Online Encyclopedia

COCKNEY

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V06, Page 628 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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COCKNEY  , a colloquial name applied to Londoners generally, but more properly confined to those

born in
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London, or more strictly still to those born within the sound of the bells of St Mary-le-Bow church . The origin of the word has been the subject of many guesses, from that in John Minsheu's
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lexicon, Ductor in linguas (1617), which gives the tale of the
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town-bred child who, on hearing a horse neigh, asked whether a " cock neighed " too, to the confusion of the word with the name of the
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Utopia, the
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land of Cockaigne (q.v.) . The
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historical examination of the various uses of " Cockney," by
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Sir James Murray (see Academy, loth of May 1890, and the New
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English
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Dictionary, s.v,) clearly shows the true derivation . The earliest form of the word is cokenay or cokeney, i.e. the ey or egg, and coken, genitive plural of " cock," " cocks' eggs " being the name given to the small and malformed eggs sometimes laid by young hens, known in German as Hahneneier . An early
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quotation, in Langland's Piers Plowman, A. vii . 272, gives the combination of " cokeneyes " and bacon to make a " collop," or dish of eggs and bacon . The word then applied to a child overlong nursed by its
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mother, hence to a simpleton or milksop . Thus in Chaucer, Reeve's Tale, the word is used with
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daf, i.e. a fool . The particular application of the name as a
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term of contempt given by country folk to town-bred
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people, with their dandified airs and ignorance of country ways and country
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objects, is easy . Thus Robert Whittington or Whitinton (fl . 1520), speaks of the " cokneys " in such "
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great cytees as London, York, Perusy " (Perugia), showing the general use of the word . It was not till the beginning of the 17th century that " cockney " appears to be confined to the inhabitants of London .

The so-called " Cockney "

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accent or pronunciation has varied in type . In the first
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part of the 19th century, it was chiefly characterized by the substitution of a v for a w, or
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vice versa . This has almost entirely disappeared, and the chief consonantal variation which exists is perhaps the change of th to f or v, as in " ling " for thing, or " favver " for
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father . This and the vowel-sound change from ou to ah, as in " abaht " for " about," are only heard among the uneducated classes, and, together with other characteristic pronunciations, phrases and words, have been well illustrated in the so-called " coster " songs of Albert Chevalier . The most marked and widely-prevalent change of vowel sound is that of ei for ai, so that " daily " becomes " dyly " and " may " becomes " my." This is sometimes so marked that it almost amounts to incapacity to distinguish the vowels a and i, and is almost universal in large classes of the population of London . The name of the " Cockney School of
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Poetry " was applied in 1817 to the
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literary circle of which Leigh Hunt was the
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principal representative, though Keats also was aimed at . The articles in Blackwood's
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Magazine, in which the name appeared, have generally, but probably wrongly, been attributed to John Gibson Lockhart . COCK-OF-THE-ROCK, the familiar name of the birds of the genus Rupicola (subfamily Rupicolinae) of the Cotingas (allied to the Manakins, q.v.), found in the
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Amazon valley . They are about the
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size of a
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pigeon, with orange-coloured plumage, a pronounced crest, and orange-red flesh, and build their nests on rock . The skins and feathers are highly valued for decoration .

End of Article: COCKNEY
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