Family & Relationships10 mins ago
Maze and dretly
3 Answers
My grandmother (who was born in Exeter and lived most of her life in Plymouth) used to say to me 'you'm maze me luvver ' meaning 'you're mad and I love you!!' Has anybody else ever heard the word 'maze' used in this respect? Also, she used to say 'dretly' meaning soon - I guess it comes from 'directly' - anybody else heard this?
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.The verb 'to maze' was in use at least 700 years ago, meaning 'stupefy' , 'perplex' or 'craze'. It was just a somewhat older version of 'amaze' and no doubt lasted in the dialects of certain regions - probably as an adjective, too - until comparatively recent times.
There seems very little doubt but that 'dretly' is just a local pronunciation, as you suspect.
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