An Alphabetical Compilation of Lancashire Dialect, Phrases, Lancashire Slang and Lancashire Words

By Nikki Wordsmith
hello@nikkiwordsmith.com
WhatsApp: 07905 456704
The symbol of a red rose with green leaves and a yellow centre on a bright yellow background.
The Lancashire flag is used to represent the historic county of Lancashire, England. It was designed by the Friends of Real Lancashire

Search Tip: If you hit CTRL or CMD F while on this webpage you can search and find the exact word or phrase you are looking for.

Got some suggestions of your own for Lancashire words, phrases and stories? Add them to the comments below with full name credit or email hello@nikkiwordsmith.com or message Business WhatsApp +447905 456704

Also don’t forget to subscribe, read, add to the comments too. There are lots of interesting local history stories relating to the words.

This project has grown! It is now a national language project called Talk Dialect.

This is a national interactive talking dictionary for all of us who live in England’s 39 Historic Counties. For the first time Talk Dialect records and revitalise all of our dialects in one central time and place www.talkdialect.co.uk

Featured Word: Gradely

The word ‘gradely’ (proper) reminds me of an incident, allegedly in Hesketh Bank. A rather haughty schoolteacher asked her class of 8 year olds to step to the front and use a phrase involving the word ‘good’ or ‘excellent’ etc. One very nervous (country) boy stepped forward and declared “Mi fathers gett’n a gradely tractor.” “No, No, that will not do” said the teacher. “Tommy, there is no such word in the English dictionary as gradely. “Well then,” says Tommy “it’s not a gradely dictionary.” — Keith Sutton

