10 ENGLISH BOOKS RELATING TO «COCKNEYFICATION»
Discover the use of
cockneyfication in the following bibliographical selection. Books relating to
cockneyfication and brief extracts from same to provide context of its use in English literature.
1
A Dictionary of Varieties of English
Raymond Hickey. Wells (1982 [1], 1994 [2.4]); MOCKNEY. Cockneyfication. See
ESTUARY ENGLISH and Wells (1994 [2.4]). coda. The end of a syllable, that part
which follows the nucleus, for example /ts/ in cats. There is a general tendency ...
2
Miscellaneous prose works
In the men on whom this metropolitan distinction was conferred, including writers
not less remarkable than Hazlitt, Leigh Hunt, and Charles Lamb, we cannot
honestly affirm that there was no element of cockneyfication. Though differing
much ...
Baron Edward Bulwer Lytton Lytton, 1868
3
Lippincott's Monthly Magazine: A Popular Journal of General ...
It is a well-regulated little watering-place, and it has been subjected to a due
measure of cockneyfication. But the glittering ocean remains, shimmering at
moments with blue and silver, and the large gorse - covered downs rise superbly
above it ...
I had learned that, with regard to all the public lions in England, there is a
minimum of cockneyfication with which you must make your account. There are
always people on the field before you, and there is generally something being
drank on ...
Now they will have the Hindus and the Indus, and it will be apparent to acute
readers in England that the former is only an accidental cockneyfication of the
name of the river. People in England as well as in India who have occasion to dip
into ...
It is a well-regulated little watering-place, and it has been subjected to a due
measure of cockneyfication. But the glittering ocean remains, shimmering at
moments with blue and silver, and the large gorse-covered downs rise superbly
above it.
7
Collected Travel Writings: Great Britain and America
I had learned that, with regard to most romantic sites in England, there is a
constant cockneyfication with which you must make your account. There are
always people on the field before you, and there is generally something being
drunk on the ...
8
The reliquary: depository for precious relics, legendary, ...
... suit the landscape of rock stream and wood, Because the presence of
cockneyfication To fairest scenery is direct damnation. Poetic rigmaroles on fallen
grandeur, The instability of life, et cxtera, Are things I am really tired of and can't
endure.
9
The Saturday Review of Politics, Literature, Science and Art
453 Rome, the Cockneyfication of, 454 Sculling, Amateur, Vindication of, 73
Starling, the, and the Woodpecker, 106 Starlings in Congregation, 230 Starlings,
Watching the, 420 Strauss, Huneker and Others, 75 Summer, the Br;ath of
English, ...
John Douglas Cook, Philip Harwood, Walter Herries Pollock, 1903
10
Half-hours of blind man's holiday; or, Summer and winter ...
... out upon the broad weald of Sussex, we must admit, however prosaic our
mood, that these are like mountain crests. The cockneyfication of the region by
excursionists to the little inn at the Devil's Dyke cannot destroy 268 blind man's
holiday.
William Wilthew Fenn, 1878
NEWS ITEMS WHICH INCLUDE THE TERM «COCKNEYFICATION»
Find out what the national and international press are talking about and how the term
cockneyfication is used in the context of the following news items.
A sensitive bounder
Kipling's cockneyfication seems contrived. This isn't how I feel at all. I still shiver when the ballad of 'Danny Deever' turns nasty. And I am still ... «Spectator.co.uk, Oct 07»