How many of these words do you recognise? And are there any other words or phrases we've missed off?

  • Annan: Say that again? A word you'd need if you were dunch.
  • Dunch: a bit deaf, hard of hearing Joppety-joppety: nerves. From "jaup", a Dorset dialect word meaning the breaking of a wave, or to splash or spatter with water. According to Susie Dent's book How to Talk like a Local, joppety-joppety is the sound reduplicated to indicate spurts of panic.
  • Miff: a quarrel, a coolness between friends. The alternative tiff is the one that's most used today, but we rather like miff, which is of course where the phrase "I'm a bit miffed." comes from.
  • God Almighty's Cow: the ladybird. No, we don't know why either.
  • Homble: a duck Horridge (or whorage): a house of bad characters Slommock: a slatternly woman Torrididdle: out of one's mind Emmet: ant. The Cornish call their tourists emmets. The word used in the rest of the West Country, grockle, is believed to come from a comic strip which originated in the 1920s comic the Rover before moving to the Dandy. Jimmy and his Grockle was about a boy and his pet dragon. Research seems to suggest that the word grockle was adopted for summer visitors by workers at a Torquay hotel, where a scriptwriter picked it up for his film The System, from where it was transferred into more mainstream use. If you know better, let us know!
  • Ramshacklum: good for nothing Twanketen: melancholy Undercreepen: sly.
  • Wopsy: wasp. From the Dorset habit of transposing the "s" sound, so also ax for ask and claps for clasp.
  • Yop: to talk rapidly Dewbit: first breakfast. Dorset dialect has more words for meals than hobbits do. Dewbit means the first meal of the day, although not breakfast, which is bigger and later.
  • Bit an' drop: bit of food, drop of drink. Not a meal. Just a Baggins style snack.
  • Nuncheon, cruncheon, nummit and crummit: four more words for meals. Dorset farm workers were said to have dewbit, breakfast, nuncheon, cruncheon, lunch, nammet, crammet and supper. But nammet - food eaten in the fields between meals, possibly from noon-meat - and nuncheon may well have been two words for the same thing (also cruncheon and crammet) so it's not as bad as it sounds.
  • Boris-noris: to go on recklessly without thought to risk or decency Drawlatcheten: lazy. A drawlatchet is a person who walks slowly and lazily, so quite a good word to apply to your four-year-old when you'd like them to get a move on. Affectionately, of course.
  • Bibber: shiver Airmouse: The bat.
  • Dumbledore: The bumblebee. J K Rowling chose the word for her Hogwarts headmaster because of Dumbledore's love of music: she imagined him walking around "humming to himself a lot".
  • Lippy: Wet and rainy, often stormy. So Harry's probably saying to Dumbledore: "It's a bit lippy out, sir, can't we apparate back to your study?" Or something.
  • Overclap: eg clouds overclosing the earth. So, "will it freeze tonight? Depends on the overclap."
  • Ballywrag: To scold or accuse in foul language.
  • Loplolly: A lazy, or idle person.
  • Gally: To scare. So you may also see a gally-crow in the fields of Dorset.
  • Zummerwold (summer-mould): Freckles on the face, brought out by the sun.