bovver
Appearance
English
[edit]Etymology
[edit]Represents a nonstandard or dialectal (in particular Cockney) pronunciation of bother.
Pronunciation
[edit]- Rhymes: -ɒvə(ɹ)
Noun
[edit]bovver (countable and uncountable, plural bovvers)
- Pronunciation spelling of bother.
- 1997, Patricia Guiver, Delilah Doolittle and the Purloined Pooch[1], page 27:
- No need to tell me, I'd recognize that Cockney accent anywhere! “I'm in a bit of bovver,” he said. “Do me a favour and go to the shelter and do the necessary for Trixie.”
- (British, slang) Violence, especially that associated with youth gangs.
- 1976, Freda Adler, Herbert Marcus Adler, Sisters in Crime: The Rise of the New Female Criminal, page 100:
- In London there are some thirty gangs of “bovver birds,” violence-prone girls who roam the streets in packs attacking almost any vulnerable object for no apparent reason other than the sheer thrill of it.
Derived terms
[edit]Translations
[edit]Verb
[edit]bovver (third-person singular simple present bovvers, present participle bovvering, simple past and past participle bovvered)
- Pronunciation spelling of bother.
- 1990, Linda Svendsen, Words We Call Home: Celebrating Creative Writing at UBC, University of British Columbia Press, page 38:
- "You specials," Nigel said disgustedly. "I don't know why I bovver, really I don't."
- 2007, Hugh Walpole, The Golden Scarecrow[2], page 83:
- "I don't bovver," he said, with a cross look in the direction of his brother and sister Rochesters.
- 2007, Julie Burchill, Daniel Raven, Made in Brighton […] , Virgin Books, pages 60–61:
- […] in Brighton & Hove, where the council were not above attempting a sort of half-hearted, class-based ethnic-cleansing-without-violence, wherein families who have been in Brighton for generations—who could probably even trace their lineage right back to Brighthelmstone if they could be bovvered […]
- 2018 September 18, Brian Logan, “Catchphrase comedy is dead. Am I bovvered?”, in The Guardian[3]:
- “Playgrounds and canteens are denied catchphrases,” he writes in the Radio Times, fretting that “the art will be lost.” Which begs the question: am I bovvered?
Interjection
[edit]bovver
Further reading
[edit]- “bovver n.”, in Green’s Dictionary of Slang, Jonathon Green, 2016–present