How common is the phrase around Brum and outside of it? My mom says it all the time to refer to going somewhere far away. "I ain't going to Brum to pick up your cousins, it's round the Wrekin!" and I'd used it before, but outside of Aberystwyth where there's loads of people from the West Midlands people will look at me strange if I say it.
Also, I don't know if there's the same pronouncing Fs as Vs in Brummie dialect, like ing becoming ink "Sumfink and nufink" for example. I know it used to be a thing in old Mercian English, and it's probably due to Welsh influence as the letter F is V in Welsh.
Also, I don't know if there's the same pronouncing Fs as Vs in Brummie dialect, like ing becoming ink "Sumfink and nufink" for example. I know it used to be a thing in old Mercian English, and it's probably due to Welsh influence as the letter F is V in Welsh.