cockneyize
Collocations
2ADJ.
bad, used
ADV.
already
Definitions
verb
To pronounce with a cockney accent.
After some sensible remarks to the effect that, before a word beginning with an aspirated “h,” (“heroic,” “harangue,” and “historical,” for instance,) “a” should be used, and not “an,” unless you choose to cockneyize and weaken the aspiration of your “h's,” it is declared that we should avoid the error of not repeating the article, and that we must say, instead of "an ivory handle and silver blade," "an ivory handle and a silver blade," and instead of "an arbitrary and conventional language," "an arbitrary and a conventional language."
The cockneyized form of Bethlehem, "Bedlam," has long been an accepted and significant word in our vocabulary.
To make vulgar and tasteless.
To sing such great statesmen and morals so pure, His first bard is Bowring—the second Tom Moore; Leigh Hunt was refused, as a cockneyized calf, And Rogers, for being too comic by half!
If the little history of Madison could not have been written without meddling with the caps and petticoats of its first ladies, and also selecting from the verdant brain of an old gray-headed idiot, trash concocted and cockneyized in London, then it had better ever remained a blank.
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Idioms & Phrases
Example Bank
3After some sensible remarks to the effect that, before a word beginning with an aspirated “h,” (“heroic,” “harangue,” and “historical,” for instance,) “a” should be used, and not “an,” unless you choo
WiktionaryThe cockneyized form of Bethlehem, "Bedlam," has long been an accepted and significant word in our vocabulary.
WiktionaryIt is a great pity that an excellent dictionary should be used to cockneyize the already bad pronunciation in use in this country.
Wiktionary