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Modern Scots

Modern Scots comprises the varieties of Scots traditionally spoken in Lowland Scotland and parts of Ulster, from 1700.

Anti-littering sign in Modern Scots on the Ayrshire Coastal Path.

Throughout its history, Modern Scots has been undergoing a process of language attrition, whereby successive generations of speakers have adopted more and more features from English, largely from the colloquial register.[1] This process of language contact or dialectisation under English[2] has accelerated rapidly since widespread access to mass media in English, and increased population mobility became available after the Second World War.[3] It has recently taken on the nature of wholesale language shift towards Scottish English, sometimes also termed language change, convergence or merger.

By the end of the twentieth century, Scots was at an advanced stage of language death over much of Lowland Scotland.[4] Residual features of Scots are often simply regarded today as slang, especially by people from outwith Scotland, but even by many Scots.

Dialects edit

 
Map of Scots dialects

The varieties of Modern Scots are generally divided into five dialect groups:[5][6]

The southern extent of Scots may be identified by the range of a number of pronunciation features which set Scots apart from neighbouring English dialects. Like many languages across borders there is a dialect continuum between Scots and the Northumbrian dialect, both descending from early northern Middle English. The Scots pronunciation of come [kʌm] contrasts with [kʊm] in Northern English. The Scots realisation [kʌm] reaches as far south as the mouth of the north Esk in north Cumbria, crossing Cumbria and skirting the foot of the Cheviots before reaching the east coast at Bamburgh some 12 miles north of Alnwick. The Scots [x]–English [∅]/[f] cognate group (micht-might, eneuch-enough, etc.) can be found in a small portion of north Cumbria with the southern limit stretching from Bewcastle to Longtown and Gretna. The Scots pronunciation of wh as [ʍ] becomes English [w] south of Carlisle but remains in Northumberland, but Northumberland realises r as [ʁ], often called the burr, which is not a Scots realisation. The greater part of the valley of the Esk and the whole of Liddesdale have been considered to be northern English dialects by some, Scots by others. From the nineteenth century onwards influence from the South through education and increased mobility have caused Scots features to retreat northwards so that for all practical purposes the political and linguistic boundaries may be considered to coincide.[8]

As well as the main dialects, Edinburgh, Dundee and Glasgow (see Glasgow patter) have local variations on an Anglicised form of Central Scots. In Aberdeen, Mid Northern Scots is spoken by a minority. Due to their being roughly near the border between the two dialects, places like Dundee and Perth can contain elements and influences of both Northern and Central Scots.

Phonology edit

Consonants edit

  1. ^ /t/ may be /ʔ/ between vowels or word final.[9]
  2. ^ a b In Ulster, dentalised pronunciations may also occur.
  3. ^ Initial /θ/ in thing, think and thank, etc. may be /h/ in central dialects.[9]: 507 
  4. ^ In mid northern varieties an intervocallic /ð/ may be realised /d/.[10]
  5. ^ Allophone of /x/ after front vowels, especially /i/ and /ɪ/. May also be heard initially in heuk (/c̜juk/), heuch (/c̜ju/), and hoe (/c̜jʌu/).[11]
  6. ^ Medial /xt/ may be /ð/ in Northern dialects.[9]: 499 
  7. ^ Older /xʍ/.[9]: 499  Northern dialects also have /f/.[9]: 507 
  8. ^ The cluster wr may be realised /wr/, more often /r/, but may be /vr/ in northern dialects[9]: 507  e.g. wrack ("wreck"), wrang ("wrong"), write, wrocht ("worked"), etc.

Vowels edit

Vowel length is usually conditioned by the Scottish Vowel Length Rule.

Aitken[12] IPA Notes
1 short /əi/
long /aɪ/
2 /i/
3 /ei/ With the exception of North Northern dialects[13] this vowel has generally merged with vowels 2, 4 or 8.
In northern varieties the realisation may be /əi/ after /w/ and /ʍ/, and in the far north /əi/ may occur in all environments.[14]
4 /e/
5 /o/
6 /u/
7 /ø/ Merges with vowels 1 and 8 in central dialects and vowel 2 in northern dialects.
/e/ in parts of Fife, Dundee and north Antrim.
Usually /i/ in northern dialects, but /wi/ after /ɡ/ and /k/.
Mid Down and Donegal dialects have /i/.
In central and north Down dialects, merger with vowel 15 occurs when short and with vowel 8 when long.
8 /eː/ Always long in many varieties.
8a /əi/
9 /oe/
10 /əi/
11 /iː/ Always long in many varieties.
Final vowel 11 may be /əi/ in Southern dialects.[15]
12 /ɑː, ɔː/ Always long in many varieties.
13 /ʌu/ Vocalisation to /o/ may occur before /k/, especially in western and Ulster dialects.
14 /ju/
15 /ɪ/ Always short.
Often varies between /ɪ/ and /ʌ/ especially after 'w' and 'wh'.[16]
/ɪ̞/ (/æ̈/) occurs in much of Ulster except Donegal which usually has /ɛ̈/.[17]
16 /ɛ/
17 /ɑ, a/ Usually /ɑ/, often /ɑː/ in south west and Ulster dialects,[18] but /aː/ in Northern dialects.
18 /ɔ/ Some mergers with vowel 5.
19 /ʌ/ Always short.

Orthography edit

Words which differ only slightly in pronunciation from Scottish English are generally spelled as in English. Other words may be spelt the same but differ in pronunciation, for example: aunt, swap, want and wash with /a/, bull, full v. and pull with /ʌ/, bind, find and wind v., etc. with /ɪ/.

Alphabet edit

Letter Details
A Vowel 17
Vowel 4 in a(consonant)e.[19] In Northern dialects the vowel in the cluster 'ane' is often /i/[20] and after /w/ and dark /l/ the realisation /əi/ may occur.[21]
Vowel 12 for final a in awa (away), twa (two) and wha (who), but may also be /ɑː/, /ɔː/, /aː/ or /eː/ depending on dialect[22]
The unstressed vowel /ə/
B /b/
C /k/ or /s/[23]
D /d/
Silent in word final nd and ld,[24] but often pronounced in derived forms. Sometimes simply n and l or n and l e.g. auld (old) and haund (hand) etc.
E Vowel 16.[25] bed, het (heated), yett (gate), etc.
Vowel 2 in e(consonant)e[26]
The unstressed vowel /ə/
F /f/
G /ɡ/ or /dʒ/
H /h/
I Vowel 15.[27] E.g. big, fit (foot), wid (wood), etc.
Vowels 1, 8a and 10 in i(consonant)e[28]
The unstressed vowel /ə/
J /dʒ/
K /k/
L /l/
M /m/
N /n/
O Vowel 18.[29]
Vowel 5. Often spelled phonetically oa in dialect spellings such as boax (box), coarn (corn), Goad (God), joab (job) and oan (on) etc.[30]
The unstressed vowel /ə/
P /p/
Q /k/
R /r/ or /ɹ/ is pronounced in all positions,[31] i.e. rhotically[32]
S /s/ or /z/[33]
T /t/
May be /ʔ/ between vowels or word final[34]
Silent in medial cht ('ch' = /x/) and st, and before final en,[35] e.g. fochten (fought), thristle (thistle) and also the 't' in aften (often) etc.
Silent in word final ct and pt,[35] but often pronounced in derived forms e.g. respect and accept etc.
U Vowel 19[36] but, cut, etc.
Vowel 7 occurs in u(consonant)e, especially before nasals,[37] and sometimes for u alone
Vowel 6 in u(consonant)e in some words
The unstressed vowel /ə/
V /v/
W /w/
X /ks/
Y Vowels 1, 8a and 10 in y(consonant)e[28]
Z /z/
/jɪ/ or /ŋ/, may occur in some words as a substitute for the older <ȝ> (yogh). For example: brulzie (broil), gaberlunzie (a beggar) and the names Menzies, Finzean, Culzean, Mackenzie etc.[38] (As a result of the lack of education in Scots, Mackenzie is now generally pronounced with a /z/ following the perceived realisation of the written form, as more controversially is sometimes Menzies.)

Consonant digraphs edit

  • ch:
    • Usually /x/.[39][23] loch (fjord or lake), nicht (night), dochter (daughter), dreich (dreary), etc.
    • /tʃ/ word initial or where it follows 'r'. airch (arch), mairch (march), etc.
    • /ʃ/ usually where it follows 'n'.[40] brainch (branch), dunch (push), etc.
  • gh: /x/.[41]
  • gn: /n/. In Northern dialects /ɡn/ may occur.[34][41]
  • kn: /n/. In Northern dialects /kn/ or /tn/ may occur.[34] knap (talk), knee, knowe (knoll), etc.[42]
  • ng: /ŋ/.[43][41]
  • sh: /ʃ/.
  • th: /ð/ or /θ/. Initial 'th' in thing, think and thank, etc. may be /h/.[44]
  • wh: /ʍ/.[39]
  • wr: /wr/; more often realised as /r/ but may be /vr/ in Northern dialects:[44] wrack (wreck), wrang (wrong), write, wrocht (worked), etc.[45]

Vowel digraphs edit

  • ae (generally in final positions): Vowel 4. Also occurs for vowel 7 in dae (do), tae (too) and shae (shoe).[46] In Southern Scots and many central and Ulster varieties ae, ane and ance may be realised /jeː/, /jɪn/ and /jɪns/ often written yae, yin and yince in dialect writing.
  • ai: Vowel 8 in initial and medial positions.[47] Often /ɛ/ before /r/. The merger of vowel 8 with 4 has resulted in the digraph ai occurring in some words with vowel 4 and a(consonant)e occurring in some words with vowel 8, e.g. saip (soap), hale (whole), ane (one), ance (once), bane (bone), etc. and word final brae (slope) and day etc. Long vowel 7 is often written ai in dialect writing for central and north Down dialects.
  • ay (generally in final positions): Vowel 8. Usually /e/ but /əi/ in ay (yes) and aye (always). In Dundee it is noticeably /ɛ/.
  • au, aw: Vowel 12 in southern, central and Ulster dialects but /aː/ in northern dialects, with au usually occurring in medial positions[48][49] and aw in final positions.[48] Sometimes a or a' representing L-vocalisation.[50][51] The digraph aa also occurs, especially in written representations of the (/aː/) realisation in northern and insular dialects.[49] The cluster 'auld' may also be /ʌul/ in Ulster, e.g. aw (all), cauld (cold), braw (handsome), faw (fall), snaw (snow), etc.
  • ea:[52] Vowel 3. /ɛ/ may occur before /r/. meat (food), clear etc. Vowel 2/11 in a few words such as sea and tea.
  • ee:[53] Vowels 2 and 11. The realisation is generally /i(ː)/ but in Northern varieties may be /əi/ after /w/ and /ʍ/.[14] ee (eye), een (eyes), steek (shut), here, etc. Often used for vowel 7 in dialect writing for northern dialects.
  • ei:[54] Vowel 3. deid (dead), heid (head), etc. Occasionally vowels 2 and 11, generally before ch (/x/), but also in a few other words, e.g. speir (enquire).
  • eu:[55][56] Vowel 7 before /k/ and /x/, see ui. /(j)u/ or /(j)ʌ/ depending on dialect. beuk (book), eneuch (enough), ceuk (cook), leuk (look), teuk (took) etc.
  • ew: Vowel 14. In Northern dialects a root final 'ew' may be /jʌu/. few, new, etc.
  • ey: Vowels 1, 8a and 10.
  • ie: Vowels 2 and 11, generally occurring before l and v.
  • oa:[57] Vowel 5.
  • oi, oy: Vowel 9.
  • oo: Vowel 6, a 19th-century borrowing from Standard English.[58] hoose (house), moose (mouse) etc. Vowel 7 also occurs from the spelling of Standard English cognates.
  • ou: The general literary spelling[59] of vowel 6. Occasionally vowel 13. Root final /ʌu/ may occur in southern dialects. cou (cow), broun (brown) etc.
  • ow,[60] owe (root final): Vowel 13. bowk (retch), bowe (bow), howe (hollow), knowe (knoll), cowp (overturn), yowe (ewe), etc.
  • ui: The usual literary spelling[37] of vowel 7 (except before /k/ and /x/, see eu). Also used for /u/ before /r/ in some areas e.g. fuird (ford). buird (board), buit (boot), cuit (ankle), fluir (floor), guid (good), schuil (school), etc. In central dialects uise v. and uiss n. (use) are [jeːz] and [jɪs].

