US /ˈkɑkni/
・UK /'kɒknɪ/
In Cockney English, H's are often dropped at the beginning of words, so someone trying to correct for that might add H's where they don't belong, like Eliza Doolittle in "My Fair Lady." In Oxford, Edinburgh, and
In Cockney English, Hs are often dropped at the beginning of words, so someone trying to correct for that might add Hs where they don't belong.
I learned the Cockney accent for the sex puppets.
I learned the Cockney accent for the sex puppets.
[Cockney accent] Yer right, I'm Amy Walker.
um i'll probably say cockney
cockney
Cockney rhyming slang survives well beyond its original inspiration, as in the currently popular "Marvin" for starving hungry.
"Cockney rhyming slang survives well beyond its original inspiration,
Firstly, the Cockney rhyming slang for years is donkey's ears,
Let's have a butcher's that ring then." It's another one that comes from Cockney rhyming slang, butcher's hook, meaning look,
(Cockney accent) I'm a khaleesi, not a queen. [bleep], me.
now if you're form London, and you speak cockney, or a bit like slang
But after discovering an old VHS tape which included a snippet of her original Cockney accent, artificial intelligence was able to recreate that original voice, something Sarah's children had never heard before.
But after discovering an old VHS tape which included a snippet of her original Cockney accent, artificial intelligence was able to recreate that original voice, something Sarah's children had never heard before.
OK, so Cockney Rhyming Slang is a type of slang. It's a coded language invented in the 19th Century
What's Cockney Rhyming Slang for 'money'? Is it… a) bread? b) honey? Or c) dough?