Oxford "-er"
The Oxford "-er", or often "-ers", is a colloquial and sometimes facetious suffix prevalent at Oxford University from about 1875, which is thought to have been borrowed from the slang of Rugby School. The term was defined by the lexicographer Eric Partridge in his Dictionary of Slang and Unconventional English.
Rugger, footer and soccer
The "-er" gave rise to such words as rugger for Rugby football, soccer and the now archaic footer was used for association football.The term "soccer", derived from a transformation/emendation of the "assoc" in Association football, was popularised by a prominent English footballer, Charles Wreford-Brown. The first recorded use of "soccer" was in 1895. Two years earlier The Western Gazette reported that "W. Neilson was elected captain of ‘rugger’ and T. N. Perkins of ‘socker’" and Henry Watson Fowler recommended socker in preference to "soccer" to emphasise its correct pronunciation. In this context, he suggested that "baccy", because of the "cc" in "tobacco", was "more acceptable than soccer". "Socker" was the form that appeared in the first edition of the Concise Oxford Dictionary.
The sports writer E. W. Swanton, who joined the London Evening Standard in 1927, recalled that "Rugby football... in those days, I think, was never called anything but rugger unless it were just football". Around the same time the Conservative Minister Leo Amery noted that, for his thirteen-year-old son Jack, "footer in the rain a very real grievance" at Harrow School.
In literature
In Evelyn Waugh's Brideshead Revisited, Oxford undergraduate Anthony Blanche claims that "I was lunching with my p-p-preposterous tutor. He thought it very odd my leaving when I did. I told him I had to change for f-f-footer."In Stiff Upper Lip, Jeeves, a novel of P. G. Wodehouse, Bertie Wooster was asked whether he was fond of rugger, to which he replied "I don't think I know him".
As late as 1972 the retired headmaster of a Hertfordshire grammar school recalled "the footer" having had a poor season in 1953–4.
What is and is not
Typically such words are formed by abbreviating or altering the original word and adding "-er". Words to which "-er" is simply suffixed to provide a word with a different, though related, meaning – such as "Peeler" and "exhibitioner" – are not examples. Nor are slang nouns like "bounder" or "scorcher", formed by adding "-er" to a verb. "Topper" may appear to be an example, but as a word meaning excellent person or thing, existed from the early 18th century. Both "top hat" and "topper" as synonymous terms date from Regency times and Partridge seems to suggest that the former, itself originally slang, may have been derived from the latter.Words like "rotter" are somewhere in between. Fiver and tenner probably do fit the "-er" mould, as, more obviously, does oncer, though this was always less prevalent than the higher denominations and is virtually obsolete following the introduction of the pound coin in 1983. Antiquarian Tim Wonnacott used the term "oner" on an edition of BBC TV's Bargain Hunt as recently as 2007.
During the First World War the Belgian town of Ypres was known to British soldiers as "Wipers" . This had some hallmarks of an "-er" coinage and the form would have been familiar to many young officers, but "Wipers" was essentially an attempt to anglicize a name that some soldiers found difficult to pronounce. In the BBC TV series Blackadder Goes Forth, a comedy series set in the trenches during the First World War, Captain Edmund Blackadder and Lieutenant George occasionally addressed Private Baldrick as Balders.
A common extension of the "-er" is found in names containing a pronounced "r", e.g., "Darren", "Barry", etc. where in addition to the "-er", the "r"-sound is replaced by a "zz" so one gets "Dazza" from "Darren", "Bazza" from "Barry".
''Test Match Special''
The "-er" form was famously used on BBC radio's Test Match Special by Brian Johnston, ex-Eton and New College, Oxford, who bestowed nicknames on his fellow commentators on Test cricket: thus, Blowers for Henry Blofeld, Aggers, Bearders and McGillers. The habit extended to cricketers such as Phil Tufnell, but the '-ie' suffix is more common for the current crop of commentating ex-players, such as Michael Vaughan or Shane Warne.The former Hampshire County Cricket Club captain Colin Ingleby-Mackenzie, whose most usual nickname was McCrackers, was sometimes addressed as Ingers when he made occasional appearances on TMS and former Middlesex bowler and journalist Mike Selvey was referred to as Selvers. The programme's producer, Peter Baxter, cited Backers as his own nickname and Jenkers that of commentator and cricketing journalist, Christopher Martin-Jenkins.
Johnston himself was known as Johnners. Following his death in 1994, the satirical magazine Private Eye published a cartoon of Johnston arriving at the gates of heaven with the greeting "Morning, Godders". An earlier Eye cartoon by McLachlan, reproduced in the 2007 edition of Wisden, included in its long caption a reference to former England bowler Fred Trueman as Fredders, while yummers was applied to "another lovely cake sent in by one of our listeners". Blowers has continued the tradition, referring on one occasion to a particular stroke as inexplickers.