Featured Phrase: Blackpool Illuminations

Mum always says, “It’s like Blackpool Illuminations!” when the lights are left on in our house. Or when there cars jamming up the narrow Lancashire country roads where we live. — Nikki Wordsmith
  1. A-be, bi thersell (alone)
  2. Abeawt (about)
  3. Aboon (above)
  4. Ackersprit (potato)
  5. Actilly (actually)
  6. Addle (earn, get)
  7. Addled (drunk)
  8. Afoor (before)
  9. Aftite (as soon)
  10. Afterings (last of cow’s milk)
  11. Agate (I was saying — Norma Hart, Rochdale)
  12. Agate (working, on the way)
  13. Ageen, agen (again)
  14. Agog (set on, begun)
  15. Aighs (axe)
  16. Aiker (nute/newt?)
  17. Ah’ll see thee (goodbye — Geoff Partington)
  18. An’ (and)
  19. An’ all (too or as well – Jim McDonald)
  20. Ankitcher (handkerchief— via John Sharples who said his Grandmother Margaret Sharples from Preston said this)
  21. Apeth (a halfpenny, a dimwit)
  22. Arter (are ya? John Sharples)
  23. Are you fast? (Are you stuck on something such as a crossword)
  24. At t’far end (at the end of one’s tether — derived from reaching the far end of the warp when weaving cloth, when the loom has stopped from beaming up)
  25. Axs or Ash (ask – old form seen in the The King James Bible still heard all over – Jim McDonald)
  26. Aye (yes)
  27. Bap (round piece of bread shaped like a bun)
  28. Banjo Butty (Egg and bacon barm— when you eat your butty the egg yolk drips down your tie, you hold it out at arms length and brush the yolk off it)
  29. Barm cake (round piece of bread)
  30. Barm (yeast for making bread — Geoff Partington, he said his Grandad “Barm Joe” sold yeast from a handcart in Hindley and Westhoughton)
  31. Bassinet (bed for baby that looks like a basket)
  32. Beltin’ (very good)
  33. Bleb (blister or blob of something – Jim McDonald)
  34. Bloomin’ (blooming – as in, It’s like bloomin’ Blackpool illuminations in ‘ere)
  35. Bowd (bold)
  36. Bob (hit)
  37. Bobbins (rubbish)
  38. Boggarts (ghosts – Margaret)
  39. Bonkers (crazy – Jim McDonald)
  40. Bowton (Bolton)
  41. Brassick (broke)
  42. Brasted (broke – Jim McDonald)
  43. Brat (mischievous child)
  44. Brew (cup of tea)
  45. Brew (hill — John Thorpe)
  46. Brid (bird)
  47. Brunt (burnt, this one goes way back and is more like brown which it is related to – Jim McDonald)
  48. Burr left (turn left)
  49. Burr reet (turn right)
  50. Buzz (bus)
  51. By thee eck (wow that’s amazing — Deb Freeman)
  52. Ceawnt ’em (count them)
  53. Carr (high hill)
  54. Cartimandua (Queen of the Brigantes, possibly Britain’s first queen around AD60 ish)
  55. Chap (man)
  56. Cheers big ears (thank you)
  57. Childer (children — via John Sharples’s who said his Grandmother Margaret Sharples from Preston said this.)
  58. Chippy tea (a Friday evening meal tradition)
  59. Chuffed (proud)
  60. Chur (chair)
  61. Clarty (sticky – Jim McDonald)
  62. Clemmed (hungry – John Thorpe)
  63. Clench yer flotch (clean your face)
  64. Clod hoppers (shoes)
  65. Clog it (run away fast)
  66. Cloggy bogies ( snow caught between heel and sole of a shoe)
  67. Clomp (stamp)
  68. Clompin’ about lark a fury elephant (stomping about heavy footed – Jim MDonald)
  69. Cloth arms (someone who doesn’t reach out to help with a job — an extension of cloth ears according to commenter below)
  70. Cloth ears (someone who doesn’t hear or doesn’t listen, from the cotton mills)
  71. Coal, lump of (a common present in a childer’s Xmas stocking)
  72. Cob (throw)
  73. Cotch (catch – Jim McDonald)
  74. Cowd (cold)
  75. Cower thee down whilst I pouse thee (sit down while I cut your hair – John Thorpe)
  76. Crammed (upset)
  77. Creating (going on with yourself, being a bit of a theatrical drama queen)
  78. Crowboggart (scarecrow)
  79. Crukel (going over sideways on your ankle — a Rochdale word)
  80. Daft (stupid)
  81. Deeuth (death)
  82. Demic (a person who can’t function properly — Ann Ward, her grandparents used to say this, they lived in Patricroft, Eccles)
  83. Dickies meda (big trouble)
  84. Dinner (12pm, see tea time)
  85. Do you want owt or nowt? (Would you like something or nothing?)
  86. Dobbers (lumps or marbles – Jim McDonald)
  87. Doesto (do you)
  88. Ducky (a game of some sorts?)
  89. Dun yew a thickun (messed things up in your life)
  90. Duster (do ya — John Sharples)
  91. Ecky thump (a humorous expression of pleasure or surprise, supposedly part of the dialect)
  92. Ee am jiggered — (worn out tired — Alice’s Gran, see the entry “Jiggered”)
  93. Ee, tha shap like thee bin suppin cowd tea (you look like you don’t seem to be enjoying your work — heard by Millard who used to work in Hawthorn Mill in Oldham)
