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WIKITONGUES: David speaking Doric Scots and English

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  • čas přidán 22. 09. 2014
  • Uploaded in Edinburgh, Scotland.
    The speaker(s) featured herein have not explicitly agreed to distribute this video for reuse. For inquiries on licensing this video, please contact hello@wikitongues.org.
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Komentáře • 468

  • @angharadhafod
    @angharadhafod Před 6 lety +676

    Whilst studying in Aberdeen University for my masters, I lived in the small village of Collieston, some 18 miles north. Just down below the cottage where I lived, was an old man who could only speak Doric. He was lonely, and would sometimes call to me from his shed as I passed. So I would often drop by to visit. But I could barely understand what he said. Certainly, his Doric was far less intelligible to me than the Doric in this video. And of what I could understand, a number of words I recognised from my knowledge of Norwegian, not English.
    This was 25 years ago now. I think it's very unlikely he's still around. What a shame I didn't record him; there may be none left quite like that now.

    • @CocoaHerBeansness
      @CocoaHerBeansness Před 5 lety +28

      I still have some extended family speak broad Doric

    • @Aconitum_napellus
      @Aconitum_napellus Před 5 lety +1

      Are you Welsh?

    • @jackduncan4228
      @jackduncan4228 Před 4 lety +4

      Something Dreadful Welsh don’t speak Doric.

    • @foolofhearts8126
      @foolofhearts8126 Před 4 lety +21

      Angharad broad Doric speaker here, use it more than English and it’s my native language, you should here me and some of my Doric speaking friends

    • @Michael.Eddington
      @Michael.Eddington Před 4 lety +3

      ThePictishMan 26
      Post a video of it mate

  • @Tranxhead
    @Tranxhead Před 9 lety +413

    As another Scot from the Doric regions, it was very good, and his Doric pronunciation was very loyal (made me feel nostalgic), but there wasn't actually much of the dialect vocabulary. You get a lot thicker than that, both in Scots and Doric.

    • @umeshln8873
      @umeshln8873 Před 4 lety +7

      Hey! Since you're from the Doric regions,
      Are there different accents of the Doric dialect within the Grampian region ?? For example Buchan accent vs Mearns accent or Elgin accent vs Banff accent
      Plus are there also Coastal vs Inland variations within a County?
      thank you

    • @Illumin
      @Illumin Před 3 lety +13

      @@umeshln8873 Hey There, sorry for the late reply - I wouldn't say the accent was different much between places however the more inland you went the thicker the doric got in my experience, coastal towns had alot more watered down doric but i think that may be because they were fishing towns and had an people visiting from all over etc. however Aberdonians (People from Aberdeen) sound completely different to the people from the villages and towns - and although they use some of the vocabulary they don't employ the accent that we would normally use with and so some of the pronounciation is butchered. Hope this helps clears things up!

    • @neom0nk
      @neom0nk Před 7 měsíci

      ​@@Illumin Through the border region the accent switch around considerably.. I'm from Kelso, but sometimes in Jedburgh or Hawick, you have no clue what they're on about. Then go to say Chirnside or Duns, they basically sound English.

  • @alexanderboulton2123
    @alexanderboulton2123 Před 11 měsíci +39

    As a Minnesotan I think it's really understated how much influence the Scottish/West Country accent had on the Midwest/Canadian accent. People love to talk about the Scandinavian influence, and that's a big part of it, but they're all Germanic languages, so they all kind of come together in this big mess of "oh yah, oh you betcha, for shoure yah."

    • @anschelsc
      @anschelsc Před 9 měsíci +5

      Don't discount the Scandinavian impact on Doric as well! That part of Scotland was extremely Norse for a while

    • @alexanderboulton2123
      @alexanderboulton2123 Před 9 měsíci +2

      @anschelsc I mean yeah absolutely, that's a huge part of it. I feel like the Norse and Danish had a huge impact on Scottish English as a whole, but there especially.

  • @nathangale7702
    @nathangale7702 Před 4 lety +567

    It seems to me that Scots is at least as different from English as Portuguese is different from Spanish, I think it’s preservation should be supported.

    • @Pokarface7
      @Pokarface7 Před 4 lety +20

      Spanish and Gallego language :D

    • @mlee-w664
      @mlee-w664 Před 3 lety +53

      Not quite sure if that is accurate most Spaniards can't understand Portuguese but most Portuguese can understand Spanish. I think both English and Scots speakers can understand each other it's just a bit harder for English speakers to follow Scots

    • @nathangale7702
      @nathangale7702 Před 3 lety +38

      @@mlee-w664 I don't know, if you listen to some Scots speakers going hard and fast it can seem pretty unintelligible. I'm also speaking from personal experience, I speak Spanish, so I have about as much trouble understanding Portuguese as Scots.

