What is the Scottish accent called?

Brogue (accent) - Wikipedia.
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What is a thick Scottish accent called?

brogue Add to list Share. You may know of a brogue as a thick Irish accent, and that can help you remember another meaning: it's also a thick Irish shoe. Brogues are heavy, sturdy Irish shoes, and they're usually made from untanned hide.
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Why is the Scottish accent called a brogue?

Today we're featuring brogue, the shoe, which comes from the Irish word bróg and probably derives from an Old Norse term meaning "leg covering." Brogue, the accent, comes from a different Irish word, barróg, which means "accent" or "speech impediment."
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Is it Scottish accent or Scottish brogue?

Brogue is an informal term for a distinctive regional pronunciation, especially an Irish (or sometimes Scottish) accent. The term occasionally refers more specifically to the exaggerated speech patterns of the stage Irishman.
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Is brogue a derogatory term?

I'm used to the term, but some Irish might consider their accent being described as a 'brogue' to be derogatory, due to its inferior origins.
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Learn about the SCOTTISH accent, dialect, and slang!



What is a burr accent?

If someone has a burr, they speak English with a regional accent in which 'r' sounds are pronounced more strongly than in the standard British way of speaking.
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Do Scots have a brogue?

A brogue is a reference to an Irish (occasionally Scottish) dialect of English, with a number of sounds changed that make it distinctive. A burr refers more to the trilling of the r (sometimes in the back of the mouth) that seems to be mostly a Scottish characteristic.
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What are Brochs in Scotland?

Brochs are a kind of Iron Age roundhouse found only in Scotland, and Mousa is the best-preserved of them all. Thought to have been constructed in about 300 BC, it stands 13m tall, a totem of Scottish prehistory. It appears twice in Norse sagas.
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How do you speak in a Scottish brogue?

To talk with a Scottish accent, drop the "g" sound from words that end in a "g." For example, instead of saying "good evening," you would say "good evenin." You should also pronounce "u" sounds as "oo" sounds.
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What is an Edinburgh accent called?

Standard Scottish English

Popular terms, such as 'Glasgow Kelvinside accent' or 'Edinburgh Morningside accent' are frequently used to describe the type of accent associated with speakers such as Malcolm here.
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Do you say Scots or Scottish?

In modern current British usage, in England as in Scotland, the general term for things from or pertaining to Scotland is Scottish. Scots is used for the Scots language and Scots law, although one increasingly hears it used of people and organisations, especially in newspaper articles.
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What is difference between brogue and accent?

As verbs the difference between accent and brogue

is that accent is to express the accent of vocally; to utter with accent while brogue is (intransitive) to speak with a brogue (accent) or brogue can be (dialect) to fish for eels by disturbing the waters.
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How do you say no in Glasgow?

no = Cha chuir.
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What is the Glasgow accent called?

The Glasgow dialect, popularly known as the Glasgow patter or Glaswegian, varies from Scottish English at one end of a bipolar linguistic continuum, with the local dialect of West Central Scots at the other.
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How do Glaswegians say Glasgow?

Promoted Stories. Of course Glaswegians, and the majority of Scots we would like to think, pronounce it as 'Glaz-go', just as ABBA did in the famous line off their Super Trouper (to rhyme with 'last show').
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What is a Scottish Dun?

A dun is an ancient or medieval fort. In Ireland and Britain it is mainly a kind of hillfort and also a kind of Atlantic roundhouse.
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What is a cottage called in Scotland?

CRUIVE n, a hut, hovel or cottage.
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What did the Picts look like?

They wear long hair, and shave every part of the body save the head and the upper lip.” According to other Roman sources, the only clothing the Picts wore were iron chains around their waists and throats. Iron was considered to them a sign of wealth and a material more valuable than gold.
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How do you pronounce burs?

1 syllable: "BURZ"
...
Here are 4 tips that should help you perfect your pronunciation of 'burs':
  1. Break 'burs' down into sounds: [BURZ] - say it out loud and exaggerate the sounds until you can consistently produce them.
  2. Record yourself saying 'burs' in full sentences, then watch yourself and listen.
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Why do they say Irish brogue?

Multiple etymologies have been proposed: it may derive from the Irish bróg ("shoe"), the type of shoe traditionally worn by the people of Ireland and the Scottish Highlands, and hence possibly originally meant "the speech of those who call a shoe a 'brogue'".
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Why are brogues called brogues?

It comes from the Gaeilge bróg (Irish), Gaelic bròg (Scottish) "shoe", from the Old Norse "brók" meaning "leg covering". The Scots word brogue is also used to denote a bradawl or boring tool as well as the action of piercing with such a tool.
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What is the difference between an Oxford and a brogue?

An Oxford is a shoe that features a closed-lacing system on the shoe, resulting in a tighter shoe and more formal appearance. Brogues refer to the decorative perforations along the toe-cap, sides, or upper length of a shoe, which give a visually impressive appearance to a shoe, and can be found on Oxfords.
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What's the difference between a Scottish and Irish accent?

The difference between Scottish and Irish is on the quality of their intonation and accent. While Scottish is very aggressive, Irish is sexier since they speak very lively and happily. In brief: Gaelic in Scottish is pronounced as Gah-Lick whereas it is pronounce as Gai-Lick in Irish.
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