Definitions
from Wiktionary, Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License.
- adjective Liverpudlian, colloquial
Liverpudlian .
Etymologies
Sorry, no etymologies found.
Support
Help support Wordnik (and make this page ad-free) by adopting the word Scouse.
Examples
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They all came to America speaking with a very distinct Liverpool accent called 'Scouse.'
Beatles' Business Model Inspires Aspiring Entrepreneurs 2011
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They all came to America speaking with a very distinct Liverpool accent called 'Scouse.'
Beatles' Business Model Inspires Aspiring Entrepreneurs 2011
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They all came to America speaking with a very distinct Liverpool accent called 'Scouse.'
Beatles' Business Model Inspires Aspiring Entrepreneurs 2011
-
They all came to America speaking with a very distinct Liverpool accent called 'Scouse.'
Beatles' Business Model Inspires Aspiring Entrepreneurs 2011
-
They all came to America speaking with a very distinct Liverpool accent called 'Scouse.'
Beatles' Business Model Inspires Aspiring Entrepreneurs 2011
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They all came to America speaking with a very distinct Liverpool accent called 'Scouse.'
Beatles' Business Model Inspires Aspiring Entrepreneurs 2011
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Complicated by the fact that Liverpudlians spoke something known as Scouse, another foreign language.
Morgan’s Run Colleen McCullough 2000
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Complicated by the fact that Liverpudlians spoke something known as Scouse, another foreign language.
Morgan’s Run Colleen McCullough 2000
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Mr Hill, a life-long Liverpool football fan and a former pupil of Morton School and known as Scouse, had initially trained as a plasterer.
News round-up 2010
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Mr Hill, a life-long Liverpool football fan and a former pupil of Morton School and known as Scouse, had initially trained as a plasterer.
News round-up 2010
GBrislawn commented on the word Scouse
Nobody introduced them to me, or to Richard as they made easy conversation with Norman in their odd sounding Scouse accents.
Here, There and Everywhere: My Life Recording the Beatles - Geoff Emerick
June 16, 2009