Geordie
Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English 5++LDOCE 5++Geor·die /ˈdʒɔːdi $ ˈdʒɔːr-/ noun British English informal 1. [countable]SAN someone from Tyneside in northeast England 〔英格兰东北部的〕泰恩赛德人2. [uncountable]SAN a way of speaking that is typical of people from Tyneside 泰恩赛德口音
Examples from the Corpus
Geordie• A similar process is also taking place in darts led by an exuberant Geordie commentator with a Cambridge History degree.• She got to her feet and went to gather Geordie up into her arms.• Gazza's goal convinced Maradona there is no greater player on earth than the irrepressible Geordie.• Horsley just smiled, his large relaxed frame and confident bonhomie contrasting sharply with the abrupt style of the little self-made Geordie.• Leicester's Geordie boss Brian Little, in contrast, paraded his strongest side but they rarely threatened Newcastle.• But the Geordie cartoonist says producing the anarchic Viz is no longer a laughing matter.• He is a cheerful fellow with a typical Geordie sense of humour.Origin Geordie (1800-1900) From the local way of saying Georgie, a form of the man's name GeorgeGeor·die nounChineseSyllable
Corpus someone northeast in England Tyneside from
Geordie
Geor‧die /ˈdʒɔːdi $ ˈdʒɔːr-/
noun British English informal
2. [uncountable] a way of speaking that is typical of people from Tyneside
Geor‧die /ˈdʒɔːdi $ ˈdʒɔːr-/
noun British English informal Date: 1800-1900
Origin: From the local way of saying Georgie, a form of the man's name George
1. [countable] someone from Tyneside in northeast EnglandOrigin: From the local way of saying Georgie, a form of the man's name George
2. [uncountable] a way of speaking that is typical of people from Tyneside