Other personal forms
Other "-er"s as personal names include:- Athers: Lancashire and England cricket captain Michael Atherton, who subsequently became a commentator on both radio and TV ;
- Beckers: former England football captain David Beckham became known almost universally as "Becks" ;
- Beemer: Rich Beem, professional golfer, television commentator and analyst.
- Betjers: as an undergraduate, the poet John Betjeman was generally known as "Betjy" or "Betj", but Philip Larkin, among others, later adopted the "-er" form;
- Blashers: the magazine Country Life referred to the explorer Colonel John Blashford-Snell as "Blashers" ;
- Brackers: Tim Wonnacott used this form with reference to Bargain Hunt expert James Braxton during the 2008 series of the programme;
- Britters: American singer Britney Spears was often described in the British press as "Britters". Unsurprisingly, her boyfriend when she first rose to fame, the singer Justin Timberlake, was Timbers.
- Bozzer : British Prime Minister Boris Johnson
- Camers or Cammers: applied occasionally to British Prime Minister David Cameron, notably by bloggers or spoof writers and especially with reference to his educational background ;
- Cheggers: broadcaster Keith Chegwin ;
- Chunners: Street Fighter video game character Chun-li;
- Cleggers: Nick Clegg, British Deputy Prime Minister 2010-2015: shortly after the formation of a coalition government, a cartoon by Peter Brookes of The Times, had Prime Minister David Cameron saying, "Polish these , Cleggers, old son...";
- Crabbers: former Sunderland AFC local radio commentator Simon Crabtree;
- Griggers: recounting how she met John Betjeman, Alice Jennings, a programme engineer at the BBC during the Second World War referred to producer Geoffrey Grigson as follows: "'John said, 'Who's that girl?' And Griggers from a great height said, 'That's your PE'";
- Hatters was used by Private Eye with reference to Roy, Lord Hattersley, former Deputy Leader of the British Labour Party;
- Jezza: Labour Party leader Jeremy Corbyn
- From the 1960s and subsequently, Elanwy Jones of Collett Dickenson Pearce was known to her circle as Lanners;
- Macca : musician Paul McCartney
- Mozzer : musician Morrissey
- Nickers: it is perhaps inevitable that people named Nicholas will continue, from time to time, to be addressed as such;
- Notters: during the Falklands War of 1982 Conservative MP and diarist Alan Clark referred to British Defence Secretary John Nott as "poor old Notters";
- Pragger Wagger: various holders of the title of Prince of Wales, probably originally referring to Edward VII when heir apparent;
- Rampers: the Surrey cricketer Mark Ramprakash : "I could not help wondering how 'Rampers' would have dealt with their ageing attack" ;
- Rodders for Rodney, as in the BBC radio comedy series, Beyond Our Ken, when Hugh Paddick, playing the part of Charles, addressed his camp friend Rodney : "Absolutely dolly, Rodders". Rodney Trotter in Only Fools and Horses is often referred to as Rodders by his brother Del Boy.
- Tatters: the Yorkshire squire, Sir Tatton Sykes, father of politician and diplomat Sir Mark Sykes and great-great-grandfather of novelist and socialite Plum Sykes, was referred to in the novels of Robert Surtees as "Tatters" or "Old Tat";
- Thickers: John Thicknesse, cricket correspondent of the London Evening Standard 1967–96;
- Tinners: Peter Tinniswood, TV scriptwriter and author of Tales from the Long Room;
- Tollers: the Oxford nickname of writer J.R.R. Tolkien ;
- Tuffers: Middlesex and England cricketer Phil Tufnell
- Twitters: nickname of Henry Herbert, 4th Earl of Carnarvon, British Colonial Secretary in the 1860s-70s, on account of his twitchy behaviour;
- Whiters: used privately by broadcaster Carol Vorderman to address Richard Whiteley, her co-presenter of Countdown;
- Widders: former British Government Minister Ann Widdecombe was so described by journalist Hugo Vickers. See also the Daily Mail, 30 October 2010: "Widders wipes floor with John Sergeant";
- Woolers: sports journalist Ian Wooldridge.
Oxford
University and City locations
"-er" forms of Oxford locations include:- Adders: Addison's Walk, Magdalen College;
- All Soggers: All Souls ;
- Bodder: Bodleian Library;
- Compers and Benders: Compline and Benediction, Magdalen College;
- Deepers: the beer cellar of Lincoln College, officially "Deep Hall";
- the Giler: the street St Giles'; also St Giles' Café;
- Jaggers: Jesus College;
- memugger: memorial, particularly the Martyrs' Memorial, which has also been referred to as Maggers Memoggers;
- Radder: Radcliffe Camera;
- Staggers: St Stephen's House;
- Stanners: members of St Anne's College;
- Wuggers : Worcester College.
