There are not many variations of Gibberish in the English-speaking world. They use -itherg-, “thg”, -elag-, -itug-, -uthaga-, -uvug-, -idig-, -atheg- (th in then and the two vowels are pronounced with a schwa), and -adeg-. The dialects are given different names. Another form of gibberish known as allibi is spoken using the insertion -allib-.
“-idig- “-uddag-“, “-uvug-“, “-uthug-“[edit]
These four dialects of Gibberish are spoken by adding the infix to each syllable after the onset. Example:
- dog →didigog, duddagog, duvugog
- cat →cidigat, cuddagat, cuvugat
When a syllable starts with more than one consonant, the infix is added after the onset consonants. Example:
- creek →cridigeek, kruddageek, cruvugeek
- strong →stridigong, struddagong, struvugong
When the syllable begins with a vowel, that vowel is used in place of the first i in the -ithieg- infix. Example:
- all → idigall, uddagall, uvugall
- eat → idigeat, uddageat, uvugeat
Words of more than one syllable repeat the rules for each syllable.
- example →idigexidigampidigle, uddagex-uddagam-puddagle, uvugex-uvugam-puvugle
- flower → flidigow-idiger, fluddagow-uddager, fluvugow-uvuger [2]