History edit

As of 2022, there is no official standard orthography for modern Scots,[61] but most words have generally accepted spellings.[citation needed]

During the 15th and 16th centuries, when Scots was a state language, the Makars had a loose spelling system separate from that of English. However, by the beginning of the 18th century, Scots was beginning to be regarded "as a rustic dialect of English, rather than a national language". Scots poet Allan Ramsay "embarked on large-scale anglicisation of Scots spelling". Successors of Ramsay—such as Robert Fergusson, Robert Burns and Sir Walter Scott—tended to follow his spelling ideas, and the general trend throughout the 18th and 19th centuries was to adopt further spellings from English, as it was the only accessible standard. Although descended from the Scots of the Makars, 18th-19th century Scots abandoned some of the more distinctive old Scots spellings[62] for standard English ones; although from the rhymes it was clear that a Scots pronunciation was intended.[63] Writers also began using the apologetic apostrophe,[64] to mark "missing" English letters. For example, the older Scots spelling taen/tane (meaning "taken") became ta’en; even though the word had not been written or pronounced with a "k" for hundreds of years. 18th-19th century Scots drew on the King James Bible and was heavily influenced by the conventions of Augustan English poetry.[65] All of this "had the unfortunate effect of suggesting that Broad Scots was not a separate language system, but rather a divergent or inferior form of English".[66] This 'Scots of the book' or Standard Scots[67][68] lacked neither "authority nor author".[69] It was used throughout Lowland Scotland and Ulster,[70] by writers such as Allan Ramsay, Robert Fergusson, Robert Burns, Sir Walter Scott, Charles Murray, David Herbison, James Orr, James Hogg and William Laidlaw among others. It is described in the 1921 Manual of Modern Scots.[71]

By the end of the 19th century, Scots spelling "was in a state of confusion as a result of hundreds of years of piecemeal borrowing from English". Some writers created their own spelling systems to represent their own dialects, rather than following the pan-dialect conventions of modern literary Scots.[63][72] The variety referred to as 'synthetic Scots' or Lallans shows the marked influence of Standard English in grammar and spelling.[73] During the 20th century, with spoken Scots and knowledge of the literary tradition waning, phonetic (often humorous) spellings became more common.

In the second half of the 20th century a number of spelling reform proposals were presented. Commenting on this, John Corbett (2003: 260) writes that "devising a normative orthography for Scots has been one of the greatest linguistic hobbies of the past century". Most proposals entailed regularising the use of established 18th-19th century conventions and avoiding the 'apologetic apostrophe'. Other proposals sought to undo the influence of standard English conventions on Scots spelling, by reviving Middle Scots conventions or introducing new ones.

A step towards standardizing Scots spelling was taken at a meeting of the Makar's Club in Edinburgh in 1947, where the Scots Style Sheet was approved. J. K.Annand, Douglas Young, Robert Garioch, A.D. Mackie, Alexander Scott, Tom Scott and Sydney Goodsir Smith all followed the recommendations in the Style Sheet to some extent. Some of its suggestions are as follows:

  • aa, baa, caa for words like aw, baw, caw – this was later discouraged
  • -ie for final unstressed -y
  • y for the /əi/ sound in words like wynd and mynd, and i for the short /ɪ/ sound in words like wind and find.
  • ui for the /ø/ sound in words like guid
  • ou for the /uː/ sound in words like nou and hou
  • ow(e) for the /ʌu/ sound in words like growe and fowk
  • throu and tho for through and though

In 1985, the Scots Language Society (SLS) published a set of spelling guidelines called "Recommendations for Writers in Scots". They represent a consensus view of writers in Scots at the time, following several years of debate and consultation involving Alexander Scott, Adam Jack Aitken, David Murison, Alastair Mackie and others. A developed version of the Style Sheet, it is based on the old spellings of the Makars but seeks to preserve the familiar appearance of written Scots. It includes all of the Style Sheet's suggestions, but recommends that writers return to the more traditional -aw, rather than -aa. Some of its other suggestions are as follows:

  • ei for the /iː/ sound at the beginning or middle of words (eidiot, feinish, veisit), unless ee is firmly established (for example in wee and een)
  • y for the /əi/ sound in words like wynd and mynd, but if it's at the beginning or end of a word use ey (eydent, stey, wey)
  • eu for the sound in words like aneuch, speug, neuk
  • -k for final -ct in words like object and expect (which become objek and expek)
  • sk- for initial /sk/ (sclimsklim, scrieveskreive, scunnerskunner)
  • -il for final unstressed -el and -le (mucklemukkil, morselmorsil, traiveltraivil)
  • -ss for final /s/ (hoosehouss, moosemouss, polispoliss) unless -se follows a consonant (mense, merse)
  • omit final -d where it is silent (staundstaun, thousandthousan, friendfrein)

The SLS Recommendations says "it is desirable that there should be traditional precedents for the spellings employed and […] writers aspiring to use Scots should not invent new spellings off the cuff". It prefers a number of more phonetic spellings that were commonly used by medieval Makars, such as: ar (are), byd, tym, wyf (bide, time, wife), cum, sum (come, some), eftir (after), evin (even), evir (ever), heir, neir (here, near), hir (her), ir (are), im (am), littil (little), sal (shall) speik (speak), thay (they), thaim (them), thair (their), thare (there), yit (yet), wad (would), war (were), wes (was), wul (will). David Purves's book A Scots Grammar has a list of over 2500 common Scots words spelt on the basis of the SLS Recommendations. Purves has also published dozens of poems using the spellings.

In 2000 the Scots Spelling Committee report was published in Lallans.[74] Shortly after publication Caroline Macafee criticised some aspects of that, and some previous spelling suggestions, as "demolishing the kind-of-a standardisation that already existed where Scots spelling had become a free-for-all with the traditional model disparaged but no popular replacement",[75] leading to more spelling variation, not less.

Language endangerment edit

The Scots language has had a long history of being devalued and marginalized in the Scottish education system.[76]

Due to the Anglicisation of Scotland and the Education (Scotland) Act of 1872, the education system required that every child learn English.[76] This caused Scots to become forgotten about in main education and considered slang.[76] As of 2022, it is deemed a vulnerable language.

Language revitalization edit

In 2012, the Scottish Government released a policy approach that highlights their aim to provide opportunities for children to learn languages other than their mother tongues.[77] And in 2014, there was a dictionary app developed to help aid students in their learning of the Scots language.[78]

The Curriculum for Excellence is the national curriculum for schools in Scotland, for students from aged 3–18.[79] It was implemented in Scotland in 2010[80] and the initiative aimed to provide support for the incorporation of the Scots language learning in classrooms in Scotland.[76]

There is still hesitancy in acknowledging Scots as a 'proper' language in Scotland, and many believe that it should not be taught in schools. Individuals are starting to understand the cultural impact that learning Scots has on young people, and want to encourage the use of the language in everyday conversations and help re-appropriate it as a traditional.[76]

Along with the introduction of Scots learning in Scottish classrooms, publishing companies have translated popular books into Scots.[81] Itchy Coo has issued Scots editions of Harry Potter, and The Gruffalo, and by doing this they have made Scots more accessible to children, teachers, and families.[81]

Grammar edit

The spellings used below are those based on the prestigious literary conventions[82] described above. Other spelling variants may be encountered in written Scots.

Not all of the following features are exclusive to Scots and may also occur in some varieties of English.

Definite article edit

The is used before the names of seasons, days of the week, many nouns, diseases, trades and occupations, sciences and academic subjects.[83] It is also often used in place of the indefinite article and instead of a possessive pronoun:[84] the hairst ('autumn'), the Wadensday ('Wednesday'), awa tae the kirk ("off to church"), the nou ("at the moment), the day (today), the haingles ('influenza'), the Laitin ('Latin'), The deuk ett the bit breid ("The duck ate a piece of bread"), the wife ("my wife") etc.

Nouns edit

Nouns usually form their plural in -(e)s but some irregular plurals occur:[85][86] ee/een ('eye'/'eyes'), cauf/caur ('calf'/'calves'), horse/horse ('horse'/'horses'), cou/kye ('cow'/'cows'), shae/shuin ('shoe'/'shoes'). Nouns of measure and quantity are unchanged in the plural:[86][87] fower fit ("four feet"), twa mile ("two miles"), five pund (five pounds), three hunderwecht (three hundredweight). Regular plurals include laifs (loaves), leafs (leaves), shelfs (shelves) and wifes (wives).[88]

Pronouns edit

Personal and possessive pronouns edit

English Scots
I, me, myself, mine, my A, me, masel, mines, ma[89]
thou, thee, thyself, thine, thy (Early Modern English) thoo/thee, thysel, thine, thy*
we, us, ourselves, ours, our we, (h)us, oorsels/wirsels, oor/wir
you (singular), you (plural), yourself, yours, your you/ye, you(se)/ye(se), yoursel/yersel
they, them, themselves, theirs, their thay, thaim, thaimsels/thairsels, thairs, thair

The second person singular nominative thoo ([ðuː], Southern Scots [ðʌu], Shetland dialect [duː]) survived in colloquial speech until the mid 19th century in most of lowland Scotland. It has since been replaced by ye/you in most areas except in Insular Scots where thee ([ðiː], Shetland [diː]) is also used, in North Northern Scots and in some Southern Scots varieties. Thoo is used as the familiar form by parents speaking to children, elders to youngsters, or between friends or equals. The second person formal singular ye or you is used when speaking to a superior or when a youngster addresses an elder. The older second person singular possessive thy ([ðai]), and thee ([ði], Shetland [diː] along with thine(s) [dəin(z)]) still survive to some extent where thoo remains in use. See T–V distinction.[90][91]

Relative pronoun edit

The relative pronoun is that ('at is an alternative form borrowed from Norse but can also be arrived at by contraction) for all persons and numbers, but may be left out[86][92] Thare's no mony fowk (that) bides in that glen (There aren't many people who live in that glen). The anglicised forms wha, wham, whase 'who, whom, whose', and the older whilk 'which' are literary affectations;[86] whilk is only used after a statement[86] He said he'd tint it, whilk wis no whit we wantit tae hear (he said he'd lost it, which is not what we wanted to hear). The possessive is formed by adding 's or by using an appropriate pronoun[86] The wifie that's hoose gat burnt (the woman whose house was burnt), the wumman that her dochter gat mairit (the woman whose daughter got married); the men that thair boat wis tint (the men whose boat was lost).

