- So I say, mates, you see now that I am right about that little girl coming from the school yonder.
- She is going down the road there through the red gate on the left hand side of the way.
- Sure enough, the child has gone straight up to the door of the wrong house,
- where she will chance to find that drunken deaf shrivelled fellow of the name of Thomas.
- We all know him very well.
- Won't the old chap soon teach her not to do it again, poor thing!
- Look! Isn't it true?
The test consists of seventy-six words, although some of the words are repeated. The pronunciation of each word or the substitution of another word [for example, many dialects would use "See!" rather than "Look!"] should be noted for the test to be of use. In On Early English Pronunciation, A.J. Ellis distinguished forty-two different dialects in England and the Scottish Lowlands.
In A Grammar of the Dialect of Windhill, Joseph Wright said of Ellis' work, "If his rendering of the dialect test of other dialect speeches is as inaccurate as that of the Windhill dialect, the value of these tests for phonetic and philological purposes is not very great. However, Wright did commend the dialect categorisations and boundaries that Ellis determined.