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  1. #1
    Join Date
    2nd January 10
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    Whisht - be quite (from the Gaelic Ist - hush)

    Crabbit - cross, out of salts

    Piece - sandwitch/snack

    Play piece - playtime snack

    Jilly Piece - Jam Sandwitch

    Back of (as in time) - Back of 11 - after 11 o'clock

    Wazzack - idiot

    Pinkie - little finger

    The list is fairly long added to which not only are there generic Scottish ones but there are a host of regional ones too:

    In the Angus area you'll come across the mornins nicht - tomorrow night.

    Local to me you'll still here the older generation say I'm fair bochk - I'm ill (from the Gaelic bochd) - poor.

  2. #2
    Join Date
    4th November 10
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    Quote Originally Posted by figheadair View Post
    Whisht - be quite (from the Gaelic Ist - hush)

    Crabbit - cross, out of salts

    Piece - sandwitch/snack

    Play piece - playtime snack

    Jilly Piece - Jam Sandwitch

    Back of (as in time) - Back of 11 - after 11 o'clock

    Wazzack - idiot

    Pinkie - little finger

    The list is fairly long added to which not only are there generic Scottish ones but there are a host of regional ones too:

    In the Angus area you'll come across the mornins nicht - tomorrow night.

    Local to me you'll still here the older generation say I'm fair bochk - I'm ill (from the Gaelic bochd) - poor.


    Forgive me, but isn't "nicht" german? Or is that nacht? Ugh, I dont know why I try.
    [-[COLOR="DimGray"]Floreat Majestas[/COLOR]-|-[COLOR="Red"]Semper Vigilans[/COLOR]-|-[COLOR="Navy"]Aut Pax Aut Bellum[/COLOR]-|-[I][B]Go mbeannai Dia duit[/B][/I]-]
    [COLOR="DarkGreen"][SIZE="2"]"I consider looseness with words no less of a defect than looseness of the bowels."[/SIZE][/COLOR] [B]- John Calvin[/B]

  3. #3
    Join Date
    14th November 10
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    Dunfermline, Scotland
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    Greetings,

    Its a braw bricht moonlicht nicht, th' nicht = It's a grand/beautiful bright moonlight night tonight.

    naw/nae bad and yersel = no/not bad and how is yourself.

    Aw right! = alright/all is ok/ok/I basically understand what your saying I'm just not interested. (If you are talking and someone keeps saying Aw Right! they are hearing you just not listening LOL) also can mean: are you ok! e.g. (ME) Hi James, Aw right! - (JAMES) Ay' nae bad and yersel? - (ME) Aw right!

    Ay' = yes

    There is alot more, but my "Scots Dictionary" is in a cupboard somewhere.

    All the best,


    Graham
    Last edited by Graham A. Robieson; 29th December 10 at 02:00 PM. Reason: Adding more info

  4. #4
    Join Date
    11th February 10
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    Brandon, MB
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    a few that come to mind

    aboon = above
    braw = pretty
    chiel = child
    cowpin' = falling
    jaloused = guessed
    tulzie = tussle/skirmish

  5. #5
    Join Date
    4th November 09
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    Born in Glasgow, Scotland currently S.Yorkshire England UK and part time Gambia W Africa
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    The rabble have come up with a mixture of local pronunciations as well as few Scottish words. You may need to distinguish between the two. In Glasgow there are many different dialects depending on where one lived and in some cases what school you went to.

    If you can find any of Stanley Baxter's Parliamo Glasgow shows on the net you will see what I mean. He made a series of shows taking the mickey out of Glesga speak. (English as spoken in Glasgow) Phrases such as "Erra perra ...... o'er err on ra flare" Translated as- There is a pair of .... over there on the floor. Sayings such as "Goin doon ra waater" Going down the water means a boat trip on the River Clyde. Many comedians also made fun of some of the phrases in common use such as what became known as the Common Giraffe. "Cum on get aff" Meaning:- Hurry up and get off (the bus)

    I could go on but I am sure you get the drift ...... Good luck with your presentation

  6. #6
    Join Date
    20th July 05
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    Quote Originally Posted by PEEDYC View Post
    The rabble have come up with a mixture of local pronunciations as well as few Scottish words. You may need to distinguish between the two. In Glasgow there are many different dialects depending on where one lived and in some cases what school you went to.

