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| Lancashire dialect | |
|---|---|
| Native to | England |
| Region | Lancashire |
Indo-European
| |
Early forms | Old English
|
| Dialects | Different varieties within thedialects. The area of Lancashire over the Sands has long been seen as separate, as a Northern rather than North-Midland variety. Within the North-Midland dialects, those influenced more by the cities of Liverpool or Manchester have been distinguished. |
| Language codes | |
| ISO 639-3 | – |
| Glottolog | lanc1236 |
| IETF | en-u-sd-gblan |
![]() Lancashire within England, showingancient extent | |
| Coordinates:53°48′0″N2°36′0″W / 53.80000°N 2.60000°W /53.80000; -2.60000 | |
| This article containsIPA phonetic symbols. Without properrendering support, you may seequestion marks, boxes, or other symbols instead ofUnicode characters. For an introductory guide on IPA symbols, seeHelp:IPA. | |


TheLancashire dialect (or colloquially,Lanky) refers to theNorthern English vernacular speech of theEnglish county ofLancashire. The region is notable for its tradition of poetry written in the dialect.
Lancashire emerged during theIndustrial Revolution as a major commercial and industrial region. The county encompassed several hundredmill towns and collieries and by the 1830s, approximately 85% of allcotton manufactured worldwide was processed in Lancashire.[1] It was during this period that most writing in and about the dialect took place, when Lancashire covered a much larger area than it does today (at least from an administrative point of view—the historic county boundary remains unchanged). The administrative county was subject to significant boundary changes in 1974,[2] which removedLiverpool andManchester with most of their surrounding conurbations to form part of themetropolitan counties of Merseyside and Greater Manchester.[3] At this time, the detachedFurness Peninsula and Cartmel (Lancashire over the Sands) were made part ofCumbria, and theWarrington andWidnes areas became part of Cheshire.
The linguist Gerard Knowles noted that Lancashire dialect was still spoken in the city of Liverpool in 1830, before the period of mass immigration from Ireland that led the dialect of the city to change radically.[4] Modern Liverpool speech is usually treated as a separate dialect, namedScouse. In the post-war era, migration to other towns in Merseyside, and also to thenew towns created atRuncorn,Skelmersdale andWarrington, has led to an expansion in the area in which Scouse is spoken, as the next generation acquired Scouse speech habits that often displaced the traditional Lancashire or Cheshire dialects of the area.[5]
The area transferred in 1974 to modern Cumbria, known as "Lancashire over the sands", is sometimes also covered as in scope ofCumbrian dialect: for example,The Cumbrian Dictionary of Dialect, Tradition and Folklore was written by the Barrovian William Robinson and included this area.[6] As there was mass migration in the 19th century to Barrow-in-Furness fromIreland,Staffordshire, theBlack Country,Scotland and nearby rural areas, it has (like Liverpool) developed adialect different from the surrounding rural area.[6]
In recent years, some have also classified the speech of Manchester as a separateMancunian dialect, but this is a much less established distinction. Many of the dialect writers and poets in the 19th and early 20th century were from Manchester and surrounding towns.[7]
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The Lancashire dialect traditionally used rhotic pronunciation, but the accents of much of the area have become non-rhotic since the middle of the 20th century.[8]
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Alexander John Ellis, one of the first to apply phonetics to English speech, divided the county of Lancashire into four areas. Three of these four were considered North Midland in his categorisation of dialects, whereas the fourth (mostly the section that is in modern Cumbria, known as "Lancashire over the sands") was considered Northern. Dialect isoglosses in England seldom correspond to county boundaries, and an area of Lancashire could have a dialect more similar to an area of a neighbouring county than to a distant area of Lancashire.
