Haven’t seen him for a while.
Still play golf with a couple of his “old hands” twice a week. Good mates with a few more.
Very good to hear from you mate, I still bump into the old lads at matches ...
... not Frankie for some time though.
Haven’t seen him for a while.
Still play golf with a couple of his “old hands” twice a week. Good mates with a few more.
Na like, dissn Ower dialect is proper shan likThat's very good, but there's no such word as 'shan' (it might be in the dictionary, but it's bollocks and nobody has ever used it) . . . . anywhere![]()
Just had a message off one of the old codgers on here, and mentioned you.Very good to hear from you mate, I still bump into the old lads at matches ...
... not Frankie for some time though.
Strange that, I knew it was used in Hartlepool but that seems to be an isolated pocket. I'd not heard it in the coastal Durham pit villages or round the Darlington area. That surprises me because Darlo people use a lot of old Gypsy words which is where I'd expect shan comes from. It's sounds like a Gypsy word such as radge, scran, gadgie, etc.
Those are all words people who trade horses use regularly and have crept into regular useage.
Until I came onto the forum and the one over the road, shan is not a term I ever used or even heard of. Although I was born in Hertfordshire and grew up in Middle Herrington and went to a private school so I’m quite posh. In fact I have a clip of when I was in a pub and I got into a bit of a situation.That's very good, but there's no such word as 'shan' (it might be in the dictionary, but it's bollocks and nobody has ever used it) . . . . anywhere![]()
Until I came onto the forum and the one over the road, shan is not a term I ever used or even heard of. Although I was born in Hertfordshire and grew up in Middle Herrington and went to a private school so I’m quite posh. In fact I have a clip of when I was in a pub and I got into a bit of a situation.
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