  94. Eggshell Blonde (a bald man — Tony Reid)
  95. Eggy butty (soft, wimpish — M. D. Smith)
  96. Ester (have ya? John Sharples)
  97. Eyup cocker (hello)
  98. Fancy pants (see lardi dar)
  99. Fathered (resembled, pronounced with a short a as in math — Andy Speak)
  100. Feight (fight – Jim McDonald)
  101. Feorin’ (frightening things, supernatural beings)
  102. Flannel Ginnel (awning outside a hotel)
  103. Flittin’ (moving house)
  104. Floozy (see Frizzen)
  105. Flushing bog (a posh person’s toilet)
  106. Fod (forehead)
  107. Fotch (fetch – Jim McDonald)
  108. Fow (awful — Gill Hargraves)
  109. Frettin’ (worrying)
  110. Frickened (frightened)
  111. Frickened ‘deeuth (frightened to death – Jim McDonald)
  112. Frizzen (jumped up floozy, Mum would say M— was a jumped up floozy — Jim P. Hewitt; see Floozy)
  113. Fury (fairy)
  114. Galluses (braces to hold up your trousers, possibly a Scottish word but in widespread use in Lancashire in the 1950s)
  115. Gawmless (stupid – Jim McDonald)
  116. Geet (got)
  117. Get little pully on ( get going)
  118. Get weaving ( get going)
    Ginnel or Snicket ( narrow alley way)
  119. Ginnel (tunnel or alley between two houses)
  120. Ginny Green Teeth (Ginny Green Teeth is an old nursery bogie. She used to hang around the edge of ponds and drag unsuspecting children into the reeds and drown them. Later on during the Industrial Revolution when people moved to the towns to work at the mills, she was used by mothers to keep their daughters and sons away from mirrors for vanity reasons I suppose— from a contributor born in Ashton-under-Lyne)
  121. Good egg (good human, see rotten egg)
  122. Goosey, as in, it sends me goosey (a huge wave of emotion)
  123. Gradely (great)Gr
  124. Gradely (proper — Keith Sutton)
  125. Grand (great)
  126. Gud (good)
  127. He’s tighter than a bullfighter’s pants (M. D. Smith)
  128. Hond (hand)
  129. You’re like ‘orse muck, always in th’road (Mum used to always say this to me, to be fair she was right
  130. Howd (hold)
  131. Hurr (hair)
  132. If yer Bob , dunt gi er Bob, that Bob that yer Bob owes er Bob, er Bob is bount gi yer Bob, a Bob on the nose. (Bob saying contributed by John Thorpe)
  133. I’ll go the foot of our stairs (I’m astounded!)
  134. It’ll be reet (everything is going to be okay)
  135. It’s like Blackpool illuminations here (it is either very bright or there’s lots of traffic — Ann Smith)
  136. It would that it were (If only this were true)
  137. Jiggered — (worn out tired not sleepy tired — as in “ee am jiggered” by Alice’s Gran who are Salford people)
  138. Jip (pain, as in giving me jip – Jim McDonald)
  139. Keaw Yed City (Hindley and Westhoughton)
  140. Kecked o’er (fallen over – Lorcan Moriarty)
  141. Keks (trousers, see long keks)
  142. Klempt (starving, as said in Wigan — Andy Speak)
  143. La di da (used if someone puts on airs and graces, see fancy pants)
  144. Lad (boy)
  145. Laikin’ (playing — are you coming to laik at football?)
  146. Lanky (awkwardly tall)
  147. Lanky (the Lancashire dialect)
  148. Lark (like)
  149. Lass (girl)
  150. Leathered (smacked or beaten, from the leather belt)
  151. Leathered (drunk)
  152. Leyholes (meddlers)
  153. Long keks (long trousers, see keks)
  154. Lumber (trouble)
  155. Lunch (doesn’t exist)
  156. Mardy (moody)
  157. Me or mi (my)
  158. Mek us a brew (Would you mind making me a cup of tea please?)
  159. Mickey Drippin’ (a pet name Ann Ward was called by her Great Gran Mary Jane Edwards of Patricroft, Eccles)
  160. Mind tha ther riggot i street (watch out for the water running down the gutter in the street)
  161. Mither (moan)
  162. Moor (more)
  163. Moor (open uncultivated land)
  164. Moor Grime (fine rain)
  165. Motion (bowel movement)
  166. Mythering (someone repeatedly asking you to do something you don’t want to do)
  167. Nae (no)
  168. Nae tha munnah goo theer (no don’t go there)
  169. Nebbut (nearly or almost – John Thorpe)
  170. Neighburr (anyone in a 5 mile radius)
  171. Neet (night – Jim McDonald)
  172. Nesh (cold)
  173. Nice one (thanks)
  174. Noice (thank you)
  175. Nought (nothing, see nowt)
  176. Nowt (nothing, see nought)
  177. Orkard (awkward – Jim McDonald)
  178. Orp (hope, the thing that beats in thy heart)
  179. Over were (the land between Knott End-on-Sea and the River Wyre – ARB)
  180. Ow do (hello)
  181. Ow much? (How much?)
  182. Owd (old, see cowd, bowd, howd, showder, towd – Jim McDonald)
  183. Peighs above sticks (peas above sticks, too big for your boots — Jim P. Hewitt)
  184. Pillock (an idiot)
  185. Poo (pull – Jim McDonald)
  186. Posser (laundary tub agitator)
  187. Pots fer rags (seriously daft – John Thorpe)
