Scouse is the nickname of Pook in East Sussex.
Scouse is the accent and dialect of English found in the northern English city of Liverpool and adjoining urban areas of Merseyside, northwestern Cheshire and Skelmersdale, West Lancashire. The Liverpool accent is highly distinctive and sounds wholly different from the accents used in the neighbouring regions of Cheshire and rural Lancashire. Inhabitants of Liverpool are often called Scousers.
The word Scouse was originally a variation of lobscouse (probably from the north German sailor's dish Labskaus), the name of a traditional dish of scouse (food) made with lamb stew mixed with hardtack eaten by sailors.
Lancashire has one of the most diverse selections of spoken accents of any English county or region. This is thought to be due to the large amount of immigration into the Liverpool area from Ireland, Wales, the Isle of Man, Scotland, other parts of northern England inland from it, in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries. The influence of these speech patterns was strong in Liverpool, distinguishing the accent of its people from those of surrounding Lancashire and Cheshire.
Other Northern English dialects include
The characteristic features of the accent of the region are discussed in section 4.4.10 of Wells (1982).
A notable feature of Scouse is its tendency towards lenition of stop consonants (Honeybone 2001, sections 4 and 5, Marotta and Barth 2005). In particular
The velar nasal is usually followed by a hard sound in words where most other English accents have it at the end of a word or before a vowel, so that sing is as opposed to in Received Pronunciation. See Ng coalescence.
The sound is often a tap , similar to Scots.
Features of Scouse vowels include:
Scouse is noted for a fast, highly accented manner of speech, with a range of rising and falling tones not typical of most of northern England.
Irish influences include the pronunciation of the letter 'h' as 'haitch' and the plural of 'you' as 'youse'. There are also idioms shared with Hiberno-English, such as "I know where you're at" (Standard English: "I know who you are").
Expressions include 'lah' (or rarely, 'lid', with an emphasis on the 'i') as an abbreviation of lad, used to mean mate or pal, e.g. "alright lah!"
In addition, the following fictional characters speak scouse:
British English | Languages of the United Kingdom | Liverpool