A third adjective/adverb yon/yonder, thon/thonder indicating something at some distance[86] D'ye see yon/thon hoose ower yonder/thonder? Also thae (those) and thir (these), the plurals of that and this respectively.

In Northern Scots this and that are also used where "these" and "those" would be in Standard English.

Other pronouns edit

English Scots
this, these this, thir
that, those that, thae
anyone onybody
anything onything
nothing nocht
something something
everyone awbody
everything awthing
both baith
each ilk
every ilka
other ither

Verbs edit

Modal verbs edit

The modal verbs mey (may), ocht tae/ocht ti (ought to), and sall (shall), are no longer used much in Scots but occurred historically and are still found in anglicised literary Scots.[86] Can, shoud (should), and will are the preferred Scots forms. Scots employs double modal constructions[86] He'll no can come the day (He won't be able to come today), A micht coud come the morn (I may be able to come tomorrow), A uised tae coud dae it, but no nou (I used to be able to do it, but not now). Do-support can be found in Modern Scots syntax, but is variable in frequency, and is likely to be a result of influence from English syntax.[93]

Negation occurs by using the adverb no, in the North East nae,[86] as in A'm no comin (I'm not coming), A'll no learn ye (I will not teach you), or by using the suffix -na[94][95] sometimes spelled nae (pronounced variously /ə/, /ɪ/ or /e/ depending on dialect), as in A dinna ken (I don't know), Thay canna come (They can't come), We coudna hae telt him (We couldn't have told him), and A hivna seen her (I haven't seen her). The usage with no is preferred to that with -na with contractable auxiliary verbs like -ll for will, or in yes/no questions with any auxiliary[86] He'll no come and Did he no come?

English Scots
are, aren't are, arena
can, can't can, canna
could, couldn't coud, coudna
dare, daren't daur, daurna
did, didn't did, didna
do, don't dae, daena/dinna
had, hadn't haed, haedna
have, haven't hae, haena/hinna/hivna
might, mightn't micht, michtna
must, mustn't maun, maunna
need, needn't need, needna
should, shouldn't shoud, shoudna
was, wasn't wis, wisna
were, weren't war, warna
will, won't will, winna
would, wouldn't wad, wadna

Present tense of verbs edit

The present tense of verbs adhere to the Northern Subject Rule whereby verbs end in -s in all persons and numbers except when a single personal pronoun is next to the verb,[86][96] Thay say he's ower wee, Thaim that says he's ower wee, Thir lassies says he's ower wee (They say he's too small), etc. Thay're comin an aw but Five o thaim's comin, The lassies? Thay'v went but Ma brakes haes went. Thaim that comes first is serred first (Those who come first are served first). The trees growes green in the simmer (The trees grow green in summer).

Wis 'was' may replace war 'were', but not conversely:[86] You war/wis thare.

Past tense and past participle of verbs edit

The regular past form of the weak or regular verbs is -it, -t or -ed, according to the preceding consonant or vowel:[86][97] The -ed ending may be written -'d if the e is 'silent'.

  • -it appears after a stop consonant, e.g. hurtit (hurted), skelpit (smacked), mendit(mended), cuttit (cut), hurtit (hurt), keepit (kept), sleepit (slept);
  • -t appears:
    • after an unstressed syllable ending in l, n, r, or ie/y, e.g. traivelt (travelled), festent (fastened), cairrit (carried);
    • after a voiceless fricative or affricate, e.g. raxt (reached), fasht (troubled), cocht (coughed), streetched (stretched, pronounced [stritʃt]);
    • in some irregular verbs, e.g. telt (told), kent (knew/known);
  • -(e)d appears after a stressed syllable ending in a sonorant, a voiced fricative or affricate, or a vowel, e.g. cleaned/clean'd, speired (asked; but also speirt), scrieved/scriev'd (scribbled), wadged (wedged), dee'd (died).

Many verbs have (strong or irregular) forms which are distinctive from Standard English[86][98] (two forms connected with ~ means that they are variants):

  • bite/bate/bitten (bite/bit/bitten), drive/drave/driven~drien (drive/drove/driven), ride/rade/ridden (ride/rode/ridden), rive/rave/riven (rive/rived/riven), rise/rase/risen (rise/rose/risen), slide/slade/slidden (slide/slid/slid), slite/slate/slitten (slit/slit/slit), write/wrate/written (write/wrote/written), pronounced vrit/vrat/vrutten in Mid Northern Scots;
  • bind/band/bund (bind/bound/bound), clim/clam/clum (climb/climbed/climbed), find/fand/fund (find/found/found), fling/flang/flung (fling/flung/flung), hing/hang/hung (hang/hung/hung), rin/ran/run (run/ran/run), spin/span/spun (spin/spun/spun), stick/stack/stuck (stick/stuck/stuck), drink/drank/drunk~drucken (drink/drank/drunk);
  • creep/crap/cruppen (creep/crept/crept), greet/grat/grutten (weep/wept/wept), sweit/swat/swutten (sweat/sweat/sweat), weet/wat/watten (wet/wet/wet), pit/pat/pitten (put/put/put), sit/sat/sitten (sit/sat/sat), spit/spat/spitten~sputten (spit/spat/spat);
  • brek~brak/brak/brakken~broken (break/broke/broken), get~git/gat/gotten (get/got/got[ten]), speak/spak/spoken (speak/spoke/spoken), fecht/focht/fochten (fight/fought/fought);
  • beir/buir/born(e) (bear/bore/borne), sweir/swuir/sworn (swear/swore/sworne), teir/tuir/torn (tear/tore/torn), weir/wuir/worn (wear/wore/worn);
  • cast/cuist/casten~cuisten (cast/cast/cast), lat/luit/latten~luitten (let/let/let), staund/stuid/stuiden (stand/stood/stood), fesh/fuish/feshen~fuishen (fetch/fetched),thrash/thrasht~thruish/thrasht~thruishen(thresh/threshed/threshed), wash/washt~wuish/washt~wuishen(wash/washed/washed);
  • bake/bakit~beuk/bakken (bake/baked/baked), lauch/leuch/lauchen~leuchen (laugh/laughed/laughed), shak/sheuk/shakken~sheuken (shake/shook/shaken), tak/teuk/taen (take/took/taken);
  • gae/gaed/gane (go/went/gone), gie/gied/gien (give/gave/given), hae/haed/haen (have/had/had);
  • chuise/chuised/chosen (choose/chose/chosen), soum/soumed/soumed (swim/swam/swum), sell/selt~sauld/selt~sauld (sell/sold/sold), tell/telt~tauld/telt~tauld (tell/told/told).

Present participle edit

The present participle and gerund in are now usually /ən/[99] but may still be differentiated /ən/ and /in/ in Southern Scots[100] and, /ən/ and /ɪn/ North Northern Scots.

Adverbs edit

Adverbs are usually of the same form as the verb root or adjective especially after verbs. Haein a real guid day (Having a really good day). She's awfu fauchelt (She's awfully tired).

Adverbs are also formed with -s,[86] -lies, lins, gate(s)and wey(s) -wey, whiles (at times), mebbes (perhaps), brawlies (splendidly), geylies (pretty well), aiblins (perhaps), airselins (backwards), hauflins (partly), hidlins (secretly), maistlins (almost), awgates (always, everywhere), ilkagate (everywhere), onygate (anyhow), ilkawey (everywhere), onywey (anyhow, anywhere), endweys (straight ahead), whit wey (how, why).

Numbers edit

Ordinal numbers end mostly in t:[86][101] seicont, fowert, fift, saxt— (second, fourth, fifth, sixth) etc., but note also first, thrid/third— (first, third).

English Scots
one, first ane/ae, first
two, second twa, seicont
three, third three, thrid/third
four, fourth fower, fowert
five, fifth five, fift
six, sixth sax, saxt
seven, seventh seiven, seivent
eight, eighth aicht, aicht
nine, ninth nine, nint
ten, tenth ten, tent
eleven, eleventh eleiven, eleivent
twelve, twelfth twal, twalt

Ae /eː/, /jeː/ is used as an adjective before a noun[102] such as : The Ae Hoose (The One House), Ae laddie an twa lassies (One boy and two girls). Ane is pronounced variously, depending on dialect, /en/, /jɪn/ in many Central and Southern varieties, /in/ in some Northern and Insular varieties, and /wan/, often written yin, een and wan in dialect writing.

The impersonal form of 'one' is a body as in A body can niver bide wi a body's sel (One can never live by oneself).

Prepositions edit

English Scots
above, upper, topmost abuin, buiner, buinmaist
below, lower, lowest ablo, nether, blomaist
along alang
about aboot
about (concerning) anent
across athort
before afore
behind ahint
beneath aneath
beside aside
between atween/atweesh
beyond ayont
from frae/fae
into intae/intil

Interrogative words edit

English Scots
who? wha?
what? whit?
when? whan?
where? whaur?
why? why/how?
which? whilk?
how? hou?

In the North East, the 'wh' in the above words is pronounced /f/.[103]

Syntax edit

Scots prefers the word order[104] He turnt oot the licht to 'He turned the light out' and Gie's it (Give us it) to 'Give it to me'.

Certain verbs are often used progressively[86] He wis thinkin he wad tell her, He wis wantin tae tell her.

Verbs of motion may be dropped before an adverb or adverbial phrase of motion[104] A'm awa tae ma bed, That's me awa hame, A'll intae the hoose an see him.

Subordinate clauses edit

Verbless subordinate clauses introduced by an (and) express surprise or indignation.[86] She haed tae walk the hale lenth o the road an her seiven month pregnant (She had to walk the whole length of the road—and she seven months pregnant). He telt me tae rin an me wi ma sair leg (He told me to run—and me with my sore leg).

Suffixes edit

  • Negative na:[94] /ɑ/, /ɪ/ or /e/ depending on dialect.[105] Also nae or 'y' e.g. canna (can't), dinna (don't) and maunna (mustn't).
  • fu (ful): /u/, /ɪ/, /ɑ/ or /e/ depending on dialect. Also 'fu'', 'fie', 'fy', 'fae' and 'fa'.
  • The word ending ae: /ɑ/, /ɪ/ or /e/ depending on dialect.[105] Also 'a', 'ow' or 'y', for example: arrae (arrow), barrae (barrow) and windae (window), etc.

Diminutives edit

Diminutives in -ie,[86] burnie small burn (stream), feardie/feartie (frightened person, coward), gamie (gamekeeper), kiltie (kilted soldier), postie (postman), wifie (woman, also used in Geordie dialect), rhodie (rhododendron), and also in -ock,[86] bittock (little bit), playock (toy, plaything), sourock (sorrel) and Northern –ag,[86] bairnag (little), bairn (child, common in Geordie dialect), Cheordag (Geordie), -ockie, hooseockie (small house), wifeockie (little woman), both influenced by the Scottish Gaelic diminutive -ag (-óg in Irish Gaelic).

