Accent and dialect of English found primarily in the metropolitan county of Merseyside.
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A stew of meat and vegetables and hardtack that is eaten by sailors.
1People say it's vital to have a scouse heartbeat and local players.
2If you're a scouse coffee aficionado, let us know which one he means.
3Even a scouse of mouldy biscuit met the approval of Loolowcan.
4Unbeaten in their past six, it is the scouse Blues who are looking good.
5My husband is from Liverpool and talks fondly of scouse.
6His speech quickens; the scouse vowels get more pronounced.
7I phoned her and heard that familiar scouse voice cutting through a cacophony of shouting.
8I don't think it comes down to whether there is a scouse lad in the team.
9In a controversial and, frankly, snobbish outpouring on BBC radio she attacked the modern scouse accent.
10There was one thing to do and I did it-calledthem aft and gave them some hot scouse.
11Give me a bowl of me ma's scouse with crusty bread any day and I'm a happy scouser.
12The funny thing was I could never understand a word he was saying when he spoke to the other scouse lads.
13And who in all honesty wouldn't like to hear the scouse Dusty Springfield lend her brassy tones to Whip You With A Strap?
14Gentrification -the family patriarch was born in the workhouse -is neatly captured when the sibs tuck into scouse with artisan bread: Three quid.
15But how would Gladstone have fared with his booming scouse habit of addressing Queen Victoria (so she said) as if she were a public meeting?
16He was no Russian: his accent was Scouse, deep, strong and quick.