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A SCOTSMAN Explains The SCOTTISH Accent(s) to a LONDONER
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GER-Niveau
Schwierigkeit
Untertitel (171 Segmente)
How are you so late? Today on LetThemTalkTv you're going to learn how to speak Scottish
English and you'll also learn a little bit of the fascinating history of the languages in Scotland.
Now I'm from London and this subject I am totally unqualified and ill-prepared to
discuss and so I've elicited the help of a real Scottish person yes indeed and here he is it's
Jack hello Jack - Hello Gideon great to see you. So Jack first of all, where are you from
and how would you describe your accent? Yes so I was born in Aberdeen the third city of
Scotland but I grew up on the North Sea coast in a wee town, a little town, called Dornoch
the nearest well-known town to Dornoch is Inverness which is just a north of Loch Ness
famous for the monster which I still haven't seen but I live in hope. I would describe my
accent as pretty standard Scottish with a slight Highland touch. Thank you Jack
actually Gideon I have a wee gift for you oh yeah what's this is Irn bru Scotland's other
national drink - oh yeah -Scotland's most famous for whisky but there is a soft drink a fizzy drink
called Irn Bru and the taste is is quite unique I would say. - Can I try it? - of course. Let's
see I should I should tell the viewers we're not sponsored no we're not sponsored by this drink
but I have heard about it but I've actually never tried it a fizzy drinks should you call them - yes
fizzy drink or just juice some people some Scots would just say juice like a juice whether it's
orange or coke or Irn Bru. We should make another video called “Englishman tastes Irn Bru for the
first time” slainte-mhath OK so that's Scot Gaelic for cheers first thing first expression
and well it's it's kind of fruity but not in a bad way. I don't think It’s
ever seen a single piece of fruit. I was wondering if I had my Geiger counter
radioactive levels it's sort of a bright orange yeah and maybe that says something
about the Scottish character. and about perhaps - that we're radioactive we're - yeah I don't
know but it's yeah yeah it's interesting I'll finish it later OK yeah thank you thank you
Jack am I right in saying that there are three languages, three native languages spoken in
Scotland? You are right Gideon, most Scots today speak standard Scottish English which is by and
large comprehensible to most speakers of English it's often just English spoken with a Scottish
accent but interestingly there is a language or some would say dialect called Scots which
differs from English hugely in terms of vocabulary and it would be quite hard
for many non-Scots to understand. So you speak standard Scottish English more or less yes and yes
I have heard Scots being spoken and even for me it was pretty difficult to understand so I think
that's why people call it a different language. Yes exactly although that's a political debate.
Basically it's about what is a language what is the dialect and even for me if I were to visit
maybe a small village in Aberdeenshire I might struggle to understand one or two people but OK
and the third language is of course Scot’s Gaelic so not Gaelic in Ireland it's pronounced Gaelic
but in Scotland it's Gaelic and it is a Celtic language OK so it's unrelated to
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