Ellis expressly excluded the Scouse dialect of Liverpool from the areas below, although his Area 22 included some sites in modern Merseyside (e.g. Newton-le-Willows, Prescot).[9]
Ellis often spoke of "the Lancashire U" in his work.[10] This was similar to theʊ in other Northern and North Midland dialects but was actually a more centralisedʊ̈. In addition, the dialects he studied were allrhotic at the time of writing.
| Dialect area number | Dialect area name | Distinctive characteristics | Sites in Lancashire | Areas of other counties in same dialect area |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 21 | Southern North Midland[11] | ɐʏ in MOUTH words.ɪŋk for the present participle. | Bury,Failsworth,Manchester,Moston,Oldham,Patricroft,Royton,Rochdale,Stalybridge | Parts ofnorth-east Cheshire andnorth-west Derbyshire |
| 22 | Western North Midland[12] | eː in FACE words.ʊə in GOAT words, althoughɔɪ occurs in words such as "coal" and "hole".ɛɪ in some FLEECE words (e.g. "speak"). | Blackburn,Bolton,Burnley,Clitheroe,Colne Valley,Earlestown,Farington,Halliwell,Haslingden,Higham,Hoddlesden,Leigh,Leyland,Mellor,Newton-le-Willows,Ormskirk,Penwortham,Prescot,Sabden,Samlesbury,Skelmersdale,St Helens,Walton-le-Dale,Warrington,Westhoughton,Whalley,Wigan,Worsthorne | None. Ellis said that he considered including the Yorkshire sites ofHalifax,Huddersfield,Marsden andSaddleworth in this area, but decided to include them in area 24 instead. |
| 23 | Northern North Midland[13] | aʊ in MOUTH words.ɑɪ in PRICE words. | Abbeystead,Blackpool,Garstang,Goosnargh,Kirkham,Poulton-le-Fylde,Preston,Wyresdale | Isle of Man |
| 31 | West Northern[14] | ia in FACE words. eɪ in FLEECE words. aɪ in PRICE words. iʊ in GOOSE words. ʊu in MOUTH words. | Broughton-in-Furness,Cark-in-Cartmel,Caton,Cockerham,Coniston,Dalton,Heysham,High Nibthwaite,Hornby,Lancaster,Lower Holker,Morecambe,Newton-in-Furness,Quernmore,Skerton,Ulverston | All ofWestmorland,south and central Cumberland,south Durham andnorthwest Yorkshire |
A number of dialect glossaries were published in the 18th and 19th Centuries, often byphilologists who were interested in the old words retained in certain dialects.
Of these, only the works on Oldham and Adlington contain any phonetic notation, and this was in a slightly different code to the modernIPA.
| Dialect | Reference | Short vowels | Long vowels | Diphthongs | Triphthongs |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Adlington | Hargreaves, 1904[15] | a ɑ e ɪ ɔ ʊ o ə | aː ɑ: eː ɛː iː ɔ: uː oː əː | aɪː aːe eiː iːə ʊə ɔɪː ɔʊː uɪ ʊiː | aɪə |
| Oldham | Schilling, 1906[16] | a e ɪ ɔ ʊ o ə | aː eː iː ɔ: uː oː ɜː | aɪ eɪ ɪə aʊ ʊə ɛʊ ɛə ɔɪ ɔə uɪ ɪɛ |
Led byHarold Orton at theUniversity of Leeds, theSurvey of English Dialects surveyed 313 sites across England, the Isle of Man and some bordering areas of Wales in the 1950s and early 1960s. The Survey recorded the dialect used in fourteen sites in Lancashire. These sites were mostly rural. A second phase, researching more urban areas, had been planned from the outset but financial problems meant that this second phase never occurred and the Survey's coverage was mostly confined to rural parts of England.[17]
The fieldworkers for the sites wereStanley Ellis and Peter Wright.[18] The latter was a native of Fleetwood and wrote his PhD on the dialect, using his father as the principal informant.[19] In 1981, Wright published a bookThe Lanky Twang: How it is spoke that explained the dialects of Lancashire through a series of illustrations, often humorous.[20]
The table below shows the sites as reported in Book 1 of the Survey's outputs for the northern counties.[21]
| Code | Site | Date survey administered | Number of informants | Fieldworker | Tape recording made |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| La13 | Bickerstaffe, west Lancashire | 28 June – 1 July 1955 | 2 | Stanley Ellis | No |
| La2 | Cartmel, modern south Cumbria | 28 May – 6 June 1954 | 3 | Stanley Ellis | Yes, not survey respondent |
| La1 | Coniston, modern south Cumbria | 20–25 April 1955 | 2 | Stanley Ellis | Yes, survey respondent |
| La4 | Dolphinholme, nearLancaster | 21–25 May 1954 | 3 | Stanley Ellis | Yes, survey respondent |
