cockney
Valid in Scrabble
- Scrabble points
- 18
- Words With Friends
- 20
- Letters
- 7
Definition of cockney
9 senses · 3 parts of speech · etymology included
adj
- (UK, not-comparable)From the East End of London, or London generally.
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adj
- (UK, not-comparable)From the East End of London, or London generally.
- (not-comparable)Of or relating to people from this area or their speech style.
- (alt-of, alternative, not-comparable)Alternative form of Cockney.
noun
-
(UK, slang)Any Londoner.
“COCKNEY, a native of London. An ancient nickname implying effeminacy, used by the oldest English writers, and derived from the imaginary fool's paradise, or lubberland, Cockaygne.”
-
(UK)A Londoner born within earshot of the city's Bow Bells, or (now generically) any working-class Londoner.
“Londoners, and all within the sound of Bow Bell, are in reproach called Cockneys.”
“A Cockney or Cocksie, applied only to one born within the sound of Bow bell, that is in the City of London.”
““Charming place, ma’am,” said he, bowing to the widow; “noble prospect—delightful to us Cocknies, who seldom see anything but Pall Mall.””
“Parkinson: You made films before, but the part that really made your name was Zulu, wasn't it […] and there of course—against type—you played the toff, you played the officer. Caine: I played the officer, yeah, and everybody thought I was like that. Everyone was so shocked when they met me, this like Cockney guy had played this toffee-nosed git.”
-
A native or inhabitant of parts of the East End of London.
“A cockney in a rural village was stared at as much as if he had entered a kraal of Hottentots.”
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(obsolete)An effeminate person; a spoilt child.
“A young heir, or cockney, that is his mother's darling[…]”
“This great lubber, the world, will prove a cockney.”
name
- The dialect or accent of such Londoners.
- (alt-of, alternative)Alternative form of Cockney.
Definitions from Wiktionary, CC BY-SA.
Etymology
First attested in Samuel Rowland's 1600 The Letting of Humours Blood in the Head-Vaine as "a Bowe-bell Cockney", from Middle English cokenay (“a spoiled child; a milksop, an effeminate man”),…
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First attested in Samuel Rowland's 1600 The Letting of Humours Blood in the Head-Vaine as "a Bowe-bell Cockney", from Middle English cokenay (“a spoiled child; a milksop, an effeminate man”), used in the 16th c. by English country folk as a term of disparagement for city dwellers, of uncertain etymology. Possibly from Middle English cokeney (“a small, misshapen egg”), from coken (“cocks'(rooster’s)”) + ey (“egg”) or from Cockney and Cocknay, variants of Cockaigne, a mythical land of luxury (first attested in 1305) eventually used as a humorous epithet of London. Compare cocker (“to spoil a child”).
Words you can make from cockney
36 playable · top: COCKY (16 pts)
Best play cocky 16 points5-letter words
2 words4-letter words
12 words3-letter words
12 words2-letter words
9 wordsHooks
1 extension · 1 back
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