i will say this in english so that you can understand it. when god created man, they spoke scottish. then as man drifted away from the true path, they forgot how to speak god's language and started saying things like "tut tut", "got to put me bags in the boot" "jolly good" "she was chatting me up on the telly", so, if you wish to return to god, please learn how to use god's language.
2007-10-07 07:41:48
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answer #1
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answered by Anonymous
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If the Scottish language should be changed than someone maybe could come over here and get the U.S. speaking one language as we honestly have so many dialects that is not funny. And, this has a far as we were taught in English Class at school. This counts for the East,South,North and west, and I still think Cajun is the hardest of them all. It is this way, if you can catch the first couple of words we may get a part of the sentence. I come from the North and I get all the time how funny we talk. And, then you throw in the other ones who weren't born here, try to understand them with one word.
So, maybe someone can help us too!! You of course have first dibs.
2007-10-07 13:08:02
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answer #2
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answered by sherry 5
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LOL...it works both way. Even though my grandfather was from Glasgow I still have some problems deciphering what some of them are saying. Don'y know how this would reclassify the Scottish language though. The things you refer to are local dialects within the Scots language.
2007-10-07 20:14:44
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answer #3
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answered by Jock 6
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I think you should stop raiding the buckets for something to eat.......................... lol
I thought the weegies were the worst - ken fit i mean hen!!!
You can always move up north to the queens language land with nessie.
"Freedom" All say 'aye' to willie wallace.
2007-10-07 10:54:03
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answer #4
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answered by Anonymous
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Yes. Definitely.
2007-10-07 07:37:44
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answer #5
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answered by Anonymous
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Wrong category, Jimmy. Wise men came from the EAST!!
2007-10-07 08:38:59
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answer #6
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answered by alan h 1
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Are we talking Scots, Gaelic, or just the Edinburgh dialect? And I thought it was you Glaswegians who couldn't be understood?
My great-grand father was Glaswegian by adoption, but his wife and all her family were from there. We're talking 1910 and before, before they came to America.
2007-10-07 07:35:18
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answer #7
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answered by Bryce 7
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Two cities, 40 miles apart, and how they hate each other. Sad.
My grandfather was from Greenock and my grandmother from Dundee. I'm glad they were above that fray and properly became ice hockey fans.
2007-10-07 07:38:12
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answer #8
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answered by Anonymous
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Aye
2007-10-07 07:40:40
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answer #9
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answered by Megs 4
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Rubbish!
2007-10-07 07:45:49
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answer #10
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answered by little nell 4
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