Times of day edit

English Scots
morning forenuin
midday twal-oors
afternoon efternuin
evening forenicht
dusk, twilight dayligaun, gloamin
midnight midnicht
early morning wee-oors

Literature edit

 
Stone seat by the River Cree, engraved with Modern Scots poem by Liz Niven

The eighteenth century Scots revival was initiated by writers such as Allan Ramsay and Robert Fergusson, and later continued by writers such as Robert Burns and Sir Walter Scott. Scott introduced vernacular dialogue to his novels. Other well-known authors like Robert Louis Stevenson, William Alexander, George MacDonald, J. M. Barrie and other members of the Kailyard school like Ian Maclaren also wrote in Scots or used it in dialogue, as did George Douglas Brown whose writing is regarded as a useful corrective to the more roseate presentations of the kailyard school.

In the Victorian era popular Scottish newspapers regularly included articles and commentary in the vernacular, often of unprecedented proportions.[106]

In the early twentieth century, a renaissance in the use of Scots occurred, its most vocal figure being Hugh MacDiarmid whose benchmark poem A Drunk Man Looks at the Thistle (1926) did much to demonstrate the power of Scots as a modern idiom. Other contemporaries were Douglas Young, John Buchan, Sydney Goodsir Smith, Robert Garioch and Robert McLellan. The revival extended to verse and other literature.

William Wye Smith's New Testament translations appeared in 1901 and in 1904 in a new edition.[107] In 1983 William Laughton Lorimer's translation of the New Testament from the original Greek was published.

Sample texts edit

From Hallow-Fair (Robert Fergusson 1750–1774)

At Hallowmas, whan nights grow lang,
And starnies shine fu' clear,
Whan fock, the nippin cauld to bang,
Their winter hap-warms wear,
Near Edinbrough a fair there hads,
I wat there's nane whase name is,
For strappin dames an sturdy lads,
And cap and stoup, mair famous
Than it that day.
Upo' the tap o' ilka lum
The sun bagan to keek,
And bad the trig made maidens come
A sightly joe to seek
At Hallow-fair, whare browsters rare
Keep gude ale on the gantries,
And dinna scrimp ye o' a skair
O' kebbucks frae their pantries,
Fu' saut that day.

From The Maker to Posterity (Robert Louis Stevenson 1850–1894)

Far 'yont amang the years to be
When a' we think, an' a' we see,
An' a' we luve, 's been dung ajee
By time's rouch shouther,
An' what was richt and wrang for me
Lies mangled throu'ther,
It's possible – it's hardly mair -
That some ane, ripin' after lear -
Some auld professor or young heir,
If still there's either -
May find an' read me, an' be sair
Perplexed, puir brither!
"What tongue does your auld bookie speak?"
He'll spier; an' I, his mou to steik:
"No bein' fit to write in Greek,
I write in Lallan,
Dear to my heart as the peat reek,
Auld as Tantallon.
"Few spak it then, an' noo there's nane.
My puir auld sangs lie a' their lane,
Their sense, that aince was braw an' plain,
Tint a'thegether,
Like runes upon a standin' stane
Amang the heather.

From The House with the Green Shutters (George Douglas Brown 1869–1902)

He was born the day the brig on the Fleckie Road gaed down, in the year o' the great flood; and since the great flood it’s twelve year come Lammas. Rab Tosh o' Fleckie’s wife was heavy-footed at the time, and Doctor Munn had been a' nicht wi' her, and when he came to Barbie Water in the morning it was roaring wide frae bank to brae; where the brig should have been there was naething but the swashing o' the yellow waves. Munn had to drive a' the way round to the Fechars brig, and in parts of the road, the water was so deep that it lapped his horse’s bellyband.
A' this time Mistress Gourlay was skirling in her pains an praying to God she micht dee. Gourlay had been a great cronie o' Munn’s, but he quarrelled him for being late; he had trysted him, ye see, for the occasion, and he had been twenty times at the yett to look for him-ye ken how little he would stomach that; he was ready to brust wi' anger. Munn, mad for the want o' sleep and wat to the bane, swüre back at him; and than Goulay wadna let him near his wife! Ye mind what an awful day it was; the thunder roared as if the heavens were tumbling on the world, and the lichtnin sent the trees daudin on the roads, and folk hid below their beds an prayed-they thocht it was the judgment! But Gourlay rammed his black stepper in the shafts and drave like the devil o' Hell to Skeighan Drone, where there was a young doctor. The lad was feared to come, but Gourlay swore by God that he should, and he gaired him. In a' the countryside, driving like his that day was never kenned or heard tell o'; they were back within the hour!
I saw them gallop up Main Street; lichtin struck the ground before them; the young doctor covered his face wi' his hands, and the horse nichered wi' fear an tried to wheel, but Gourlay stood up in the gig and lashed him on though the fire. It was thocht for lang that Mrs. Gourlay would die, and she was never the same woman after. Atweel aye, sirs. Gorlay has that morning's work to blame for the poor wife he has now.

From Embro to the Ploy (Robert Garioch 1909–1981)

The tartan tred wad gar ye lauch;
nae problem is owre teuch.
Your surname needna end in –och;
they’ll cleik ye up the cleuch.
A puckle dollar bill will aye
preive Hiram Teufelsdröckh
a septary of Clan McKay
it’s maybe richt eneuch,
verflüch!
in Embro to the ploy.
The Auld High Schule, whaur mony a skelp
of triple-tonguit tawse
has gien a heist-up and a help
towards Doctorates of Laws,
nou hears, for Ramsay’s cantie rhyme,
loud pawmies of applause
frae folk that pey a pund a time
to sit on wudden raws
gey hard
in Embro to the ploy
The haly kirk’s Assembly-haa
nou fairly coups the creel
wi Lindsay’s Three Estatis, braw
devices of the Deil.
About our heids the satire stots
like hailstanes till we reel;
the bawrs are in auld-farrant Scots,
it’s maybe jist as weill,
imphm,
in Embro to the ploy.

From The New Testament in Scots (William Laughton Lorimer 1885- 1967) Mathew:1:18ff

This is the storie o the birth o Jesus Christ. His mither Mary wis trystit til Joseph, but afore they war mairriet she wis fund tae be wi bairn bi the Halie Spírit. Her husband Joseph, honest man, hed nae mind tae affront her afore the warld an wis for brakkin aff their tryst hidlinweys; an sae he wis een ettlin tae dae, whan an angel o the Lord kythed til him in a draim an said til him, "Joseph, son o Dauvit, be nane feared tae tak Mary your trystit wife intil your hame; the bairn she is cairrein is o the Halie Spírit. She will beir a son, an the name ye ar tae gíe him is Jesus, for he will sauf his fowk frae their sins".
Aa this happent at the wurd spokken bi the Lord throu the Prophet micht be fulfilled: Behaud, the virgin wil bouk an beir a son, an they will caa his name Immanuel – that is, "God wi us".
Whan he hed waukit frae his sleep, Joseph did as the angel hed bidden him, an tuik his trystit wife hame wi him. But he bedditna wi her or she buir a son; an he caa’d the bairn Jesus.

References edit

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  23. ^ a b "SND:C".
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  26. ^ SND:E 1 (2)
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  29. ^ SND:O
  30. ^ SND:O 3 (1)
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  32. ^ "SND:R".
  33. ^ "SND:S".
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  35. ^ a b Johnston, Paul (1997) Regional Variation in Jones, Charles (ed.) The Edinburgh History of the Scots Language, Edinburgh University Press, Edinburgh. p.509
  36. ^ SND:U 4 (2)
  37. ^ a b SND:U 2 (4)(i)
  38. ^ "SND:Z".
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  41. ^ a b c "SND:G".
  42. ^ "SND:K".
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  45. ^ "SND:W".
  46. ^ SND:E 3
  47. ^ SND:A 5
  48. ^ a b SND:A 4
  49. ^ a b SND:U 2 (1)
  50. ^ SND:A 2 (2)
  51. ^ SND W 6
  52. ^ SND:E 3 (2)
  53. ^ SND:E 3 (3)
  54. ^ SND:E 3 (4)
  55. ^ SND:E 3 (5)
  56. ^ SND:U 2 (2)
  57. ^ SND:O 3
  58. ^ SND:O 5 (1)
  59. ^ SND: U 3 (4)(i)
  60. ^ SND:O 3 (4)(ii)
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  102. ^ Grant, William; Dixon, James Main (1921) Manual of Modern Scots. Cambridge, University Press. p.105
  103. ^ Grant, William; Dixon, James Main (1921) Manual of Modern Scots. Cambridge, University Press. p.32
  104. ^ a b A.J. Aitken in The Oxford Companion to the English Language, Oxford University Press 1992. p.897
  105. ^ a b William Grant and David D. Murison (eds) The Scottish National Dictionary (SND) (1929–1976), The Scottish National Dictionary Association, vol. I Edinburgh, p.xvii
  106. ^ William Donaldson, The Language of the People: Scots Prose from the Victorian Revival, Aberdeen University Press 1989.
  107. ^ William Wye Smith: The New Testament in Braid Scots. New edition, Paisley 1904: Modern Scots at the Internet Archive   Guinea-Bissau

External links edit

  • The Dictionary of the Scots Language
  • Scots Language Centre
  • The Scots Language Society
  • Scots-online
  • Scots Language Recordings
  • ScotsteXt – books, poems and texts in Scots
  • Scottish words – illustrated

