Abbey
spelk, spell splinter
spice sweets
spoggs sweets
sprog child
spuggy sparrow
starved/starves really cold (not 'hungry' as you might expect) or makes cold eg: "Milk starves my tea"
sten stone
stor great
strand shore
summat something
sup drink


GLOSSARY: T
Yorkshire term Definition
ta thanks
tarra bye
tek take
thee, tha you
thissen yourself
thorpe hamlet
threp a blow or a kick
thwaite clearing
Tyke Yorkshire person

GLOSSARY: U
Yorkshire term Definition
un one
up-skelled upset, knocked over, spilled

GLOSSARY: V
Yorkshire term Definition
vexed angry

GLOSSARY: W
Yorkshire term Definition
waint won't
watter water
while until e.g. "I'm working while seven"
wick alive or lively


GLOSSARY: Y
Yorkshire term Definition
ya, yan one
yam home
yat hot
yonder over there
yune oven



LindainHerriotCountry

LindainHerriotCountry Report 1 Aug 2009 14:36

ginnell alleyway
gi' over give over, stop it
giz, gizza, gizzyer give, give us, give your
goffs smells horrible
goodies sweets
good 'un good one
goosegog gooseberry
gormless stupid
gripe garden rake
guff fart
gunna, gonna going to

GLOSSARY: H
Yorkshire term Definition
hell fire! goodness me!

GLOSSARY: I
Yorkshire term Definition
in a bit bye
in't in the

GLOSSARY: J
Yorkshire term Definition
jammy very lucky
jiggered very tired

GLOSSARY: K
Yorkshire term Definition
khali sherbert
kegs trousers/underwear
kiddin(g) telling a fib, joking

GLOSSARY: L
Yorkshire term Definition
lake, laikin(g), larking play (i.e. "Is your Lesley coming out to lake?"), playing
lass girl/young woman/wife
lavvy toilet
leg throw
v. (to have a) lem on to be angry, moody
lowence snack whilst working, especially for farmers
lug, lug'ole ear

GLOSSARY: M
Yorkshire term Definition
maffin' hot and clammy weather
(I'm) mafted (I'm) hot
manky not nice, unpleasant
mardy moody, sulky, stroppy
mester mister
middin' muck heap
middlin(g) ok, average
minging horrible, unpleasant
mithered, mitherin(g) irritated with something, as in "stop mitherin' me" is "stop bothering/irritating me".
v. (to have a) monk on to be grumpy, to have a sulky face
missen My self e.g. "I'll do it missen"

GLOSSARY: N
Yorkshire term Definition
narky moody, sulky, stroppy, (mardy)
n'arn now then
neb nose
nesh cold. Often exclaimation that an individual is 'soft' for feeling the cold or term of mild abuse e.g. "nesh southerners!"
nithered very cold
not back'ard at comin' for'ard (not backward at coming forward) pushy person
nouse sense
nowt/ nout nothing
now then hello

GLOSSARY: O
Yorkshire term Definition
oh aye?! oh really?!
'ow do how are you, hello
owt anything

GLOSSARY: P
Yorkshire term Definition
pack it in stop it
paggered knackered e.g. "I'm completely paggered" or "I've just paggered my dad's car"
parkin ginger cake made with oats
pikelet crumpet
playin(g) pop to tell of/ get angry with
plother mud
pop fizzy drink
pot washin' washing up
pudgy fat or chubby person
put wood in'th oyle shut the door

LindainHerriotCountry

LindainHerriotCountry Report 1 Aug 2009 14:35

Yorkshire words

GLOSSARY: A
Yorkshire term Definition
allus always
'appen maybe, possibly e.g. "I'll 'appen that's it" for "that's possibly true"
aye yes

GLOSSARY: B
Yorkshire term Definition
backend Autumn
bad 'un no good
badly not in a good state of health, i.e.'How's Martha?', 'She's badly.'
baggin packed lunch
bagsey childhood term, i.e. 'bagsey my turn!'
bairn child
bait/ bait box snack/ packed lunch
bap bread bun
bazzerking relaxing/ telling off (?)
beck brook
beefin(g), blubberin(g) crying
be reight it'll be alright
berg mountain
best y' do see that you do
black bright, black as't face o' spades very dirty
bog toilet
bonce head
bonny pretty
brant steep e.g. "'tis a brant hill"
bracken ferns
bray/braying beating e.g. "you'll get a good braying" or "I'll bray you"
breadcake bread roll or bap
butty sandwich

