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Many years ago before Scottish newspapers were taken over by Press Barons, Hogmany was the name given to the 31st of December, each year, in on the TV/Radio. Now papers the Press Barons own have dropped HOGMANY.

2006-11-20 03:21:02 · 10 answers · asked by TOMTOM 1 in Arts & Humanities History

10 answers

I JUST WISH THE JOCKS WOULD STOP WHINGING..IT MUST BE THE CONSTANT DRAFT UP THERE SKIRTS..SORRY KILTS

2006-11-20 03:31:36 · answer #1 · answered by michael b 5 · 0 3

Its not being anglicised at all...........who gives a stuff what it says in the papers or in any other media.

It is the one time of the year that everybody I know wishes they were Scottish (not that any of us need an excuse for a p*ss up).

It is, was, and always will be a Scottish celebration - not another name for New's Year Eve, but a festival in its own right.

Since when has a Jock given a damn for what anyone else thinks anyway ?

2006-11-20 03:41:47 · answer #2 · answered by the_lipsiot 7 · 0 0

applicable ten names final 12 months Jacob, Michael, Joshua, Ethan, Mathew, Daniel, Christopher, Andrew, Anthony, William some names from 10 to 50 Alexander, Joseph, David, Ryan, Noah, James, Tyler, Logan, Chirstian, Nathan, Benjamin, Samuel, Dylan, Brandon, Elijah, Aiden, Zachary, Caleb, Jackson, Gavin, Luke, Aidan, Jorden, Jayden, Isaac, Luke , Evan Names i like Bryant, Bryce, Elliott, Zeke, Zayden, Zavier, Javier, Xavier, Troy, Trey, Duncan, River, Luka, Seth, Joel, Mycah, Mitchell

2016-12-29 06:20:11 · answer #3 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

The reason it has been changed to New years eve is because you Scots have trouble spelling your own language .There is no such thing as HOGMANY.
Come back when you learn how to spell .

2006-11-21 21:18:55 · answer #4 · answered by Haydn 4 · 0 0

I do not see it as anglified. Lets face it only Scots people really know what its about and English people are not at all interested in it.

2006-11-20 03:31:08 · answer #5 · answered by Anonymous · 0 2

As far as i know, no such language as Scottish... so speak bloody English, knob rots.

2006-11-20 03:30:46 · answer #6 · answered by Ellie29uk 3 · 1 2

I thought it was spelled Hogmanay?

2006-11-20 03:27:40 · answer #7 · answered by braennvin2 5 · 0 1

Who cares - I don't know what you mean about anglified.

2006-11-20 05:23:03 · answer #8 · answered by costa 4 · 0 0

haven't a clue. Maybe because it's too commercial and no one really cares anymore....?

2006-11-20 03:25:16 · answer #9 · answered by antagonist 5 · 0 2

i still call it hogmanay coz thats what it is

2006-11-20 03:28:55 · answer #10 · answered by Anonymous · 0 1

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