modern, scots, confused, with, scottish, people, comprises, varieties, scots, traditionally, spoken, lowland, scotland, parts, ulster, from, 1700, anti, littering, sign, ayrshire, coastal, path, throughout, history, been, undergoing, process, language, attriti. Not to be confused with Scottish people Modern Scots comprises the varieties of Scots traditionally spoken in Lowland Scotland and parts of Ulster from 1700 Anti littering sign in Modern Scots on the Ayrshire Coastal Path Throughout its history Modern Scots has been undergoing a process of language attrition whereby successive generations of speakers have adopted more and more features from English largely from the colloquial register 1 This process of language contact or dialectisation under English 2 has accelerated rapidly since widespread access to mass media in English and increased population mobility became available after the Second World War 3 It has recently taken on the nature of wholesale language shift towards Scottish English sometimes also termed language change convergence or merger By the end of the twentieth century Scots was at an advanced stage of language death over much of Lowland Scotland 4 Residual features of Scots are often simply regarded today as slang especially by people from outwith Scotland but even by many Scots Contents 1 Dialects 2 Phonology 2 1 Consonants 2 2 Vowels 3 Orthography 3 1 Alphabet 3 2 Consonant digraphs 3 3 Vowel digraphs 3 4 History 3 5 Language endangerment 3 6 Language revitalization 4 Grammar 4 1 Definite article 4 2 Nouns 4 3 Pronouns 4 3 1 Personal and possessive pronouns 4 3 2 Relative pronoun 4 3 3 Other pronouns 4 4 Verbs 4 4 1 Modal verbs 4 4 2 Present tense of verbs 4 4 3 Past tense and past participle of verbs 4 4 4 Present participle 4 5 Adverbs 4 6 Numbers 4 7 Prepositions 4 8 Interrogative words 4 9 Syntax 4 9 1 Subordinate clauses 4 10 Suffixes 4 10 1 Diminutives 4 11 Times of day 5 Literature 5 1 Sample texts 6 References 7 External linksDialects edit nbsp Map of Scots dialectsThe varieties of Modern Scots are generally divided into five dialect groups 5 6 Insular Scots spoken in Orkney and Shetland Northern Scots Spoken north of the Firth of Tay North Northern spoken in Caithness Easter Ross and the Black Isle Mid Northern also called North East 7 and popularly known as the Doric spoken in Moray Buchan Aberdeenshire and Nairn South Northern spoken in east Angus and the Mearns Central Scots spoken in the Central Lowlands and South west Scotland North East Central spoken north of the Forth in south east Perthshire and west Angus South East Central spoken in the Lothians Peeblesshire and Berwickshire West Central spoken in Dunbartonshire Lanarkshire Renfrewshire Inverclyde Ayrshire on the Isle of Bute and to the southern extremity of Kintyre South West Central spoken in west Dumfriesshire Kirkcudbrightshire and Wigtownshire Southern Scots spoken in mid and east Dumfriesshire and the Scottish Borders counties Selkirkshire and Roxburghshire in particular the valleys of the Annan the Esk the Liddel Water the Teviot and the Yarrow Water It is also known as the border tongue or border Scots Ulster Scots spoken primarily by the descendants of Scottish settlers in Ulster particularly counties Antrim Down and Donegal Also known as Ullans The southern extent of Scots may be identified by the range of a number of pronunciation features which set Scots apart from neighbouring English dialects Like many languages across borders there is a dialect continuum between Scots and the Northumbrian dialect both descending from early northern Middle English The Scots pronunciation of come kʌm contrasts with kʊm in Northern English The Scots realisation kʌm reaches as far south as the mouth of the north Esk in north Cumbria crossing Cumbria and skirting the foot of the Cheviots before reaching the east coast at Bamburgh some 12 miles north of Alnwick The Scots x English f cognate group micht might eneuch enough etc can be found in a small portion of north Cumbria with the southern limit stretching from Bewcastle to Longtown and Gretna The Scots pronunciation of wh as ʍ becomes English w south of Carlisle but remains in Northumberland but Northumberland realises r as ʁ often called the burr which is not a Scots realisation The greater part of the valley of the Esk and the whole of Liddesdale have been considered to be northern English dialects by some Scots by others From the nineteenth century onwards influence from the South through education and increased mobility have caused Scots features to retreat northwards so that for all practical purposes the political and linguistic boundaries may be considered to coincide 8 As well as the main dialects Edinburgh Dundee and Glasgow see Glasgow patter have local variations on an Anglicised form of Central Scots In Aberdeen Mid Northern Scots is spoken by a minority Due to their being roughly near the border between the two dialects places like Dundee and Perth can contain elements and influences of both Northern and Central Scots Phonology editFor a historical overview see Phonological history of Scots Consonants edit Labial Dental Alveolar Post alveolar Palatal Velar GlottalNasal m n ŋStop p b t a b d b tʃ dʒ k ɡ ʔFricative f v 8 c d d s z ʃ ʒ c e x f hApproximant central ɹ j ʍ g w h lateral lTrill r t may be ʔ between vowels or word final 9 a b In Ulster dentalised pronunciations may also occur Initial 8 in thing think and thank etc may be h in central dialects 9 507 In mid northern varieties an intervocallic d may be realised d 10 Allophone of x after front vowels especially i and ɪ May also be heard initially in heuk c juk heuch c ju and hoe c jʌu 11 Medial xt may be d in Northern dialects 9 499 Older xʍ 9 499 Northern dialects also have f 9 507 The cluster wr may be realised wr more often r but may be vr in northern dialects 9 507 e g wrack wreck wrang wrong write wrocht worked etc Vowels edit Vowel length is usually conditioned by the Scottish Vowel Length Rule Aitken 12 IPA Notes1 short ei long aɪ 2 i 3 ei With the exception of North Northern dialects 13 this vowel has generally merged with vowels 2 4 or 8 In northern varieties the realisation may be ei after w and ʍ and in the far north ei may occur in all environments 14 4 e 5 o 6 u 7 o Merges with vowels 1 and 8 in central dialects and vowel 2 in northern dialects e in parts of Fife Dundee and north Antrim Usually i in northern dialects but wi after ɡ and k Mid Down and Donegal dialects have i In central and north Down dialects merger with vowel 15 occurs when short and with vowel 8 when long 8 eː Always long in many varieties 8a ei 9 oe 10 ei 11 iː Always long in many varieties Final vowel 11 may be ei in Southern dialects 15 12 ɑː ɔː Always long in many varieties 13 ʌu Vocalisation to o may occur before k especially in western and Ulster dialects 14 ju 15 ɪ Always short Often varies between ɪ and ʌ especially after w and wh 16 ɪ ae occurs in much of Ulster except Donegal which usually has ɛ 17 16 ɛ 17 ɑ a Usually ɑ often ɑː in south west and Ulster dialects 18 but aː in Northern dialects 18 ɔ Some mergers with vowel 5 19 ʌ Always short Orthography editWords which differ only slightly in pronunciation from Scottish English are generally spelled as in English Other words may be spelt the same but differ in pronunciation for example aunt swap want and wash with a bull full v and pull with ʌ bind find and wind v etc with ɪ Alphabet edit Letter DetailsA Vowel 17Vowel 4 in a consonant e 19 In Northern dialects the vowel in the cluster ane is often i 20 and after w and dark l the realisation ei may occur 21 Vowel 12 for final a in awa away twa two and wha who but may also be ɑː ɔː aː or eː depending on dialect 22 The unstressed vowel e B b C k or s 23 D d Silent in word final nd and ld 24 but often pronounced in derived forms Sometimes simply n and l or n and l e g auld old and haund hand etc E Vowel 16 25 bed het heated yett gate etc Vowel 2 in e consonant e 26 The unstressed vowel e F f G ɡ or dʒ H h I Vowel 15 27 E g big fit foot wid wood etc Vowels 1 8a and 10 in i consonant e 28 The unstressed vowel e J dʒ K k L l M m N n O Vowel 18 29 Vowel 5 Often spelled phonetically oa in dialect spellings such as boax box coarn corn Goad God joab job and oan on etc 30 The unstressed vowel e P p Q k R r or ɹ is pronounced in all positions 31 i e rhotically 32 S s or z 33 T t May be ʔ between vowels or word final 34 Silent in medial cht ch x and st and before final en 35 e g fochten fought thristle thistle and also the t in aften often etc Silent in word final ct and pt 35 but often pronounced in derived forms e g respect and accept etc U Vowel 19 36 but cut etc Vowel 7 occurs in u consonant e especially before nasals 37 and sometimes for u aloneVowel 6 in u consonant e in some wordsThe unstressed vowel e V v W w X ks Y Vowels 1 8a and 10 in y consonant e 28 Z z jɪ or ŋ may occur in some words as a substitute for the older lt ȝ gt yogh For example brulzie broil gaberlunzie a beggar and the names Menzies Finzean Culzean Mackenzie etc 38 As a result of the lack of education in Scots Mackenzie is now generally pronounced with a z following the perceived realisation of the written form as more controversially is sometimes Menzies Consonant digraphs edit ch Usually x 39 23 loch fjord or lake nicht night dochter daughter dreich dreary etc tʃ word initial or where it follows r airch arch mairch march etc ʃ usually where it follows n 40 brainch branch dunch push etc gh x 41 gn n In Northern dialects ɡn may occur 34 41 kn n In Northern dialects kn or tn may occur 34 knap talk knee knowe knoll etc 42 ng ŋ 43 41 sh ʃ th d or 8 Initial th in thing think and thank etc may be h 44 wh ʍ 39 wr wr more often realised as r but may be vr in Northern dialects 44 wrack wreck wrang wrong write wrocht worked etc 45 Vowel digraphs edit ae generally in final positions Vowel 4 Also occurs for vowel 7 in dae do tae too and shae shoe 46 In Southern Scots and many central and Ulster varieties ae ane and ance may be realised jeː jɪn and jɪns often written yae yin and yince in dialect writing ai Vowel 8 in initial and medial positions 47 Often ɛ before r The merger of vowel 8 with 4 has resulted in the digraph ai occurring in some words with vowel 4 and a consonant e occurring in some words with vowel 8 e g saip soap hale whole ane one ance once bane bone etc and word final brae slope and day etc Long vowel 7 is often written ai in dialect writing for central and north Down dialects ay generally in final positions Vowel 8 Usually e but ei in ay yes and aye always In Dundee it is noticeably ɛ au aw Vowel 12 in southern central and Ulster dialects but aː in northern dialects with au usually occurring in medial positions 48 49 and aw in final positions 48 Sometimes a or a representing L vocalisation 50 51 The digraph aa also occurs especially in written representations of the aː realisation in northern and insular dialects 49 The cluster auld may also be ʌul in Ulster e g aw all cauld cold braw handsome faw fall snaw snow etc ea 52 Vowel 3 ɛ may occur before r meat food clear etc Vowel 2 11 in a few words such as sea and tea ee 53 Vowels 2 and 11 The realisation is generally i ː but in Northern varieties may be ei after w and ʍ 14 ee eye een eyes steek shut here etc Often used for vowel 7 in dialect writing for northern dialects ei 54 Vowel 3 deid dead heid head etc Occasionally vowels 2 and 11 generally before ch x but also in a few other words e g speir enquire eu 55 56 Vowel 7 before k and x see ui j u or j ʌ depending on dialect beuk book eneuch enough ceuk cook leuk look teuk took etc ew Vowel 14 In Northern dialects a root final ew may be jʌu few new etc ey Vowels 1 8a and 10 ie Vowels 2 and 11 generally occurring before l and v oa 57 Vowel 5 oi oy Vowel 9 oo Vowel 6 a 19th century borrowing from Standard English 58 hoose house moose mouse etc Vowel 7 also occurs from the spelling of Standard English cognates ou The general literary spelling 59 of vowel 6 Occasionally vowel 13 Root final ʌu may occur in southern dialects cou cow broun brown etc ow 60 owe root final Vowel 13 bowk retch bowe bow howe hollow knowe knoll cowp overturn yowe ewe etc ui The usual literary spelling 37 of vowel 7 except before k and x see eu Also used for u before r in some areas e g fuird ford buird board buit boot cuit ankle fluir floor guid