| La11 | Eccleston, near Chorley | 23–26 March 1954 | 3 | Stanley Ellis | Yes, survey respondent |
| La5 | Fleetwood | 1954 intermittently | 4 | Peter Wright | Yes, survey respondent |
| La14 | Halewood, near Liverpool | 29 March – 3 April 1954 | 3 | Stanley Ellis | No |
| La12 | Harwood, nearBolton | 16–23 February 1954 | 2 | Stanley Ellis | Yes, survey respondent |
| La10 | Marshside,Southport | 8–13 April 1954 | 4 | Stanley Ellis | Yes, survey respondent |
| La6 | Pilling, Fylde coast | 24–29 January 1952 | 3 | Peter Wright | No |
| La9 | Read, nearBurnley | 3–7 March 1954 | 2 | Stanley Ellis | Yes, survey respondent |
| La8 | Ribchester, betweenBlackburn andPreston | 11–17 March 1954 | 4 | Stanley Ellis | Yes, survey respondent |
| La7 | Thistleton, onthe Fylde nearBlackpool | 19–23 January 1952 | 4 | Peter Wright | No |
| La3 | Yealand, nearLancaster | 20–25 April 1955 | 2 | Stanley Ellis | No |
There were several other monographs written by dialectologists by Harold Orton's department at the University of Leeds, including some urban areas such asBury,Middleton,St. Helens andSouthport. These are now contained in the Archive of Vernacular Culture at the Brotherton Library in Leeds.[22]
The site of Harwood (La12) was later included in the UNESCO-fundedAtlas Linguarum Europae.[23] The results of this survey have attracted little attention.[24]
Graham Shorrocks, a linguist fromFarnworth, conducted a series of research projects on the dialect of the Bolton area. These were consolidated into two linked books namedA Grammar of the Dialect of the Bolton Area, published in 1998 and 1999.
In addition, the Harwood area of Bolton, which had been a site in the Survey of English Dialects, was made into a site for the Europe-wide linguistic projectAtlas Linguarum Europae.[25]
John C. Wells, who grew up inUp Holland,[26][27] made some passing comments on Lancastrian speech (mostly on the southern parts of the county) in his 1982 series of books,Accents of English.
The linguistPeter Trudgill specified a "Central Lancashire" dialect region, defined particularly by its rhoticity, around Blackburn, Preston and the northern parts of Greater Manchester. He classified the county of Merseyside, excluding the St Helens borough and Southport, as another dialect region. Trudgill grouped most of Greater Manchester in the "Northwest Midlands" region, and grouped the non-rhotic northern parts of Lancashire in with Cumbria and most of Yorkshire in the "Central North" region.[37]
In 2005 and 2006,[38] the BBC, working with theUniversity of Leeds, undertook a survey of the speech of the country.[39] The recordings are now available on the British Library's website.[40] An accompanying book,Talking for Britain: a journey through the voices of a nation, was published in 2005; the author noted that the speech of Lancashire in 2005 differed markedly from "the impenetrable tracts of rural Lancastrian that the Survey of English Dialects found in the 1950s".[41]
Academic analysis of the corpus of Lancashire dialect writing and poetry has continued into the 21st century. Areas of research include identifying thesyntax of the dialect,[42][43][44] methods of oral performance,[45][46] thelexicography of dialect words,[47] and the relationship between dialect andsocial class in the United Kingdom.[48][49]
Graham Shorrocks wrote that Lancashire has been the county with the strongest tradition of dialect poetry since the mid-19th century.[50] Many of these gave commentaries on the poverty of theworking class at the time and occasional political sentiments: for example, the balladJone o Grinfilt portrayed an unemployed handloom worker who would rather die as a soldier in a foreign war than starve at home.[51] Vicinus argued that, after 1870, dialect writing declined in quality owing to "clichés and sentimentality".[52] Writing in 1999, Shorrocks argues that "Many dialect writers nowadays cannot speak dialect, or cannot speak it in any convincing fashion, and much of what is written seems exhausted, poor, and, crucially, detached from living speech.[53] Lancashire dialect writing, at least in the nineteenth and the early twentieth century, often drew onLancashire folklore.