  188. Pot towel (a towel used in the kitchen – John Thorpe)
  189. Pow slap (after a hair cut)
  190. Power smack (clip to your head after a haircut)
  191. Prop (support for clothes line)
  192. Proper (right and good, see gradely)
  193. Pummers (big – Jim McDonald)
  194. Put wood inth’ole (shut the door)
  195. Put clog down (drive faster — Pamela Earlam)
  196. Punse (kick – John Thorpe)
  197. Reet (right)
  198. Reet gud (right good — Deb Freeman)
  199. Rotten egg (bad human, see good egg)
  200. Scrunts (underpants — Jack Alexander)
  201. See what they’re giving (see what the shops are selling – Lorraine)
  202. Shap is moving (you move like your drinking cold tea)
  203. Sharpie (a hard human, someone all about the money)
  204. Shep ( Starling)
  205. Showder (shoulder)
  206. Side thable (clear the table)
  207. Side up (tidy up)
  208. Skenning (looking at – John Thorpe)
  209. Skew (school – John Thorpe)
  210. Skew wiff (not quite straight)
  211. Skrike (cry)
  212. Skrickin ( crying)
  213. Slash (pee)
  214. Slop stone (where you wash your pots — John Thorpe)
  215. Slutch (mud – Jim McDonald)
  216. Soss it out (work it out)
  217. Soz (I’m sorry)
  218. Sponny un (good one — Deb Freeman)
  219. Sneck (gate latch)
  220. Stink a mons heith (It smells as high as a man, it stinks rotten — Deb Freeman)
  221. Sun’s cracking the flags (it’s sunny out)
  222. Sup (drink)
  223. Supper (8pm, see dinner and tea time)
  224. Swime (climb — John Kay says: I want to mention the regular verb ‘to swime’, as I still use it, having picked it up from both my granddads when I was growing up in Heywood, Lancs. One granddad from Bolton/Bowton.
    Swime means to climb and was used with prepositions swime over/up/down/through. 
    Burglars frequently ‘swimed up drainpipes’ and we swimed up trees and over back yard walls.
  225. Swirling (sweating — Ann Speak)
  226. Ta (thanks)
  227. Takes one to know one (every judgement you make is a judgement on your self)
  228. Ta ra! (the Lancashire way of saying goodbye)
  229. Teacake (teacake)
  230. Tea time (6pm, see dinner)
  231. Tellint tale (I was saying — Norma Hart, Rochdale
  232. Tha corn reed (I can’t read — M. D. Smith)
  233. Thas mixed me a bottle (you have created a problem for me — Deb Freeman)
  234. Thee (you)
  235. Thesole (fire place)
  236. Thez nor hast? (you haven’t have you?)
  237. The dog is hossing (the dog is mythering for their food)
  238. They don’t take you on (not being friendly, which is a serious crime in the North of England)
  239. Thi (your)To
  240. Titivate ((tidy or smarten)
  241. Tother (the other)
  242. Thowt (thought)
  243. Towd (told)
  244. Tret (treat — Nurse Gemma — thank you for helping my daughter)
  245. Trouble at mill (something had gone wrong)
  246. Tubs ull come (things will get sorted, it will come to pass, said by miners underground — Deb Freeman)
  247. Un (one)
  248. Up hills and down dales (an exciting journey)
  249. Us’n (EG from Bolton 1950s – us’n, we’re going to th’pub)
  250. Wassail — (good health, wellbeing)
  251. Watter (water — Andy Speak)
  252. Waz (wee – as in: going for a Waz.
  253. Wazzock (a donkey’s foreskin, also see Pillock)
  254. Weer at gooin? (where are you going?)
  255. Weers tha bin? (where have you been?)
  256. Well I’ll go to the foot of our stairs (amazing)
  257. When I were young, and in mi prime, I cud ate a buttercake eni time, now I’m gettin old and grey, it vernee taks me ayf a day. —- John Thorpe
  258. Were reet down in coal hole where muck slats ont windas / we’ve used all the coal up and were down to t’cinders / when there yon bon bailiff comes he’ll never findus / coz were reet down in coal hole where muck slats on windas (Ann Smith)
  259. Where were we Walter, when the Westinghouse whistle went ? We were where we were weren’t we Walter? (contributed by John Thorpe)
  260. Whips and Tops (a game, with one top called a window breaker – John Thorpe)
  261. Who’da thowt it? (the name of a few local pubs around the country – John Thorpe)
  262. Wi (with)
  263. Wilter (will ya?)
  264. Woatin O’er (resting after a big meal)Wo
  265. Wovven up (woven up, finished what you are doing)
  266. Yed (head)
  267. Yeet! (an enthusiatic shout when throwing something, okay probably not originally from Lancashire but it goes so well with reet!)
  268. Yed wartch or an ‘ed wartch (head ache, as in: A’ve geet un ‘ed wartch – Jim McDonald )
  269. Yer (you are)
  270. Yer wornt feel th’ benefit when yer owt in theckold (Why are you wearing a coat inside?)
  271. Yonder (over there, far away — Andy Speak)
  272. Yonks (ages)
  273. Yer not as green as yer cabbage looking (smarter than you look — Ann Smith)