good schuil school etc In central dialects uise v and uiss n use are jeːz and jɪs History edit As of 2022 there is no official standard orthography for modern Scots 61 but most words have generally accepted spellings citation needed During the 15th and 16th centuries when Scots was a state language the Makars had a loose spelling system separate from that of English However by the beginning of the 18th century Scots was beginning to be regarded as a rustic dialect of English rather than a national language Scots poet Allan Ramsay embarked on large scale anglicisation of Scots spelling Successors of Ramsay such as Robert Fergusson Robert Burns and Sir Walter Scott tended to follow his spelling ideas and the general trend throughout the 18th and 19th centuries was to adopt further spellings from English as it was the only accessible standard Although descended from the Scots of the Makars 18th 19th century Scots abandoned some of the more distinctive old Scots spellings 62 for standard English ones although from the rhymes it was clear that a Scots pronunciation was intended 63 Writers also began using the apologetic apostrophe 64 to mark missing English letters For example the older Scots spelling taen tane meaning taken became ta en even though the word had not been written or pronounced with a k for hundreds of years 18th 19th century Scots drew on the King James Bible and was heavily influenced by the conventions of Augustan English poetry 65 All of this had the unfortunate effect of suggesting that Broad Scots was not a separate language system but rather a divergent or inferior form of English 66 This Scots of the book or Standard Scots 67 68 lacked neither authority nor author 69 It was used throughout Lowland Scotland and Ulster 70 by writers such as Allan Ramsay Robert Fergusson Robert Burns Sir Walter Scott Charles Murray David Herbison James Orr James Hogg and William Laidlaw among others It is described in the 1921 Manual of Modern Scots 71 By the end of the 19th century Scots spelling was in a state of confusion as a result of hundreds of years of piecemeal borrowing from English Some writers created their own spelling systems to represent their own dialects rather than following the pan dialect conventions of modern literary Scots 63 72 The variety referred to as synthetic Scots or Lallans shows the marked influence of Standard English in grammar and spelling 73 During the 20th century with spoken Scots and knowledge of the literary tradition waning phonetic often humorous spellings became more common In the second half of the 20th century a number of spelling reform proposals were presented Commenting on this John Corbett 2003 260 writes that devising a normative orthography for Scots has been one of the greatest linguistic hobbies of the past century Most proposals entailed regularising the use of established 18th 19th century conventions and avoiding the apologetic apostrophe Other proposals sought to undo the influence of standard English conventions on Scots spelling by reviving Middle Scots conventions or introducing new ones A step towards standardizing Scots spelling was taken at a meeting of the Makar s Club in Edinburgh in 1947 where the Scots Style Sheet was approved J K Annand Douglas Young Robert Garioch A D Mackie Alexander Scott Tom Scott and Sydney Goodsir Smith all followed the recommendations in the Style Sheet to some extent Some of its suggestions are as follows aa baa caa for words like aw baw caw this was later discouraged ie for final unstressed y y for the ei sound in words like wynd and mynd and i for the short ɪ sound in words like wind and find ui for the o sound in words like guid ou for the uː sound in words like nou and hou ow e for the ʌu sound in words like growe and fowk throu and tho for through and thoughIn 1985 the Scots Language Society SLS published a set of spelling guidelines called Recommendations for Writers in Scots They represent a consensus view of writers in Scots at the time following several years of debate and consultation involving Alexander Scott Adam Jack Aitken David Murison Alastair Mackie and others A developed version of the Style Sheet it is based on the old spellings of the Makars but seeks to preserve the familiar appearance of written Scots It includes all of the Style Sheet s suggestions but recommends that writers return to the more traditional aw rather than aa Some of its other suggestions are as follows ei for the iː sound at the beginning or middle of words eidiot feinish veisit unless ee is firmly established for example in wee and een y for the ei sound in words like wynd and mynd but if it s at the beginning or end of a word use ey eydent stey wey eu for the sound in words like aneuch speug neuk k for final ct in words like object and expect which become objek and expek sk for initial sk sclim sklim scrieve skreive scunner skunner il for final unstressed el and le muckle mukkil morsel morsil traivel traivil ss for final s hoose houss moose mouss polis poliss unless se follows a consonant mense merse omit final d where it is silent staund staun thousand thousan friend frein The SLS Recommendations says it is desirable that there should be traditional precedents for the spellings employed and writers aspiring to use Scots should not invent new spellings off the cuff It prefers a number of more phonetic spellings that were commonly used by medieval Makars such as ar are byd tym wyf bide time wife cum sum come some eftir after evin even evir ever heir neir here near hir her ir are im am littil little sal shall speik speak thay they thaim them thair their thare there yit yet wad would war were wes was wul will David Purves s book A Scots Grammar has a list of over 2500 common Scots words spelt on the basis of the SLS Recommendations Purves has also published dozens of poems using the spellings In 2000 the Scots Spelling Committee report was published in Lallans 74 Shortly after publication Caroline Macafee criticised some aspects of that and some previous spelling suggestions as demolishing the kind of a standardisation that already existed where Scots spelling had become a free for all with the traditional model disparaged but no popular replacement 75 leading to more spelling variation not less Language endangerment edit The Scots language has had a long history of being devalued and marginalized in the Scottish education system 76 Due to the Anglicisation of Scotland and the Education Scotland Act of 1872 the education system required that every child learn English 76 This caused Scots to become forgotten about in main education and considered slang 76 As of 2022 it is deemed a vulnerable language Language revitalization edit In 2012 the Scottish Government released a policy approach that highlights their aim to provide opportunities for children to learn languages other than their mother tongues 77 And in 2014 there was a dictionary app developed to help aid students in their learning of the Scots language 78 The Curriculum for Excellence is the national curriculum for schools in Scotland for students from aged 3 18 79 It was implemented in Scotland in 2010 80 and the initiative aimed to provide support for the incorporation of the Scots language learning in classrooms in Scotland 76 There is still hesitancy in acknowledging Scots as a proper language in Scotland and many believe that it should not be taught in schools Individuals are starting to understand the cultural impact that learning Scots has on young people and want to encourage the use of the language in everyday conversations and help re appropriate it as a traditional 76 Along with the introduction of Scots learning in Scottish classrooms publishing companies have translated popular books into Scots 81 Itchy Coo has issued Scots editions of Harry Potter and The Gruffalo and by doing this they have made Scots more accessible to children teachers and families 81 Grammar editThis section may require cleanup to meet Wikipedia s quality standards The specific problem is basic informations are missing like number of cases genders numbers Please help improve this section if you can October 2016 Learn how and when to remove this template message Spelling variantsafternoon eftirnuinat times whiles whylsare aren t ar are arena arnaanyone anybody oniebodie onybodyanything oniething onythinganyhow anyway onieweyanyhow oniegatebeneath anaithbeside asydbetween atwein atweishcould couldn t coud cud coudna cudnaeight eighth echt echteleven eleventh eleivin eleivinteveryone everybody awbodie awbodyinto intinine ninth nyn nyntseven seventh seivin seivintshould shouldn t shoud shud shoudna shudnawill won t will wul winna wunnaThe spellings used below are those based on the prestigious literary conventions 82 described above Other spelling variants may be encountered in written Scots Not all of the following features are exclusive to Scots and may also occur in some varieties of English Definite article edit The is used before the names of seasons days of the week many nouns diseases trades and occupations sciences and academic subjects 83 It is also often used in place of the indefinite article and instead of a possessive pronoun 84 the hairst autumn the Wadensday Wednesday awa tae the kirk off to church the nou at the moment the day today the haingles influenza the Laitin Latin The deuk ett the bit breid The duck ate a piece of bread the wife my wife etc Nouns edit Nouns usually form their plural in e s but some irregular plurals occur 85 86 ee een eye eyes cauf caur calf calves horse horse horse horses cou kye cow cows shae shuin shoe shoes Nouns of measure and quantity are unchanged in the plural 86 87 fower fit four feet twa mile two miles five pund five pounds three hunderwecht three hundredweight Regular plurals include laifs loaves leafs leaves shelfs shelves and wifes wives 88 Pronouns edit Personal and possessive pronouns edit English ScotsI me myself mine my A me masel mines ma 89 thou thee thyself thine thy Early Modern English thoo thee thysel thine thy we us ourselves ours our we h us oorsels wirsels oor wiryou singular you plural yourself yours your you ye you se ye se yoursel yerselthey them themselves theirs their thay thaim thaimsels thairsels thairs thairThe second person singular nominative thoo duː Southern Scots dʌu Shetland dialect duː survived in colloquial speech until the mid 19th century in most of lowland Scotland It has since been replaced by ye you in most areas except in Insular Scots where thee diː Shetland diː is also used in North Northern Scots and in some Southern Scots varieties Thoo is used as the familiar form by parents speaking to children elders to youngsters or between friends or equals The second person formal singular ye or you is used when speaking to a superior or when a youngster addresses an elder The older second person singular possessive thy dai and thee di Shetland diː along with thine s dein z still survive to some extent where thoo remains in use See T V distinction 90 91 Relative pronoun edit The relative pronoun is that at is an alternative form borrowed from Norse but can also be arrived at by contraction for all persons and numbers but may be left out 86 92 Thare s no mony fowk that bides in that glen There aren t many people who live in that glen The anglicised forms wha wham whase who whom whose and the older whilk which are literary affectations 86 whilk is only used after a statement 86 He said he d tint it whilk wis no whit we wantit tae hear he said he d lost it which is not what we wanted to hear The possessive is formed by adding s or by using an appropriate pronoun 86 The wifie that s hoose gat burnt the woman whose house was burnt the wumman that her dochter gat mairit the woman whose daughter got married the men that thair boat wis tint the men whose boat was lost A third adjective adverb yon yonder thon thonder indicating something at some distance 86 D ye see yon thon hoose ower yonder thonder Also thae those and thir these the plurals of that and this respectively In Northern Scots this and that are also used where these and those would be in Standard English Other pronouns edit English Scotsthis these this thirthat those that thaeanyone onybodyanything onythingnothing nochtsomething somethingeveryone awbodyeverything awthingboth baitheach ilkevery ilkaother itherVerbs edit Modal