Mackem

"Mak'em" is an informal name for residents of and people from Sunderland, a city in North East England. Spelling variations include "Mackem", "Makem", and "Maccam". Which is local slang for Make Them ("Mak'em") it's also a name for the local accent (not to be confused with Geordie); and for a fan, whatever their origin, of the professional football club Sunderland A.F.C.

Origin

One explanation for the term mackem is that it stems from "mackem and tackem" with mackem as a corruption of the local pronunciation of "make them" (roughly "mack 'em") and tackem from "take them." The expressions date back to the height of Sunderland's shipbuilding history, as the Sunderland shipwrights would make the ships that would sail down the River Wear which would take them to the sea. A variant explanation is that the builders at Sunderland would build the ships, which would then go to Tyneside to be outfitted, hence from the standpoint of someone from Sunderland, "we make 'em an' they take 'em." The term could also be a reference to the volume of ships built during wartime on the River Wear, e.g. "We make'em and they sink'em".

Whatever the exact origin of the term, mackem has come to refer to someone from Sunderland and its surrounding areas, in particular the supporters of the local football team Sunderland AFC, and may have been coined in that context. Newcastle and Sunderland have a history of rivalry beyond the football pitch, dating back to the early stages of the English Civil War,[1] the rivalry associated with industrial disputes of the 19th century and political rivalries after the 1974 creation of Tyne and Wear County.

Evidence suggests the term is a recent coinage. According to the Oxford English Dictionary, with which the BBC carried out a well-publicised search for references,[2][3] the earliest occurrence of it in print was in 1988.[4] The phrase "we still tak'em and mak'em" was found in a sporting context in 1973 in reference to Sunderland Cricket & Rugby Football Club.[4] While this lends support to the theory that this phrase was the origin of the term "Mak'em", there is nothing to suggest that "mak'em" had come to be applied to people from Sunderland generally at such a date. The name "Mak'em" may refer to the Wearside shipyard workers, who during World War II were brought into shipbuilding and regarded as taking work away from the Geordies on Tyneside.[5]

Accent

To people from outside the region the differences between Mak'em and Geordie accents often seem marginal, but there are many notable differences.[6] There is even a small but noticeable difference in pronunciation between the accents of North and South Sunderland (for example, the word something in North Sunderland is often contracted to summik whereas a South Sunderland speaker may often prefer summat).

Pronunciation differences and dialect words

See also

References

  1. "Football Derbies: Geordies v Mackems". Sunderland Life. Archived from the original on July 27, 2007. Retrieved 21 September 2007.
  2. "The Mackem Wordhunt!". BBC.co.uk. British Broadcasting Corporation. 21 June 2005. pp. "Wear > Voices 2005" section. Retrieved 2011-07-31.
  3. "BBC Wordhunt: Your Language Needs You!". OED.com. Oxford University Press. 10 June 2005. pp. "OED News" section. Archived from the original on 2009-02-08. Retrieved 2011-07-31.
  4. 1 2 "New Entry for OED Online: Mackem, n. (Draft Entry Jan. 2006)". OED.com. Oxford University Press. 11 January 2006. pp. "OED News: BBC Balderdash and Piffle (Series One)" section. Archived from the original on 2009-04-19. Retrieved 2011-07-31.
  5. "Mackems". Virtual Sunderland. Retrieved 21 September 2007.
  6. "Accents & dialects". British Library. Retrieved 31 May 2015.
  7. "Mackem Accent". OED Online. Oxford English Dictionary. Retrieved 21 September 2007.
  8. "Where I Actually Live". Blast. BBC Lincolnshire. 5 August 2006. Retrieved 21 September 2007.

External links

Look up mackem in Wiktionary, the free dictionary.
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