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  2. Ned (Scottish) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ned_(Scottish)

    Scottish soap opera River City has featured neds such as Shellsuit Bob. [18] Neds is a 2010 film by director Peter Mullan . [ 19 ] A 2020 Graeme Armstrong novel, The Young Team , set in Airdrie, North Lanarkshire a few miles east of Glasgow and narrated by a gang member in the local dialect , focuses on the 'ned culture' of the region in the ...

  3. Bonnie - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bonnie

    Bonnie is a Scottish given name and is sometimes used as a descriptive reference, as in the Scottish folk song, My Bonnie Lies over the Ocean or Bonnie Dundee about John Graham, 7th Laird of Claverhouse. It comes from the Scots language word "bonnie" (handsome, pretty, attractive), or the French bonne (good).

  4. List of English words of Scots origin - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_English_words_of...

    Scottish and North English dialect. laddie A boy. lassie A girl. links Sandy, rolling ground, from Old English hlinc (ridge). pernickety From pernicky. minging literally "stinking", from Scots "to ming". plaid From Gaelic plaide or simply a development of ply, to fold, giving plied then plaid after the Scots pronunciation. pony

  5. List of British regional nicknames - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_British_regional...

    Cobras, Plastic Jocks (the new town was populated by Scottish immigrants) Corfe Castle Coarse Arseholes Cornwall Kernowicks, Merry-Jacks, Mera-Jacks, Uncle Jacks or Cousin Jacks (when abroad). Coupar Angus Cowpat Funguses Coventry Peeping-Toms, Covids (pejorative) Cramlington Cramps Crawley Creepy Crawlies, Insects [34] Cromer Crabs [2] Crosby ...

  6. Dictionary of the Scots Language - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dictionary_of_the_Scots...

    The current project team includes editorial staff from the Dictionary of the Older Scottish Tongue and from the Scottish National Dictionary Association. In 2021, Scottish Language Dictionaries became an SCIO (Scottish Charitable Incorporated Organisation) and changed its name to Dictionaries of the Scots Language.

  7. Glasgow dialect - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Glasgow_dialect

    Glasgow Standard English (GSE), the Glaswegian form of Scottish English, spoken by most middle-class speakers; Glasgow vernacular (GV), the dialect of many working-class speakers, which is historically based on West-Central Scots, but which shows strong influences from Irish English, its own distinctive slang and increased levelling towards GSE ...

  8. Jock Tamson's bairns - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jock_Tamson's_bairns

    A copper plaque by Duddingston Kirk, Edinburgh, Scotland.The Kirk is situated below Arthur's Seat and next to Duddingston Loch. "Jock Tamson's bairns" is a Scots (and Northumbrian English) dialect version of "Jack (John) Thomson's children" but both Jock and Tamson in this context take on the connotation of Everyman.

  9. Teuchter - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Teuchter

    Teuchter (English: / ˈ tj uː x t ər / TEWKH-tər, Scots: [ˈtjuxtər, ˈtʃuxtər]) [1] [2] is a Lowland Scots word sometimes used to offensively describe a Scottish Highlander, in particular a Gaelic-speaking Teuchter. [3]