verbs edit The modal verbs mey may ocht tae ocht ti ought to and sall shall are no longer used much in Scots but occurred historically and are still found in anglicised literary Scots 86 Can shoud should and will are the preferred Scots forms Scots employs double modal constructions 86 He ll no can come the day He won t be able to come today A micht coud come the morn I may be able to come tomorrow A uised tae coud dae it but no nou I used to be able to do it but not now Do support can be found in Modern Scots syntax but is variable in frequency and is likely to be a result of influence from English syntax 93 Negation occurs by using the adverb no in the North East nae 86 as in A m no comin I m not coming A ll no learn ye I will not teach you or by using the suffix na 94 95 sometimes spelled nae pronounced variously e ɪ or e depending on dialect as in A dinna ken I don t know Thay canna come They can t come We coudna hae telt him We couldn t have told him and A hivna seen her I haven t seen her The usage with no is preferred to that with na with contractable auxiliary verbs like ll for will or in yes no questions with any auxiliary 86 He ll no come and Did he no come English Scotsare aren t are arenacan can t can cannacould couldn t coud coudnadare daren t daur daurnadid didn t did didnado don t dae daena dinnahad hadn t haed haednahave haven t hae haena hinna hivnamight mightn t micht michtnamust mustn t maun maunnaneed needn t need neednashould shouldn t shoud shoudnawas wasn t wis wisnawere weren t war warnawill won t will winnawould wouldn t wad wadnaPresent tense of verbs edit The present tense of verbs adhere to the Northern Subject Rule whereby verbs end in s in all persons and numbers except when a single personal pronoun is next to the verb 86 96 Thay say he s ower wee Thaim that says he s ower wee Thir lassies says he s ower wee They say he s too small etc Thay re comin an aw but Five o thaim s comin The lassies Thay v went but Ma brakes haes went Thaim that comes first is serred first Those who come first are served first The trees growes green in the simmer The trees grow green in summer Wis was may replace war were but not conversely 86 You war wis thare Past tense and past participle of verbs edit The regular past form of the weak or regular verbs is it t or ed according to the preceding consonant or vowel 86 97 The ed ending may be written d if the e is silent it appears after a stop consonant e g hurtit hurted skelpit smacked mendit mended cuttit cut hurtit hurt keepit kept sleepit slept t appears after an unstressed syllable ending in l n r or ie y e g traivelt travelled festent fastened cairrit carried after a voiceless fricative or affricate e g raxt reached fasht troubled cocht coughed streetched stretched pronounced stritʃt in some irregular verbs e g telt told kent knew known e d appears after a stressed syllable ending in a sonorant a voiced fricative or affricate or a vowel e g cleaned clean d speired asked but also speirt scrieved scriev d scribbled wadged wedged dee d died Many verbs have strong or irregular forms which are distinctive from Standard English 86 98 two forms connected with means that they are variants bite bate bitten bite bit bitten drive drave driven drien drive drove driven ride rade ridden ride rode ridden rive rave riven rive rived riven rise rase risen rise rose risen slide slade slidden slide slid slid slite slate slitten slit slit slit write wrate written write wrote written pronounced vrit vrat vrutten in Mid Northern Scots bind band bund bind bound bound clim clam clum climb climbed climbed find fand fund find found found fling flang flung fling flung flung hing hang hung hang hung hung rin ran run run ran run spin span spun spin spun spun stick stack stuck stick stuck stuck drink drank drunk drucken drink drank drunk creep crap cruppen creep crept crept greet grat grutten weep wept wept sweit swat swutten sweat sweat sweat weet wat watten wet wet wet pit pat pitten put put put sit sat sitten sit sat sat spit spat spitten sputten spit spat spat brek brak brak brakken broken break broke broken get git gat gotten get got got ten speak spak spoken speak spoke spoken fecht focht fochten fight fought fought beir buir born e bear bore borne sweir swuir sworn swear swore sworne teir tuir torn tear tore torn weir wuir worn wear wore worn cast cuist casten cuisten cast cast cast lat luit latten luitten let let let staund stuid stuiden stand stood stood fesh fuish feshen fuishen fetch fetched thrash thrasht thruish thrasht thruishen thresh threshed threshed wash washt wuish washt wuishen wash washed washed bake bakit beuk bakken bake baked baked lauch leuch lauchen leuchen laugh laughed laughed shak sheuk shakken sheuken shake shook shaken tak teuk taen take took taken gae gaed gane go went gone gie gied gien give gave given hae haed haen have had had chuise chuised chosen choose chose chosen soum soumed soumed swim swam swum sell selt sauld selt sauld sell sold sold tell telt tauld telt tauld tell told told Present participle edit The present participle and gerund in are now usually en 99 but may still be differentiated en and in in Southern Scots 100 and en and ɪn North Northern Scots Adverbs edit Adverbs are usually of the same form as the verb root or adjective especially after verbs Haein a real guid day Having a really good day She s awfu fauchelt She s awfully tired Adverbs are also formed with s 86 lies lins gate s and wey s wey whiles at times mebbes perhaps brawlies splendidly geylies pretty well aiblins perhaps airselins backwards hauflins partly hidlins secretly maistlins almost awgates always everywhere ilkagate everywhere onygate anyhow ilkawey everywhere onywey anyhow anywhere endweys straight ahead whit wey how why Numbers edit Ordinal numbers end mostly in t 86 101 seicont fowert fift saxt second fourth fifth sixth etc but note also first thrid third first third English Scotsone first ane ae firsttwo second twa seicontthree third three thrid thirdfour fourth fower fowertfive fifth five fiftsix sixth sax saxtseven seventh seiven seiventeight eighth aicht aichtnine ninth nine nintten tenth ten tenteleven eleventh eleiven eleiventtwelve twelfth twal twaltAe eː jeː is used as an adjective before a noun 102 such as The Ae Hoose The One House Ae laddie an twa lassies One boy and two girls Ane is pronounced variously depending on dialect en jɪn in many Central and Southern varieties in in some Northern and Insular varieties and wan often written yin een and wan in dialect writing The impersonal form of one is a body as in A body can niver bide wi a body s sel One can never live by oneself Prepositions edit English Scotsabove upper topmost abuin buiner buinmaistbelow lower lowest ablo nether blomaistalong alangabout abootabout concerning anentacross athortbefore aforebehind ahintbeneath aneathbeside asidebetween atween atweeshbeyond ayontfrom frae faeinto intae intilInterrogative words edit English Scotswho wha what whit when whan where whaur why why how which whilk how hou In the North East the wh in the above words is pronounced f 103 Syntax edit Scots prefers the word order 104 He turnt oot the licht to He turned the light out and Gie s it Give us it to Give it to me Certain verbs are often used progressively 86 He wis thinkin he wad tell her He wis wantin tae tell her Verbs of motion may be dropped before an adverb or adverbial phrase of motion 104 A m awa tae ma bed That s me awa hame A ll intae the hoose an see him Subordinate clauses edit Verbless subordinate clauses introduced by an and express surprise or indignation 86 She haed tae walk the hale lenth o the road an her seiven month pregnant She had to walk the whole length of the road and she seven months pregnant He telt me tae rin an me wi ma sair leg He told me to run and me with my sore leg Suffixes edit Negative na 94 ɑ ɪ or e depending on dialect 105 Also nae or y e g canna can t dinna don t and maunna mustn t fu ful u ɪ ɑ or e depending on dialect Also fu fie fy fae and fa The word ending ae ɑ ɪ or e depending on dialect 105 Also a ow or y for example arrae arrow barrae barrow and windae window etc Diminutives edit Diminutives in ie 86 burnie small burn stream feardie feartie frightened person coward gamie gamekeeper kiltie kilted soldier postie postman wifie woman also used in Geordie dialect rhodie rhododendron and also in ock 86 bittock little bit playock toy plaything sourock sorrel and Northern ag 86 bairnag little bairn child common in Geordie dialect Cheordag Geordie ockie hooseockie small house wifeockie little woman both influenced by the Scottish Gaelic diminutive ag og in Irish Gaelic Times of day edit English Scotsmorning forenuinmidday twal oorsafternoon efternuinevening forenichtdusk twilight dayligaun gloaminmidnight midnichtearly morning wee oorsLiterature editThis article or section should specify the language of its non English content using lang transliteration for transliterated languages and IPA for phonetic transcriptions with an appropriate ISO 639 code Wikipedia s multilingual support templates may also be used See why November 2020 nbsp Stone seat by the River Cree engraved with Modern Scots poem by Liz NivenThe eighteenth century Scots revival was initiated by writers such as Allan Ramsay and Robert Fergusson and later continued by writers such as Robert Burns and Sir Walter Scott Scott introduced vernacular dialogue to his novels Other well known authors like Robert Louis Stevenson William Alexander George MacDonald J M Barrie and other members of the Kailyard school like Ian Maclaren also wrote in Scots or used it in dialogue as did George Douglas Brown whose writing is regarded as a useful corrective to the more roseate presentations of the kailyard school In the Victorian era popular Scottish newspapers regularly included articles and commentary in the vernacular often of unprecedented proportions 106 In the early twentieth century a renaissance in the use of Scots occurred its most vocal figure being Hugh MacDiarmid whose benchmark poem A Drunk Man Looks at the Thistle 1926 did much to demonstrate the power of Scots as a modern idiom Other contemporaries were Douglas Young John Buchan Sydney Goodsir Smith Robert Garioch and Robert McLellan The revival extended to verse and other literature William Wye Smith s New Testament translations appeared in 1901 and in 1904 in a new edition 107 In 1983 William Laughton Lorimer s translation of the New Testament from the original Greek was published Sample texts edit From Hallow Fair Robert Fergusson 1750 1774 At Hallowmas whan nights grow lang And starnies shine fu clear Whan fock the nippin cauld to bang Their winter hap warms wear Near Edinbrough a fair there hads I wat there s nane whase name is For strappin dames an sturdy lads And cap and stoup mair famous Than it that day Upo the tap o ilka lum The sun bagan to keek And bad the trig made maidens come A sightly joe to seek At Hallow fair whare browsters rare Keep gude ale on the gantries And dinna scrimp ye o a skair O kebbucks frae their pantries Fu saut that day From The Maker to Posterity Robert Louis Stevenson 1850 1894 Far yont amang the years to be When a we think an a we see An a we luve s been dung ajee By time s rouch shouther An what was richt and wrang for me Lies mangled throu ther It s possible it s hardly mair That some ane ripin after lear Some auld professor or young heir If still there s either May find an read me an be sair Perplexed puir brither What tongue does your auld bookie speak He ll spier an I his mou to steik No bein fit to write in Greek I write in Lallan Dear to my heart as the peat reek Auld as Tantallon Few spak it then an noo there s nane My puir auld sangs lie a their lane Their sense that aince was braw an plain Tint a thegether Like runes upon a standin stane Amang the heather From The House with the Green Shutters George Douglas Brown 1869 1902 He was born the day the brig on the Fleckie Road gaed down in the year o the great flood and since the great flood it s twelve year come Lammas Rab Tosh o Fleckie s wife was heavy footed at the time and Doctor Munn had been a nicht wi her and when he came to Barbie Water in the morning it was roaring wide frae bank to brae where the brig should have been there was naething but the swashing o the yellow waves Munn had to drive a the way round to the Fechars