An Alphabetical Compilation of the Lancashire Dialect

This image has an empty alt attribute; its file name is 39-Historic-Counties-of-England.png
Map of the 39 historic counties of England, as set up by the Normans in many cases based on earlier kingdoms and shires created by the Angles, Saxons, Jutes, Celts and others.
The 39 historic counties of England, as set up by the Normans. In many cases based on earlier kingdoms and shires, created by the Angles, Saxons, Jutes, Celts and others. Wikipedia

The Lancashire dialect, known colloquially as Lanky, refers to the Northern English vernacular speech of our county, or in other words how we all talk to each other in this area.

Not to be confused with the other definition of Lanky detailed above as describing someone who is awkwardly tall.

The Lancashire dialect phrases and Lancashire slang only sound right said in a Lancashire accent.

If you want to hear what a real Lanky accent sounds like, a real Lancashire accent listen to Frank Speak from Blackrod reading my poem The Pike.

Feel free, should you be so kind, as to add your own Lancashire dialect words and northern sayings relating to Lancashire in the comments below.

I will then happily add them to this list.

HUGE thanks to all the people who have helped and contributed to this list including a special mention to the local dialect groups.

The next historic county up is…the Cumberland dialect, then the Northumberland dialect.

Please note these lists are a blend of Internet research, talking to people and asking the right questions. It is, as we say in Adlington, Lancashire, based on the gradley skill of the no-nonsense reet good communication method of using yer loaf.

All these blogs are being collated to contribute to the national Talk Dialect Living Dictionary launching in January 2026 by Nikki Wordsmith.

Read more about the Lancashire accent and Lindsay Hoyle…


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