Mee-mawing

Mee-mawing was a form of speech with exaggerated movements to allow lip reading employed by workers in weaving sheds in Lancashire in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries. The noise in a weaving shed rendered hearing impossible so workers communicated by mee-mawing which was a cross between mime and lip reading.[1] To have a private conversation when there were other weavers present, the speaker would cup their hand over their mouth to obscure vision. This was very necessary as a mee-mawer would be able to communicate over distances of tens of yards. It was said that each mill had its own dialect.

The British comedian Hylda Baker used mee-mawing as part of her stage and radio act in the 1950s.

See also

References

Notes
  1. Freethy 2008, p. 123
Bibliography
  • Freethy, Ron (2008). Memories of the Lancashire Cotton Mills. Newbury,Berks: Countryside Books. ISBN 978-1-84674-104-3.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.