「CockNEY」の共起表現一覧(1語右で並び替え)
該当件数 : 98件
| a number of British regionalities, including | Cockney, a Geordie, a Scouser, and a Scotsman; a 19th |
| for the John Lewis Partnership, dropping his | Cockney accent to appeal to society customers. |
| He has a | cockney accent and speaks in a very pompous, verbose |
| physically strong character and speaks with a | Cockney accent in the English versions. |
| Vern speaks with a strong | cockney accent, and his speech is phonetic (for examp |
| orian ballads over a "couple of pints" with a | Cockney accent. |
| Its mascot is a green gecko with an | Cockney accent. |
| the 2009 box office hit Harry Brown starring | Cockney actor Michael Caine, and soul music singer Pl |
| eatures excerpts of John Betjeman's poem "The | Cockney Amorist". |
| tablishing the image of the humorous East End | Cockney and highlighting the conditions of ordinary w |
| a lack of education on the part of the actor ( | cockney and northern English accents tend to be bette |
| Was Eric Idle supposed to be | Cockney and John Cleese supposed to be upper class or |
| le-bow was destroyed there would have been no | cockney area until a new church was built. |
| I agree with the above about | Cockney area selection. |
| The concept of a ' | cockney area' is flawed anyway. |
| ello-playing Victoria, single mother Kate and | Cockney art student Avril - were played by Liza Godda |
| Limehouse around 1565, reportedly from a poor | cockney background. |
| to have no belief in initialisms; a swearing | cockney, bald car salesman; overweight Chinese studen |
| Barry was a | cockney barrow-boy, and an unlikely partner for the g |
| Goniff (Christopher Cary) a slender, likable | Cockney cat burglar; and Chief (Brendan Boone) a rugg |
| leader, Billy Cotton, was a larger-than-life | Cockney character who started each show with the cry |
| ces random, interpolation of a pair of comedy | Cockney characters whose presence in the Parisian set |
| ostess on the show by Green, impressed by her | cockney charm and manner, and stayed for three years. |
| He broadcast his own recollections of a | cockney childhood, for the BBC in the 'seventies. |
| It was a | Cockney comedy and the dialogue is in the Cockney dia |
| r a misunderstanding with his girlfriend, the | Cockney cook, the father-figure, and several others. |
| Bill Snibson - a | cockney costermonger who inherits Lord Hareford's lan |
| born to Richard Butler and Sybella Butler, a | cockney couple who had emigrated from London to Adela |
| ts residents, and as a celebration of popular | Cockney culture, especially its music hall traditions |
| ams from London, and is thus often dubbed the | Cockney Cup Final. |
| Actor and professional | Cockney Danny Dyer, who has appeared in films includi |
| accurate phonetic transcription of the London | Cockney dialect, transmogrified into a Native South A |
| ndon between the Wars) (1985) and Yes Mush: A | Cockney Dictionary: The Cockney Language and Its Worl |
| "Lazy Sunday" has a novel, traditional | cockney East End of London music-hall sound and Marri |
| re under way, Mrs Pike leads in a 10-year-old | Cockney evacuee also named Arthur. |
| Born to a | Cockney family, Morse was a 15 year old school dropou |
| 86 MFI World Matchplay tournament, The Crafty | Cockney famously declared that "he kept losing to wal |
| sweatshop, and Alfie Bass as a self-employed | Cockney fish curer. |
| In this musical comedy, a | Cockney flower girl is in love with a policeman whom |
| o their friend and ex-drummer Mark Stewart, a | cockney from East London. |
| He played the | cockney fruit and veg trader from the show's inceptio |
| gs-to-riches story about a young guttersnipe, | cockney girl from the slums of 18th century London. |
| Jorrocks, the sporting | cockney grocer, with his vulgarity and good-natured a |
| Bernard Knowles and starring Ronald Shiner as | Cockney Harry, Michael Redgrave, Jean Kent, Joan Gree |
| The play, by Frank Norman, himself a | Cockney, has music and lyrics by Lionel Bart, who als |
| essor Archimedes Porter, and Esmerelda, their | cockney housekeeper, are shipwrecked at the same loca |
| d was famous for his nervous twitches and his | Cockney humour. |
| that time under the name Peter Richmond, as a | Cockney informer. |
