Cheers for that link kiddy, a great read. Now I challenge someone to come up with a song that incorporates some of our numerous terms for mud.
Brilliant! I was about to say the words kiddy/old kiddy are good signifiers of a Sussex background and possibly accent and then you used it. QED
And my Mum, born and bred in Plumpton still uses the word Puggy to describe what can loosely be described as soil in her clay-infested wealden garden.
I noticed whilst in Hampshire the other week, that they seem to have a slight regional accent, then as you move into Dorset and across it gets more pronounced. Essex also has a distinctive accent.
Kent and Surrey seem to speak broadly with the same accent as we do in Sussex.
However, I have a Northern friend that reckons there is a definite Brighton accent, and we can be spotted a mile off.
Brighton people might sound like South Londoners. They don't sound anything like East Londoners or Essex boys.
I thought the Brightonian accent sounded like we dropped the middle of words, and making the letter t soft. At least that's what my friends from other parts of the country say