ChatterBank1 min ago
'Ee by gum !'
34 Answers
Do people up north still say this ? And what does it mean ?
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It's same as the expression 'By gum' which is used in many other parts of the country - Ee bah gum is just A northern way of pronunciation of it.
It's a 'minced oath' meaning 'By God'.
A minced oath is something you use when you, for instance, drop a hammer on your foot and don't want to swear in front of the children or granny.
It's same as the expression 'By gum' which is used in many other parts of the country - Ee bah gum is just A northern way of pronunciation of it.
It's a 'minced oath' meaning 'By God'.
A minced oath is something you use when you, for instance, drop a hammer on your foot and don't want to swear in front of the children or granny.
I could be wrong here but I suspect it's still used in places like Yorkshire and I wouldn't say it's used instead of swearing as boxtops and Mark have suggested. In can be used in several ways as in if a girl asks her boyfriend .'Do I look nice in this?' He would reply,'Ee bah gum lass thou looks a treat.'
By 'eck is also used like this.
By 'eck is also used like this.
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When I first started out as a teacher, in 1970s Accrington, I thought the kids were extracting the michael as they regularly referred to 'yon lad', 'o'er yon'....and even talking to one who had been taken poorly and findin he'd had 'pobbies' for breakfast.
It was like setting your watch back 50 years.
It was like setting your watch back 50 years.
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