| ird instalment of her Adams family saga about | Cockney life. |
| who begins a relationship with working class | cockney Lorraine Watts (played by former model Lorrai |
| its multiple narrators and its stripped-down | cockney lyricism, into the light and shadow of cinema |
| According to tradition, a true | Cockney must be born within earshot of the sound of t |
| Giles, now as his teenage | Cockney personality "Ripper," invites Joyce out for s |
| Russian defector and actor Leo Bulgakoff, the | cockney producer, Leslie Spiller and famed lighting d |
| Cockney Rebel went on to release The Human Menagerie | |
| For the Steve Harley and | Cockney Rebel song, see "Make Me Smile (Come Up and S |
| D box set compilation album spanning Harley's | Cockney Rebel and solo work. |
| fame later in the decade with Steve Harley & | Cockney Rebel and as a part of Rod Stewart's backing |
| me-James (Keyboards) - earlier Steve Harley & | Cockney Rebel |
| Smile (Come Up and See Me)" - Steve Harley & | Cockney Rebel (3:59) |
| lity of Mercy, a 2005 album by Steve Harley & | Cockney Rebel |
| e Recording is a live album by Steve Harley & | Cockney Rebel released in 1977. |
| /news-sheets, again in 1980 (Steve Harley and | Cockney Rebel) and again on all 2009/2010 news-sheets |
| He also sang on albums by Steve Harley & | Cockney Rebel, Roger Daltrey, Shakin' Stevens and Cli |
| uart Elliot, renaming the band Steve Harley & | Cockney Rebel, with whom he had more success. |
| ion album by the British band, Steve Harley & | Cockney Rebel, released on the EMI label in May 1988. |
| Founder members of the punk band The | Cockney Rejects, brothers Mick & Jeff Geggus, were bo |
| such as Angelic Upstarts, The Barracudas, The | Cockney Rejects, and compilations such as the Oi! alb |
| amp turn of phrase; his name has been used as | Cockney rhyming slang for party. |
| ng slang is found in Up the frog: the road to | Cockney rhyming slang, by Sydney Thomas Kendall. |
| n a part of the town known as Pen-y-pound and | cockney rhyming slang for a penny is 'an Abergavenny' |
| The lyrics consist of | Cockney Rhyming Slang. |
| ('Screaming Alice' was | Cockney rhyming slang for Crystal Palace.) |
| In | Cockney rhyming slang, the phrase means "bank". |
| In | Cockney rhyming slang, Gertie Gitana means a banana. |
| The expression 'Penny bun' is | Cockney rhyming slang for one, sun and son. |
| His name is used as | Cockney rhyming slang for a bevvie (alcoholic drink). |
| In | cockney rhyming slang it could mean a "plate" or "wor |
| "The Greatest | Cockney Rip Off" (7-inch. |
| his band, the Stan Ellis Experiment performed | Cockney Rock style versions of popular songs - this p |
| y most familiar playing hard-boiled tough guy | Cockney roles: his role as the amiable chef Terry in |
| Robert Newton, as a | cockney schemer who witnessed the killing and attempt |
| stage appearance was in 1942, when he played | Cockney schoolboy Roberts in James Hilton's play Good |
| in most cases, several subvarieties, such as | Cockney, Scouse and Geordie within British English; N |
| The wheeler-dealer | cockney second hand car salesman Terry Tibbs, a ficti |
| Michael Robbins as | Cockney Sergeant |
| In the episodes Queen, | cockney singers Chas and Dave make an appearance. |
| Landis had an important supporting role as a | Cockney soldier in A Hill in Korea. |
| This dish gave rise to the old | cockney song Boiled Beef and Carrots which is still s |
| , an invented dialect of English derived from | Cockney, taxi-drivers' and Dave's own usages, text-me |
| kinds of London-flavoured accents, from broad | Cockney to near-RP. |
| Her rendition of traditional | Cockney tunes charmed the critics and helped win her |
| ray stupid teenagers and adults, using a weak | Cockney voice which may have been his natural one. |
| Cockney Wanker is a character from Viz based on a ste | |
| and Horble (known as the "Horrible Hogs") are | Cockney Warthogs who are a little crass at times. |
| r both used to say (back in the 1950s) that a | cockney was someone born with the sound of the bells |
| g and authentic depictions of/tributes to the | Cockney way of life in recent years." |
| her comic characterisations, playing fearsome | Cockney women in farces. |
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