    If you can find any of Stanley Baxter's Parliamo Glasgow shows on the net you will see what I mean. He made a series of shows taking the mickey out of Glesga speak. (English as spoken in Glasgow) Phrases such as "Erra perra ...... o'er err on ra flare" Translated as- There is a pair of .... over there on the floor. Sayings such as "Goin doon ra waater" Going down the water means a boat trip on the River Clyde. Many comedians also made fun of some of the phrases in common use such as what became known as the Common Giraffe. "Cum on get aff" Meaning:- Hurry up and get off (the bus)

    I could go on but I am sure you get the drift ...... Good luck with your presentation
    I'd forgotten all about Parliamo Glasgow. Thanks for the reminder.

    Daft Wullie, ye do hae the brains o’ a beetle, an’ I’ll fight any scunner who says different!

  7. #7
    Join Date
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    Quote Originally Posted by Tony View Post
    I'd forgotten all about Parliamo Glasgow. Thanks for the reminder.
    That is hilarious!

  8. #8
    Join Date
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    Quote Originally Posted by Tony View Post
    I'd forgotten all about Parliamo Glasgow. Thanks for the reminder.
    His Exalted Highness Duke Standard the Pertinacious of Chalmondley by St Peasoup
    Member Order of the Dandelion
    Per Electum - Non consanguinitam

  9. #9
    Mike_Oettle's Avatar
    Mike_Oettle is offline Oops, it seems this member needs to update their email address
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    Thanks to Lord Charles Somerset’s efforts to anglicise the Nederduitsch Gereformeerde Kerk (Dutch Reformed Church) – and the Boer people at educational level – at the Cape in the early 19th century, we have a fascinating Scots heritage from the men he imported from “North Britain”.
    The men he brought in were teachers (dominies) and Church of Scotland ministers (the Afrikaners call their ministers dominees). But instead of turning the Boers English, they learned to speak Dutch (both High Dutch, the official form of the language, and the dialect now known internationally as Afrikaans).
    Several of them married Afrikaner wives.
    One of the dominies (by name William Robertson) in fact returned to Scotland to qualify and be ordained as a minister (dominee), and returned to serve the NG Kerk. A town in the Western Cape was named after him.
    (When he was a teacher, his pupils in Graaff-Reinet included an ancestor of mine, whose granddaughter married a Scot. And an Afrikaans-speaking descendant of his, named Andrew Robertson, was married to my father’s aunt.)
    The Rev Andrew Murray was renowned as the minister of Graaff-Reinet. He was succeeded by his grandson, Dr Andrew Murray (DTh, Edinburgh), who served many years in Graaff-Reinet before accepting a call to Wellington, near Cape Town, where he served the congregation my grandmother’s family belonged to.
    It was thanks to his influence that the young women of Wellington were educated in English by American women teachers. My grandmother and her sisters were among their pupils, but so, too, were many girls sent to Wellington for their education from as far away as the Zuid Afrikaansche Republiek (ignorantly called the Transvaal by the British).
    Because of these remarkable Scots, there is a considerable Scottish influence on South African usage, in both English and Afrikaans.
    We use the term pinkie for a little finger. Some, in their South British arrogance, regard this as an unwarranted intrusion into South African English from Afrikaans, but it is in fact derived from Scots.
    The word chuffed is also in common use in South African English (it is unknown in Afrikaans).
    Regards,
    Mike
    The fear of the Lord is a fountain of life.
    [Proverbs 14:27]

  10. #10
    Join Date
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    If you want a more tongue in cheek approach try the links on http://glasgowsurvival.co.uk/, especially these http://glasgowsurvival.co.uk/category/toys/

    Guaranteed to offend some but very funny none the less.

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