lenth, strenth. In some phrases beginning with in the, on the, at the, of the, these two words are contracted into ee [i] from the town of Forfar westwards, as ee haid o’ ee toon and ee haid ee toon, glower ee mune an’ fa’ ee midden. e [ɛ] in closed position remains generally as in St.Eng. (Dumfriesshire, by Hewison, p. In one or other of the central dialects, some other diphthongised forms of ā or open a can be found — e.g. 116-117) says that the U. Teviotdale dialect of Rxb. and Sh. [33][full citation needed] In the core areas of Scots settlement, Scots outnumbered English settlers by five or six to one. birk, kirk, kirn, larik, cauf, bick, sic, steek, thak, yeukie, for birch, church, churn, larch, chaff, bitch, such, stitch, thatch, itchy. See E.E.P., V., pp. 190), forl [ = whorl]; Pitcairn’s The Assembly, 1692, fat [ = what]. awe. (Burns O’ Merry Hae I Been.). Mr J. Ross, late Rector of Arbroath High School, gave an account of the Mearns dialect of Glenfarquhar (11 mls. [21], § 44. § 41. [79] All these words except coat have also [əi] in sn.Sc. Scots is a contraction of Scottis, the Older Scots[16] and northern version of late Old English: Scottisc (modern English 'Scottish'), which replaced the earlier i-mutated version Scyttisc. § 8. In Canobie, older people until recently used a peculiar l sound after all vowels, the contact being between the after-blade and fore-palate (or after-gum). fade by ai, or, if final, ay. we find the characteristics of e.Per., in the extreme east those of Abdsh., while the central area is a compromise between the two. § 18.1. who have no real knowledge or feeling for any Sc. Irish pronunciation of these words, also Cai. (a),[25] but have i [ɪ, ɪ̜] in em.Sc.(b). As the dialects on both sides of the Border are sprung from the same source we should expect to find them possessing many phonetic features in common, along with others more or less divergent. § 119. avoid, boil (v.), choice, coin, join, oil, ointment, oyster, point, poison [pəizn, puʒn, pʌʒn], soil, spoil, voice, but see § 105.2. By signing up for this email, you are agreeing to news, offers, and information from Encyclopaedia Britannica. coast, and (2) the valleys of the Dee and Don, the old provinces of Formartine and Mar. of Scotland wrote several treatises in his native speech. § 5.2. See § 88. But as he had thir things in his mind, see! Sc. The effect, however, of seeing the English words and spellings is to tend to change our Scottish speech into a bastard English, a very good example of which may be seen in the autobiographical parts of Mansie Wauch. and Sc. § 18. ǣg: elay, key; O.E. § 1. Omniglot is how I make my living. Fifty years ago it was unknown in n. and s.Sc., but it can now be heard in many of the larger towns in these districts, not by natural development but through association with people from Glasgow and its neighbourhood.

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