Times Colonist

TikToker finds her Northern Ireland slang is understood in Newfoundla­nd

- SARAH SMELLIE

ST. JOHN’S — Whitney McCullough says she has always felt like people outside her home of Banbridge, Northern Ireland, need subtitles to decipher her accent and slang. So it has been strange and delightful to discover through her TikTok videos that in Newfoundla­nd and Labrador, people understand her just fine.

It was an invitation to a restaurant opening in Northern Ireland that led McCullough to discover Newfoundla­nd English — and an island of people who know exactly what she means when she says, “The arse is gone out of ‘er, b’y.”

“I couldn’t believe it, it’s just like home from home,” McCullough said in an interview. “And everybody has been so lovely. The comments are great.”

McCullough has 173,000 followers on TikTok, where she posts videos about life in Northern Ireland and the region’s slang words. Her popularity on social media is what got her an invitation to the opening of a new Mary Brown’s Chicken restaurant last month in the nearby town of Lisburn.

The 36-year-old had never heard of the fast-food chain before, so she posted a video to TikTok asking if anyone else had. Newfoundla­nders took notice.

Mary Brown’s was founded in St. John’s, N.L., in 1969, and has since spread across Canada. But its fried chicken and “taters” hold a special place in the province’s heart, and people began leaving her comments to explain.

“I could see that people were talking to me like we speak here,” McCullough said. “I go to London quite often, and they were using words that I use in London and nobody understand­s me.”

Someone pointed her to the Dictionary of Newfoundla­nd English, which was first published in 1982. Newfoundla­nd dialects date back about 400 years, and they come from migratory fishermen from southern England, and from immigrants from southeaste­rn Ireland, who began arriving in the early 17th century, according to a descriptio­n of the dictionary on the website of the University of Toronto Press.

McCullough began reading the dictionary, and posting videos about the words she found there that are also used in her home region.

For example, “b’y” in Newfoundla­nd and other parts of Atlantic Canada is the same as “bai” in Northern Ireland. They’re spelled differentl­y, but they’re both pronounced the same and used to casually refer to a person, typically a male.

In both places, a “skeet” is a troublemak­er, someone who might rifle through a parked car if its doors were unlocked.

“The arse is gone out of ‘er” is what someone in both regions might say if a thing or a situation had fallen apart, likely beyond repair.

And a “feed” or a “scoff” is a big meal, which is exactly what

McCullough says she enjoyed at the restaurant opening last month. She even met Gregory Roberts, the chief executive of Mary Brown’s, who is from Newfoundla­nd.

“He was like, ‘You sound like me,’” she recalled.

Gerard Van Herk, a retired linguistic­s professor from Memorial University in St. John’s, N.L., said the similariti­es McCullough is documentin­g are intriguing. “Especially because Northern Ireland is the ‘wrong’ part of the island for migration to Newfoundla­nd and Labrador,” he said in an email.

McCullough now has several thousand TikTok followers from Newfoundla­nd and Labrador, and she says she’ll keep posting videos about shared slang words as she finds them in the Dictionary of Newfoundla­nd English.

“I think people in Newfoundla­nd enjoy seeing that connection,” she says. “As long as people still find it interestin­g, and as long as I’m still having fun, I’ll definitely keep posting.”

 ?? MOHAMMAD SAJJAD, AP ?? A man holds hailstones after a hail and rain storm in Peshawar, Pakistan, Saturday.
MOHAMMAD SAJJAD, AP A man holds hailstones after a hail and rain storm in Peshawar, Pakistan, Saturday.
 ?? WHITNEY MCCULLOUGH, VIA THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? TikToker Whitney McCullough has discovered that Newfoundla­nders use many of the same slang terms she uses in Northern Ireland.
WHITNEY MCCULLOUGH, VIA THE CANADIAN PRESS TikToker Whitney McCullough has discovered that Newfoundla­nders use many of the same slang terms she uses in Northern Ireland.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada