Mockney Explained

Mockney (a portmanteau of "mock" and "cockney") is an affected accent and form of speech in imitation of cockney or working-class London speech, or a person with such an accent. A stereotypical mockney speaker comes from an upper-middle-class background.[1]

A person speaking with a mockney accent might adopt cockney pronunciation but retain standard grammatical forms, whereas the genuine cockney speaker uses non-standard forms (e.g. negative concord).

Details

The first published use of the word according to the Oxford English Dictionary was in 1967.[2]

It is an affectation sometimes adopted for aesthetic or theatrical purposes, and at other times just to sound "cool", to generate street credibility, or to give the false impression that the speaker rose from humble beginnings and became prominent through hard work and some innate talent rather than the education, contacts and other advantages that a privileged background tends to bring. Britpop band Blur was said to have a "mockney, down-the-dogs blokey charm".[2] Mick Jagger is often accused of being the first celebrity in modern times to overplay his regional accent in order to boost his street credibility.[3]

One explanation of dialect adoption given in social linguistics is the desire for prestige, that a person is likely to adopt speech patterns (including accent, vocabulary, dialect or even language) which they perceive to be prestigious.

The concept of communication accommodation, either upwards or downwards in idiolect, can be seen in many social interactions. One can put someone at ease by speaking in a familiar tone or intonation, or one can intimidate or alienate someone by speaking more formally. For example, in a courtroom, a more formal voice register with technical legal jargon can be used to intimidate a defendant. In contrast, mockney seeks to lower the perceived socio-economic class of the speaker.

Notable people described as using mockney speech

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: British accents: Cockney and mockney | . Paweł . Rogaliński . Rogalinski.com.pl . 2 March 2011 . 29 December 2014.
  2. Web site: mockney, n. and adj.. . 23 June 2014.
  3. News: Redmond . Camilla . Radio catchup: Jagger's Jukebox, Adam Buxton's breakup tips and the power of Charlie Brooker . The Guardian . 4 June 2010 . 28 November 2013 . London.
  4. News: Caroline . Sullivan . Lily Allen, Notting Hill Arts Club, London . The Guardian . 12 May 2006 . 28 November 2013.
  5. Web site: Jeremy Paxman: 'If you didn't vote, you're a moron'. YouTube.
  6. Book: Zuckermann, Ghil'ad . Ghil'ad Zuckermann . 2003 . Language Contact and Lexical Enrichment in Israeli Hebrew . . 978-1403917232. P. 110: "British violinist Nigel Kennedy [...] speaks 'Mockney', i.e. fake Cockney, to improve his street-credibility".
  7. News: Let's hear it for the British pop babes . https://archive.today/20120911065033/http://www.telegraph.co.uk/culture/culturecritics/bernadettemcnulty/3563310/Lets-hear-it-for-the-British-pop-babes.html . dead . 11 September 2012 . The Telegraph . 17 November 2008 . 28 November 2013 . London . Bernadette . McNulty.
  8. Web site: Tim Roth: Press.
  9. News: Mary. Wakefield. The thinking man's punk. The Spectator. 9 May 2007. 13 December 2019. London.
  10. Web site: Telly chef Jamie Oliver in embarrassing infection double shocker. The Register.