GLOSSARY: C
Yorkshire term Definition
cack-handed left-handed, clumsy
carr marsh
chat fir cone
chelpin' talking
childer children
chippy, chip 'ole fish and chip shop
chuckin(g) your guts up being sick
chuddy chewing gum
chuffed pleased, excited
clarty dirty, muddy, sticky
clemmy stone (of a size you might throw)
clout cloth or slap
cludger toilet (in Knaresborough)
coal 'ole, coyle oyle coal cellar
coit/cooat coat
croggy riding on the cross-bar of a bicycle

GLOSSARY: D
Yorkshire term Definition
daft as a brush stupid
dale valley
delve dig
dowly dull, gloomy, misty day
down't (road) down the (road)
drinkings mid-morning snack farm workers took to work
dursn't daren't

GLOSSARY: E
Yorkshire term Definition
'ead head
eeh by gum oh my God

GLOSSARY: F
Yorkshire term Definition
faffing messing about
fair t' middlin fair, in the middle
famished hungry, starving
fast stuck
fell moor
fettle to tidy/mend
flaggin(g) tired, worn out
flayed, flaysome scared, scary
flippin 'eck (flipping heck) exclamation of shock and surprise
flitin' moving house
flower term of endearment
flummoxed confused
foss/ force waterfall
fowl bird
friggin' a curse
frozzed referring to face or fingers being very cold

GLOSSARY: G
Yorkshire term Definition
gaffer the boss
gander look at
garth yard
gear items, things
gill stream

LindainHerriotCountry

LindainHerriotCountry Report 1 Aug 2009 14:35

Not much money being spent round here Mac, Hambleton council are not known to spend money when they can help it.

I haven't seen your thread Joan, but the more the merrier.
Good job Merlins are protected, or we might take a pop at you Merlin lol

Just in case any one has a problem with understanding us, I will post a glossary of Yorkshire words.

Merlin

Merlin Report 1 Aug 2009 13:50

Linda,This Merlin was Bred in Wales.**M**.pmsl.

mamiddau

mamiddau Report 1 Aug 2009 11:42

My hubby is in exile......his mother sent him a message this morning! happy yorkshire day to all you lads and lasses!

SheilaSomerset

SheilaSomerset Report 1 Aug 2009 11:07

Happy Yorkshire Day to all - from a 'southerner' who loves the Dales (and Yorkshire curd tarts!)

LindainHerriotCountry

LindainHerriotCountry Report 1 Aug 2009 11:03

St Peter and St Paul's Church, Pickering houses a memorial to Robert King and his son Nicholas who went to America in the eighteenth century and helped plan the city of Washington DC.

The walls of the church of St Peter and St Paul at Pickering bear a unique gallery of 15th century wall-paintings. Discovered in the 15th century they were promptly concealed with whitewash because the vicar thought that they would encourage idolatry. Happily, they were rediscovered in 1878. They depict scenes form the Bible, from history and from legend ranging from St George slaying the dragon to the martyrdom of St Thomas-a-Becket.

The Reverend William Scoresby, who was born in 1879 at Cropton near Pickering, was the son of the famous Whitby whaler - William Scoresby Snr. Scoresby Snr, who invented the crow's nest, first took his son on a whaling trip to Greenland when he was ten. By the age of twenty-one he had captained his first ship and brought the whaler Resolution back with a record quantity of whale oil.

Hutton le Hole, as well as being one of the showpiece villages of the Moors, is unusual as the common land of the village and surrounding area is still administered by a courts leet. The Spaunton Court Leet and Court Baron with View of Frankpledge is one of the few remaining Courts Leet in the country.

A few unusual residents can be found in the moorland villages of Hutton le Hole and Appleton le Moors. Common grazing is still practised and sheep can be found wandering around the village, grazing on the roadside, greens and gardens.

Wharram Percy is a classic deserted village in the Yorkshire Wolds. Now in the care of English Heritage, the site tells the story of a village abandoned in the 16th century probably when farming methods changed from arable fields to sheep.

Rievaulx Abbey Yorkshire's first Cistercian Abbey, was once home to 150 monks and 500 lay brothers. The wealth of the Abbey came mostly from their success as sheep farmers. At one time the Abbey farmed 14,000 sheep on the moors and the monks were very successful at selling wool to cloth merchants from Flanders, France and Italy.

The world's largest onion bhaji was made at the Jinnah Restaurant near Flaxton, Malton. Weighing 3.12kg and with a diameter of 51cm, the bhaji has been officially recognised as the largest in the world by the Guinness Book of Records.

The Ryedale Folk Museum is the home of the oldest daylight photographic studio in the country. Dating back to 1902, this Edwardian photographic studio incorporated a darkroom and a finishing room at one end, with a large area lit by daylight illumination suitable for photography. In 1911 it was dismantled from its location in York and transported by horses and carts to Hutton le Hole.

Richard Spruce, the famous 19th century naturalist, lived at Coneysthorpe and is buried at Terrington. He was responsible for bringing quinine into mass production as an anti-malaria antidote. A great Victorian plant expert, he explored the Amazon and was one of the first ethno-botanists.
A Witch Post can be found on the smoke hood which covers the fireplace in Stangend, a cruck cottage dating back to the mid 15th century, which is one of the exhibits at the Ryedale Folk Museum. It is thought that they were intended to protect the house or hearth from the influence of witches or prevent them from entering the house. Less than 20 of these carved posts are known, all in north east Yorkshire, except one found in Lancashire.

The North York Moors National Park is one of the country's greatest strongholds for the breeding of merlins, a small falcon.

The "electrogena-affinis", a type of mayfly, is found nowhere else in Britain and is therefore unique to the River Derwent in Ryedale.

One of the last breeding grounds of the Great Bustard was in Ryedale, on the Yorkshire Wolds.




LindainHerriotCountry

LindainHerriotCountry Report 1 Aug 2009 11:02

Unusual Facts about the Yorkshire Moors and Coast

Unique and unusual facts that you might not have known about the Yorkshire Moors and Coast - our heritage, folklore, residents and environment.

One of the largest known gooseberries was grown by Mr Bernard Harland of Pickering. In 1994 he showed a Yellow Woodpepper Gooseberry, weight of 31drams 22 grains, at the Egton Gooseberry Fair and won first prize.

The highest point in Ryedale? The crown of Round Hill (454m) is just a few yards outside Ryedale though the boundary around there may be just below the 450m mark. Certainly the Urra Moor general area is higher than Bilsdale Moor which rises to about 420m. Round Hill (above Ingleby Greenhow) is said to be the highest point on the Cleveland Way.

Over 14,000 sandbags were used when the River Derwent burst its banks in and around Malton and Norton in March 1999.

If you hear somebody talking about Fat Betty, Young or Old Ralph, don't worry these are just stone crosses in the North York Moors.

King Billy, Uncle Sam's, Monkman's Slaughter, Scoresby Stour, Backwood's Bitter, Two Pints, Olde Bob, Double Chance are all current or past locally brewed beers from the Cropton Brewery and Malton Brewery Company and take their names from local fables and facts.

The tallest lime tree in Britain can be found at Duncombe Park, Helmsley - measuring 46 x 3.7 metres.

The North Riding Forest Park, now known as Dalby Forest, is the largest upland heath forest in the country.

The North York Moors National Park has the largest expanse of heather upland in England.

You can find a bridge over nothing on the village green at Sinnington, along with the world's first stainless steel maypole.

The North Yorkshire Moors Railway runs steam trains along 18 miles of track from Pickering to Grosmont and is the longest steam operated railway in Great Britain.

Richard III held court at Sheriff Hutton Castle. The tomb of Edward, Prince of Wales, Richard III's only child can be found at the Church of St Helen in Sheriff Hutton.

The Battle of Byland was fought in 1322, two miles from the Abbey. King Edward II was surprised (and almost captured) by an invading Scottish army as he sat dining with the Abbots

The longest lime tree avenue in Europe can be seen on the drive up to Castle Howard.

Hovingham Hall was the childhood home of HRH the Duchess of Kent. Her brother Sir Marcus Worsley still lives in the family home.

King Ethelwald is allegedly buried at St Gregory's Minster, Kirkdale.

A cave at Kirkdale was found in 1821. In it the remains of hundreds of hyena, bear, tiger, elephant and wolf were discovered. One theory at this time was that Noah's flood had involved Yorkshire, but it is fairly certain that the cave was a hyena den.

One well-known resident of Kirkbymoorside was George Villiers, the 2nd Duke of Buckingham (1628 - 1687). Rich and powerful, he was said to be one of the most notorious and dazzling courtiers of his time, but died in shame after a life of drunkenness, violence and general misbehaviour. Legend says he lay dying in the worst room of the worst inn in Kirkbymoorside, but this is not so. He died in one of the best houses in the town next door to the King's Head Inn. The parish register records his death simply as "1687, George Vilaus, lord dooke of bookingham". His intestines were buried at Helmsley and his body taken back to London for burial beside his father in Westminster Abbey.

George Hudson the 'railway king', who pioneered the York to Scarborough line, is buried in the churchyard at Scrayingham.

The top three largest towns in the District of Ryedale in order of population size according to estimates supplied in the year 2000 are as follows: (i) Pickering - 6710; (ii) Norton on Derwent - 6620; (iii) Malton - 4840.