Other Oxonian forms
- Bonners was undergraduate slang for bonfire, possibly, as Partridge suggests, an allusion to Bishop Edmund Bonner of London who was involved in the burning of alleged heretics under Queen Mary I.
- Bullers for the University Police, or bulldogs: for example, "The proctors... go about accompanied by small, thickset men in blue suits and bowler hats, who are known as bullers".
- Bumpers for a bumps race in rowing was in use at both Oxford and Cambridge from about the turn of the 20th century and may have arisen first at Shrewsbury School.
- Congratters, now very dated indeed as a form of congratulations, was recorded by Desmond Coke in Sandford of Merton.
- Cuppers is an inter-collegiate sporting competition, derived from "cup".
- Divvers referred to divinity as a subject of study, as, for example, when John Betjeman, as an undergraduate in 1928, published "a special 'Divvers' number of The University News, complete with cut-out Old and New Testament cribs in the form of shirt cuffs to enable candidates to cheat in the exam".
- Eccer for exercise.
- Sonners was the nickname of William Stallybrass, the inter-war principal of Brasenose.
Other examples
At Cambridge University, cleaning staff who change bed linen and towels in college rooms are referred to as "bedders".
Simon Raven, describing an episode on military service in the late 1940s, referred several times to a particular brigadier as "the Brigger".
Terms from Harrow School include bluer and yarder.
The common abbreviation 'bant' is an archaism - the word banter people hold to have been derived from actually being slang itself, a cruel victim of the Oxford 'er'. The original word bant refers to a drinking toll exacted on those passing from the main quadrangle of University College, Oxford to its secondary Radcliffe 'quad' between the hours of 7 and 10 PM, The tollgate itself being the entrance to a shared student room, and the toll being the rapid consumption of an alcoholic beverage.
A flat-sided conker is known as a cheeser, an "-er" contraction of "cheese-cutter". The names applied to conkers that have triumphed in conker fights are arguably "-er" forms, though "conker" itself is derived from a dialect word for the shell of a snail.
20th century novelists
There are few "-ers" in the books of P. G. Wodehouse, though, with reference to a boundary in cricket scoring four runs, his poem, "The Cricketer in Winter" contained the line, "And giving batsmen needless fourers". The "-er" was evident also in the school cricketing stories of E. F. Benson: "Owlers ". In the two Chimneys novels of Agatha Christie, a pompous Cabinet Minister was nicknamed Codders because of his bulging eyes.Evelyn Waugh referred to his books Remote People and Black Mischief as Remoters and Blackers and to Madresfield Court, the country seat of the Earls Beauchamp, as Madders.
Locations
Evidence of badders for the racquet sport of badminton is largely anecdotal, as it is in respect of the horse trials held since 1949 in the grounds of Badminton House, Gloucestershire.The same is true of Skeggers and Honkers, for the former British colony of Hong Kong, though this form has appeared on a number of websites and in print and Wodehouse's first employer, The Hongkong and Shanghai Banking Corporation, is sometimes referred to in the City of London as Honkers and Shankers.
The stadium at Twickenham in South West London, used for major Rugby Union fixtures, including the annual Oxford v. Cambridge 'Varsity match, is often abbreviated to Twickers and journalist Frank Keating has referred to the annual lawn tennis championships at Wimbledon as Wimbers.
The Gloucestershire town of Cheltenham is sometimes reduced to Chelters, particularly by visitors to the Cheltenham Gold Cup horse races.
Chatsworth, seat of the Dukes of Devonshire, has been referred to as Chatters in Private Eye.
Further examples
Test Match Special aside, by the mid-20th century the "-er" was being replaced by snappier nicknames. Thus, in the stories of Anthony Buckeridge, set in a preparatory school of the 1950s, Jennings was "Jen", and not "Jenners". Even so, in the Harry Potter books of J. K. Rowling, Dudley Dursley was addressed as Dudders.The adjective butters, meaning ugly, is a 21st-century example of the "-er" as "street" slang, as in "She's well butters, innit". This is similar in concept to the well-established starkers. The origin of bonkers is uncertain, but seems to date from the Second World War and is most likely an "-er" coinage derived from "bonk". Similarly, crackers is probably derived from "cracked" and ultimately from "crazy"; Partridge cited "get the crackers" as a late 19th-century slang for "to go mad"
The late 20th century form, probably Australian in origin, that gave rise to such nicknames as "Bazza", "Gazza", "Hezza", "Prezza", "Bozza", "Jezza", "Wozza", "Wazza", and "Mozza" has some similarities to the Oxford "-er". "Macca" for Sir Paul McCartney and others is another variant, McCartney's former wife Heather Mills having been referred to in the press as "Lady Macca". In Private Eye's occasional spoof romance, Duchess of Love, Camilla, Duchess of Cornwall addressed her husband, Prince Charles, as "Chazza", while he referred to her as Cammers.