The Lancashire Authors Association was founded in 1909 and still exists for writers in the dialect, producing an annual paper calledThe Record.[53]
Some dialect poets include:
Dialect poets have occasionally appeared on the BBC since its establishment. Sam Smith featured on the radio in the 1920s.[58] In the 2010s, BBC radio programmes analysed the Manchester Ballads (which featured dialect)[59] and reported on contemporary poets that kept the tradition of dialect poetry alive.[60][61]
In April 2011,Pendle Borough Council printed phrases from local dialect poems on stone-cube artworks in the area.[62]
In November 2016, Simon Rennie from Exeter University announced his collection of Lancashire dialect poetry from the time of theLancashire Cotton Famine of 1861–65.[63] He said, "It's fascinating how people turned to and used poetry, in their local languages, to express the impact events so far away were having on them."[63]
The Lancashire Dialect Society was founded in 1951;The Journal of the Lancashire Dialect Society has included articles on the Survey of English Dialects and on the dialects of Germany, Switzerland and the United States.[64] The society collected a library of publications relating to dialect studies which was kept at the John Rylands University Library of Manchester from 1974 onwards.[65] This collection was afterwards taken away and deposited at the Lancashire County Library in Preston.
The Lancashire Authors' Association is devoted to the study of Lancashire literature, history, traditions and dialect.[66] TheAssociation’s library collection was founded in Horwich in 1921 and contains dialect works by authors includingEdwin Waugh,Samuel Laycock and Teddy Ashton. The collection has been housed at public libraries across Lancashire, and was moved to theUniversity of Bolton Library in 2021.[67]
Various newspapers in Lancashire and the magazineLancashire Life have included content relating to the Lancashire dialect. R. G. Shepherd contributed many articles interesting both for their philosophy and their excursions into local dialect toThe West Lancashire Gazette andThe Fleetwood Chronicle. Dialect has also featured inThe Bolton Journal,The Leigh Reporter andThe Lancashire Evening Post as well as in "Mr. Manchester's diary" inThe Manchester Evening News.[68]
Between 1979 and 2015, theNorth West Sound Archive contained a range of records in Lancashire dialect (as well as Cumberland and Westmorland dialect). The Archive closed owing to financial reasons in 2015, and its materials were relocated to theManchester Central Library,Liverpool Central Library, and theLancashire Archives.[69]
Films from the early part of the 20th century, particularly those produced byMancunian Films, often contain Lancashire dialect: the films ofGeorge Formby,Gracie Fields andFrank Randle are some examples.[70]
The 2018 filmPeterloo used reconstructed Lancashire dialect from the early 19th century, based on the works of Samuel Bamford, who was portrayed in the film.[71]
Similarly, in music, the Lancashire dialect is often used in regional folk songs. The folk song "Poverty Knock"[72] is one of the best-known songs of such nature, describing life in a Lancashire cotton mill.[73] TheHoughton Weavers is a band formed in 1975 that continues to sing in Lancashire dialect.[74] In 1979, the Houghton Weavers presented a series on local folk music on BBC North West entitledSit thi deawn.[75]
The bandthe Lancashire Hotpots, fromSt Helens, have also used the Lancashire dialect in their work, particularly for humor.[76]