brig and in parts of the road the water was so deep that it lapped his horse s bellyband A this time Mistress Gourlay was skirling in her pains an praying to God she micht dee Gourlay had been a great cronie o Munn s but he quarrelled him for being late he had trysted him ye see for the occasion and he had been twenty times at the yett to look for him ye ken how little he would stomach that he was ready to brust wi anger Munn mad for the want o sleep and wat to the bane swure back at him and than Goulay wadna let him near his wife Ye mind what an awful day it was the thunder roared as if the heavens were tumbling on the world and the lichtnin sent the trees daudin on the roads and folk hid below their beds an prayed they thocht it was the judgment But Gourlay rammed his black stepper in the shafts and drave like the devil o Hell to Skeighan Drone where there was a young doctor The lad was feared to come but Gourlay swore by God that he should and he gaired him In a the countryside driving like his that day was never kenned or heard tell o they were back within the hour I saw them gallop up Main Street lichtin struck the ground before them the young doctor covered his face wi his hands and the horse nichered wi fear an tried to wheel but Gourlay stood up in the gig and lashed him on though the fire It was thocht for lang that Mrs Gourlay would die and she was never the same woman after Atweel aye sirs Gorlay has that morning s work to blame for the poor wife he has now From Embro to the Ploy Robert Garioch 1909 1981 The tartan tred wad gar ye lauch nae problem is owre teuch Your surname needna end in och they ll cleik ye up the cleuch A puckle dollar bill will aye preive Hiram Teufelsdrockh a septary of Clan McKay it s maybe richt eneuch verfluch dd dd dd dd in Embro to the ploy The Auld High Schule whaur mony a skelp of triple tonguit tawse has gien a heist up and a help towards Doctorates of Laws nou hears for Ramsay s cantie rhyme loud pawmies of applause frae folk that pey a pund a time to sit on wudden rawsgey hard dd dd dd dd in Embro to the ployThe haly kirk s Assembly haa nou fairly coups the creel wi Lindsay s Three Estatis braw devices of the Deil About our heids the satire stots like hailstanes till we reel the bawrs are in auld farrant Scots it s maybe jist as weill imphm dd dd dd dd in Embro to the ploy From The New Testament in Scots William Laughton Lorimer 1885 1967 Mathew 1 18ff This is the storie o the birth o Jesus Christ His mither Mary wis trystit til Joseph but afore they war mairriet she wis fund tae be wi bairn bi the Halie Spirit Her husband Joseph honest man hed nae mind tae affront her afore the warld an wis for brakkin aff their tryst hidlinweys an sae he wis een ettlin tae dae whan an angel o the Lord kythed til him in a draim an said til him Joseph son o Dauvit be nane feared tae tak Mary your trystit wife intil your hame the bairn she is cairrein is o the Halie Spirit She will beir a son an the name ye ar tae gie him is Jesus for he will sauf his fowk frae their sins Aa this happent at the wurd spokken bi the Lord throu the Prophet micht be fulfilled Behaud the virgin wil bouk an beir a son an they will caa his name Immanuel that is God wi us Whan he hed waukit frae his sleep Joseph did as the angel hed bidden him an tuik his trystit wife hame wi him But he bedditna wi her or she buir a son an he caa d the bairn Jesus References edit Robert McColl Millar 2018 Modern Scots An Analytical Survey Edinburgh University Press p 135 Robert McColl Millar 2018 Modern Scots An Analytical Survey Edinburgh University Press p 1 A Brief History of Scotsin Corbett John McClure Derrick Stuart Smith Jane Editors 2003 The Edinburgh Companion to Scots Edinburgh Edinburgh University Press ISBN 0 7486 1596 2 p 15 Macafee C Studying Scots Vocabularyin Corbett John McClure Derrick Stuart Smith Jane Editors 2003 The Edinburgh Companion to Scots Edinburgh Edinburgh University Press ISBN 0 7486 1596 2 p 51 Mairi Robinson editor in chief The Concise Scots Dictionary Aberdeen University Press 1985 p xxxi SND Introduction Dialect Districts Dsl ac uk Archived from the original on 1 June 2013 Retrieved 21 May 2009 Mairi Robinson editor in chief The Concise Scots Dictionary Aberdeen University Press 1985 SND Introduction Phonetic Description of Scottish Language and Dialects Dsl ac uk Archived from the original on 6 January 2009 Retrieved 21 May 2009 a b c d e f Johnston Paul 1997 Regional Variation In Jones Charles ed The Edinburgh History of the Scots Language Edinburgh Edinburgh University Press p 501 Jones Charles 1997 The Edinburgh History of the Scots Language Edinburgh Edinburgh University Press p 506 ISBN 978 0 7486 0754 9 Retrieved 9 August 2010 Grant William 1931 Phonetic Description of Scottish Language and Dialects in the Scottish National Dictionary vol I ix xli Aitken A J How to Pronounce Older Scots in Bards and Makars Glasgow University Press 1977 SND Introduction Archived 2012 09 22 at the Wayback Machine a b Johnston Paul 1997 Regional Variation in Jones Charles ed The Edinburgh History of the Scots Language Edinburgh University Press Edinburgh p 455 Johnston Paul 1997 Regional Variation in Jones Charles ed The Edinburgh History of the Scots Language Edinburgh University Press Edinburgh p 456 SND U 4 2 ii Archived 2014 07 03 at the Wayback Machine Gregg Robert 1972 The Scotch Irish dialect boundaries in Ulster in Martyn Wakelin ed Patterns in the Folk Speech of the British Isles London Athlone 109 139 SND A 1 SND A 3 Grant William Dixon James Main 1921 Manual of Modern Scots Cambridge University Press p 44 Johnston Paul 1997 Regional Variation in Jones Charles ed The Edinburgh History of the Scots Language Edinburgh University Press Edinburgh p 461 SND A 2 1 a b SND C Johnston Paul 1997 Regional Variation in Jones Charles ed The Edinburgh History of the Scots Language Edinburgh University Press Edinburgh p 502 503 SND E 1 3 SND E 1 2 SND I Archived from the original on 3 July 2014 Retrieved 27 March 2010 a b SND I 3 SND O SND O 3 1 Johnston Paul 1997 Regional Variation in Jones Charles ed The Edinburgh History of the Scots Language Edinburgh University Press Edinburgh p 510 511 SND R SND S a b c Johnston Paul 1997 Regional Variation in Jones Charles ed The Edinburgh History of the Scots Language Edinburgh University Press Edinburgh p 501 a b Johnston Paul 1997 Regional Variation in Jones Charles ed The Edinburgh History of the Scots Language Edinburgh University Press Edinburgh p 509 SND U 4 2 a b SND U 2 4 i SND Z a b Johnston Paul 1997 Regional Variation in Jones Charles ed The Edinburgh History of the Scots Language Edinburgh University Press Edinburgh p 499 Johnston Paul 1997 Regional Variation in Jones Charles ed The Edinburgh History of the Scots Language Edinburgh University Press Edinburgh p 500 a b c SND G SND K Johnston Paul 1997 Regional Variation in Jones Charles ed The Edinburgh History of the Scots Language Edinburgh University Press Edinburgh p 510 a b Johnston Paul 1997 Regional Variation in Jones Charles ed The Edinburgh History of the Scots Language Edinburgh University Press Edinburgh p 507 SND W SND E 3 SND A 5 a b SND A 4 a b SND U 2 1 SND A 2 2 SND W 6 SND E 3 2 SND E 3 3 SND E 3 4 SND E 3 5 SND U 2 2 SND O 3 SND O 5 1 SND U 3 4 i SND O 3 4 ii Eagle Andy 2014 Aw Ae Wey Written Scots in Scotland and Ulster Available at 1 Tulloch Graham 1980 The Language of Walter Scott A Study of his Scottish and Period Language London Deutsch p 249 a b William Grant and David D Murison eds The Scottish National Dictionary SND 1929 1976 The Scottish National Dictionary Association vol I Edinburgh p xv William Grant and David D Murison eds The Scottish National Dictionary SND 1929 1976 The Scottish National Dictionary Association vol I Edinburgh p xiv J D McClure in The Oxford Companion to the English Language Oxford University Press 1992 p 168 Corbett John McClure Derrick Stuart Smith Jane Editors 2003 The Edinburgh Companion to Scots Edinburgh Edinburgh University Press pp 12 13 Mackie Albert D 1952 Fergusson s Language Braid Scots Then and Now in Smith Syndney Goodsir ed Robert Fergusson 1750 1774 Edinburgh Nelson p 123 124 129 Mairi Robinson editor in chief The Concise Scots Dictionary Aberdeen University Press 1985 p xiii Stevenson R L 1905 The Works of R L Stevenson Vol 8 Underwoods London Heinemann P 152 Todd Loreto 1989 The Language of Iish Lieature London MacMillan p 134 Grant William Dixon James Main 1921 Manual of Modern Scots Cambridge University Press McClure J Derrick 2002 Doric The Dialect of North East Scotland Amsterdam Benjamins p 79 Crystal David 1995 The Cambridge Encyclopedia of the English Language Cambridge University Press p 333 Scots Spelling Report Caroline Macafee 2000 Lea the leid alane in Lallans 57 The Scots Language Society ISSN 1359 3587 a b c d e Lowing Karen 2017 The Scots Language and its Cultural and Social Capital in Scottish Schools a Case Study of Scots in Scottish Secondary Classrooms Association for Scottish Literary Studies 36 via Gale Literature Resource Center Language learning in Scotland a 1 2 approach gov scot Retrieved 1 December 2022 New Scots language app scotslanguage info Retrieved 1 December 2022 Scotland s Curriculum for Excellence Page 4 Scotland s Curriculum for Excellence Retrieved 30 November 2022 School admissions curriculum and qualifications gov scot Retrieved 1 December 2022 a b Hame Itchy Coo itchy coo com Retrieved 1 December 2022 Online Scots Dictionary Grant William Dixon James Main 1921 Manual of Modern Scots Cambridge University Press p 78 Grant William Dixon James Main 1921 Manual of Modern Scots Cambridge University Press p 77 Grant William Dixon James Main 1921 Manual of Modern Scots Cambridge University Press p 79 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v A J Aitken in The Oxford Companion to the English Language Oxford University Press 1992 p 896 Grant William Dixon James Main 1921 Manual of Modern Scots Cambridge University Press p 80 Grant William Dixon James Main 1921 Manual of Modern Scots Cambridge University Press p 21 Grant William Dixon James Main 1921 Manual of Modern Scots Cambridge University Press p 95 ff Insular Shetland Grant William Dixon James Main 1921 Manual of Modern Scots Cambridge University Press p 102 Gotthard Lisa 3 April 2019 Why Do Support in Scots is Different English Studies 100 3 314 338 doi 10 1080 0013838X 2018 1558699 S2CID 166975842 Retrieved 6 December 2022 a b Grant William Dixon James Main 1921 Manual of Modern Scots Cambridge University Press p 115 See the Scottish National Dictionary s entry for na SND NA Grant William Dixon James Main 1921 Manual of Modern Scots Cambridge University Press p 112 Grant William Dixon James Main 1921 Manual of Modern Scots Cambridge University Press p 113 Grant William Dixon James Main 1921 Manual of Modern Scots Cambridge University Press p 126 ff Beal J Syntax and Morphology in Jones C ed The Edinburgh History of the Scots Language Edinburgh University of Edinburgh Press p 356 SND Introduction Dialect Districts p xxxi Dsl ac uk Archived from the original on 21 January 2012 Retrieved 21 May 2009 Grant William Dixon James Main 1921 Manual of Modern Scots Cambridge University Press p 106 Grant William Dixon James Main 1921 Manual of Modern Scots Cambridge University Press p 105 Grant William Dixon James Main 1921 Manual of Modern Scots Cambridge University Press p 32 a b A J Aitken in The Oxford Companion to the English Language Oxford University Press 1992 p 897 a b William Grant and David D Murison eds The Scottish National Dictionary SND 1929 1976 The Scottish National Dictionary Association vol I Edinburgh p xvii William Donaldson The Language of the People Scots Prose from the Victorian Revival Aberdeen University Press 1989 William Wye Smith The New Testament in Braid Scots New edition Paisley 1904 Modern Scots at the Internet Archive nbsp Guinea BissauExternal links edit nbsp Scots edition of Wikipedia the free encyclopedia The Dictionary of the Scots Language Scots Language Centre The Scots Language Society Scots online Scots Language Recordings ScotsteXt books poems and texts in Scots Scottish words illustrated Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Modern Scots amp oldid 1176174880, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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