World Travel Guide

City Guide  - London  - Language
Language

Although English is the official national language in the UK, 275 separate languages are actually spoken in the nation's multicultural capital. It is perhaps surprising, then, that the acquisition of a second European language remains a low priority among most of the native population. A typical London accent is characterised by a dropped 'h' at the beginning of words, a glottal stop instead of 'tt' in the middle of words and the elongation of 'a' to 'i'. Professor Higgins (Rex Harrison) famously tries to cure Eliza Doolittle (Audrey Hepburn) of this habit in the film, My Fair Lady (based on George Bernard Shaw's play Pygmalion), by making her recite 'The rain in Spain falls mainly on the plain' and not 'The rhine in Spine falls minely on the pline'. Cockney rhyming slang emerged in the nineteenth century as a means for East End residents to communicate without being understood by the police. The most commonly used phrases, such as 'dog and bone' for phone, 'plates of meat' for feet and 'apples and pears' for stairs, have since passed into the national vernacular.



Copyright © 2001 Columbus Publishing
    
GENERAL
City Overview
City Statistics
Cost of Living
History
Language
Accommodation
 
GETTING THERE
Air
Water
Road
Rail
 
GETTING AROUND
Getting Around
 
BUSINESS
Business
 
SIGHTSEEING
Sightseeing
Key Attractions
Further Distractions
Tours of the City
Excursions
 
ENTERTAINMENT
Nightlife
Sport
Shopping
Culture
Special Events
Food and Drink