The wonderful Yorkshire dialect poet, John Castillo, "The Bard of the Dales" was born in 1792, the son of a wandering Irishman who married a girl from Yorkshire. Castillo was born in Ireland before his family moved back to Yorkshire, whereupon he became a Methodist preacher. His gravestone in Pickering bears an extract from his most popular dialect poem "Oad Isaac".

Norton is the Newmarket of the north and has a long tradition of training racehorses. The famous entertainer George Formby was an apprentice jockey at Norton.

Many of the former Prime Minister Harold Wilson's ancestors were from Ryedale and can be traced back to his great-grandfather who was the Workhouse Master in Helmsley. When Lord Wilson was seeking a territorial appendage on being created a baron in 1983, he chose Rievaulx.

Sir Herbert Read (1893 - 1968) the poet and critic was born in Stonegrave, near Helmsley.

Ian Carmichael's favourite place is Duncombe Park, where he met his wife whilst serving with the 22nd Dragoons of the 30th Armoured Brigade during the Second World War.

The mysterious Hole of Horcum is a huge hollow in Levisham Moor, which provides the basis for an interesting local legend. One legend relates how the Giant Wade scooped out the earth to throw at his wife Bell. Another is that the devil picked up a huge handful of earth and cast it across the moors to form the 800ft-high Blakey Topping.

Ryedale is the location of many television and film locations. The most famous is Heartbeat which is filmed in the North York Moors and uses the North Yorkshire Moors Railway. Brideshead Revisited - the TV series - was based at Castle Howard (and is now the location for a new film in 2008). The original film about James Herriott - All Creatures Great and Small - was set around Malton and Pickering.

At St Gregory's Minster at Kirkdale, visitors will see a Saxon sundial carved on a 7ft slab of stone. This is the most complete example of its kind in the world and shows the eight hours of a Saxon day. The inscription on the sundial reads "Orm Gamal's son bought St Gregory's Minster when it was all broken down and fallen and he let it be made new from the ground to Christ and to St Gregory in the days of Edward the King and of Tosti the Earl. And Harwarth me wrought and Brand priest."

Terrington is thought to be the location of Britain's most northern lavender farm - Yorkshire Lavender.

The Yorkshire Wolds is the northernmost most outcrop of chalk hills. The grassland is rich in chalk land plants like the Pyramidal Orchid and Purple Milk Vetch and is a haven for butterflies including the Marbled White - at the northernmost limit of its range.

Farndale is a long and remote valley which reaches deep into the centre of the moors. The dale is famed for its wild daffodils. Every spring, around the middle of April, the banks of the River Dove are covered with small yellow daffodils. They are the true wild daffodils native to Great Britain. Yorkshire folk often call them "Lentern Lilies", because they bloom around that season. Over 50,000 visitors come to see the daffodils every year.

Peter Walker, who wrote under the pseudonym of Nicolas Rhea, the author of the books which inspired the Heartbeat television series, was the village bobby in Oswaldkirk from 1963 to 1967.

Edmund Burke (1729-97) was the MP for Malton for fourteen years from 1780 as well as a famed Irish thinker and politician.

John Wesley's first missionaries to America came from Ryedale communities between Bransdale and Farndale. John Board and Joseph Pilmore responded to John Wesley's call at a Methodist conference in Leeds for volunteers to serve "in the wilderness of America". They landed later that year, after surviving what Pilmore described as "a fearful storm" at Gloucester Point near Philadelphia.

MarionfromScotland

MarionfromScotland Report 1 Aug 2009 10:53

Oh thats not so bad then lol

LindainHerriotCountry

LindainHerriotCountry Report 1 Aug 2009 10:50

If you make it a Sunday, you will be fine Marion

MarionfromScotland

MarionfromScotland Report 1 Aug 2009 10:48

Well I wont be going lol

LindainHerriotCountry

LindainHerriotCountry Report 1 Aug 2009 10:46

Hmm Sue, I am not sure about some of those.
I will email you a load of interesting Yorkshire facts which I cobbled together for the tourist office. It includes a Yorkshire glossary

One fact

York
Did you know that it is still legal to shoot a Scotsman - but only with a bow and arrow and definitely not on Sundays

SueMaid

SueMaid Report 1 Aug 2009 10:03

Yorksha day? Well ahl nip on ta wee 'ouse, wee lass. ah dint kna theear wor such eur day. 'appy Yorksha day ta thee orl.

Sue xx

PollyPoppet

PollyPoppet Report 1 Aug 2009 09:15

im in yorkshire too
HAPPY YORKSHIRE DAY
xx

LindainHerriotCountry

LindainHerriotCountry Report 1 Aug 2009 08:55

Greetings from God's own county to all Yorkshire men and woman, not forgetting their descendants now scattered throughout the globe.

Linda