Scots Gaelic


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  • noun

Synonyms for Scots Gaelic

the Gaelic of Scotland

Based on WordNet 3.0, Farlex clipart collection. © 2003-2012 Princeton University, Farlex Inc.
References in periodicals archive ?
However the pair were victorious, although the win was made easier by the departure of Scots Gaelic at the last.
The Scots Gaelic version of the series was called Donnie Murdo, two names unconnected with mice or danger.
Such agreements have now been signed for the UK's Welsh and Scots Gaelic as well as Spain's Catalan, Basque and Galician.
Moreover, students reject appeals to the historical overlap between Irish and Scots Gaelic as a basis for teaching the latter as a substitute; these teenagers see themselves as British and Irish, but not Scottish.
ACROSS in Hall 2 on Sunday night, the altogether less strident tones of Scots Gaelic singer Julie Fowlis will be in evidence.
For unexplained reasons, Quintus can speak Pictish (per press notes, subtitled dialogue for these scenes is actually Scots Gaelic, since little is known about the real Pictish language), so he's taken prisoner instead of slain.
Nor does Scots Gaelic appear a plausible source for the terra, despite later Scots usage.
The 10th-century gospel book is of interest as a treasure of Celtic Scotland, but also of historical importance because it was used during the early 12th century to record grants in Scots Gaelic to the monastery of Deer in Aberdeenshire.
Scots Gaelic, as I recall, was restricted to only one or two tracks, and while the songs were good, their scarcity did not, to me, bespeak a music scene bursting with energy.
Scots Gaelic singer Julie Fowlis, a very impressive support act to Beth Nielsen Chapman at Birmingham Town Hall recently, is nominated for the second successive year for Folk Singer of the Year.
Probably the greatest contribution Irish and Scots Gaelic have made to English is the word 'whisky'.
There will be Presbyterian ministers, Scots Gaelic singers and Gaelic language enthusiasts coming from Derry and Edinburgh.
The word is both Irish and Scots Gaelic for "Son of" and whether you spell your name MacLean or McLean is a question of personal choice.