The term
Brummies refers to people from the city of Birmingham. Brummies have
their own accent which is a subject of debate all on its own. Many
people confuse the Birmingham accent with that of the Black Country.
The word
comes from Brummagem, the local name for Britain's second city and from
which the word Brummies is derived.
Strangely
enough many foreign visitors to the city actually like the accent but
it does appear to have something of a stigma amongst the English.
Surveys have shown it to be the least favoured British accent.
If
someone speaks with a strong Brummie accent then they are often
percieved as not very bright or as one academic research suggests - a
police suspect with a Brummie accent sounds guilty!
Unfortunately
this stigma applies to the Black Country accent too. Speakers from
Wolverhampton, Dudley or Walsall are often assumed to be Brummies by
default whereas in reality the accents are different.
The
likes of Ozzy Osborne, Carl Chinn and Clare Short have helped to make
the Brummie accent famous and there are many words that are typical to
this city.
Brummies
have the last laugh though when it comes to hearing outsiders trying
their best to mimick the Brummie accent. It never sounds right, is
always over emphasised and exaggerated and often comical.
Remember
this - the Industrial Revolution didn't begin down south. The great
engineers, industrialists and the workhouse of Britain was here. It
took brains to organise all that.