plum in one's mouth
English
Noun
- An accent resembling Received Pronunciation (often described as plummy).
- 1995, Bary Dowling, Mudeye: An Australian Boyhood and Beyond, page 89:
- ‘That's not his real name. His real name is William Joyce.’
‘But why is he called Lord Haw Haw?’
Lorrie is embarrassed, and Dick answers.
‘It's because of the way he speaks, with a plum in his mouth, like some of the English do, hawhawhaw. You know?’
- 2018 March 10, Audrey Young, “Amy Adams was the right choice but she has plenty of homework to do”, in New Zealand Herald:
- She talks at a crisp clip with a slight plum in her mouth that she almost certainly didn't pick up at Rangitoto College.
- Used other than figuratively or idiomatically: see plum, in, mouth.
Further reading
- “a plum in your mouth”, in Cambridge English Dictionary, Cambridge, Cambridgeshire: Cambridge University Press, 1999–present.
- “a plum in your mouth”, in Collins English Dictionary.
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