    • @mikhailabunidal9146
      @mikhailabunidal9146 Před 2 lety +4

      Any language but i most totally agree

    • @prestonjones1653
      @prestonjones1653 Před 2 lety +20

      "A sprachk is a dialekt mit un armee und flot."
      A language is a dialect with an army and a navy.

  • @dusk_ene
    @dusk_ene Před 11 měsíci +13

    I am an American english speaker and this was fascinating.
    I was able to tune into it and understand him completely, minus a few short things here and there, and yet I could sit back and try to just hear it as if it was unintelligible. Fascinating insight into my own language as well as Scots.

  • @julierussell8876
    @julierussell8876 Před 3 lety +118

    The Doric, when spoken in this video is slower, clearer and with less strength to be understood. When spoken conversationally, it is fast and thick and heavy in the slang and strength. :-)

    • @OHYS
      @OHYS Před 3 lety +6

      You mean to say you are disappointed because it wasn't *fast and thick* enough?

    • @brucemacallan6831
      @brucemacallan6831 Před 3 měsíci +1

      This is true. I'm a native Buchan/Doric speaker, and the normal delivery is much faster.

  • @deletesoon70
    @deletesoon70 Před 8 lety +183

    I could listen to this guy all day.

    • @achtube85
      @achtube85 Před 7 lety +9

      Ishka Bibble you should give the lovely lady who speaks Shetlandic a try, then :)

    • @JoeGrimer
      @JoeGrimer Před 7 lety +6

      They need to get him back... this is one of my favourite Wikitongues

  • @SpittingGun
    @SpittingGun Před 9 lety +166

    My lord, his voice is awesome

  • @robmcrob2091
    @robmcrob2091 Před 9 lety +138

    If you can speak English you can tune in to Scots but I promise if you go to Buchan and listen to some locals speaking the claik you will only be able to follow it at best. It is different. It's like some of the dialects of German and Hoch Deutsch or Swedish and Danish. They can follow each other bit they can't just strike up straight away.

    • @CocoaHerBeansness
      @CocoaHerBeansness Před 5 lety +2

      depends on the Scots. see wikitongues video about Shetlandic

    • @CoherentChimp
      @CoherentChimp Před 4 lety +6

      It metters far aboot ye guin in Buchan. Thers a muckle o' diffrence atween Teuchters an Toonsers.

    • @MaoRatto
      @MaoRatto Před 3 lety

      ... Swedish German is uninteligable with Low German or with High German due to the vast French influence.

    • @eddyc8900
      @eddyc8900 Před 2 lety

      Swedish German? U havin a giraffe?

    • @robmcrob2091
      @robmcrob2091 Před 2 lety +1

      @@eddyc8900 Swedish and Danish. Reread the comment.

  • @Pitcairn2
    @Pitcairn2 Před 4 lety +11

    My Grandmother was from rural Aberdeenshire, she left school in 1912 aged 14 to work in service in a local farm, where she also milked the cows..I was born and brought up in East Anglia, and on visits to my Grandmother every year, now in Perthshire , if I was up to mischief she would look at me sternly and say ' Yer an affa loon' (You are a terrible boy) . I thought she meant I was slightly mental (Loony) for many years. My Mother who was born in 1921, was strapped regularly by her teacher for not speaking 'The Kings English' and using Doric.

    • @keithwouldstay
      @keithwouldstay Před 3 lety +1

      Even in the early 80s I was smacked at school for not speaking the Queen's English.

  • @dumptrump3788
    @dumptrump3788 Před 4 lety +2

    I had to work up near Aberdeen for a year & got quite good with Doric. I miss it & this video brings back many happy memories.

  • @Sylkenwolf
    @Sylkenwolf Před 8 lety +30

    I am American and understand love the diverse ways of the Scots! I hope to visit North East and West Scotland soon.

    • @crazyforcoffee5950
      @crazyforcoffee5950 Před 8 lety +1

      Doric are much easier than Glaswegians

    • @Sylkenwolf
      @Sylkenwolf Před 6 lety +3

      Rugby Man yes. I've also noticed it sounds much like the Applachian tongue here.

    • @vannjunkin8041
      @vannjunkin8041 Před 2 lety +1

      Did you go?

  • @MaxBarnish
    @MaxBarnish Před 9 lety +37

    Scots can be pretty hard to understand in Aberdeenshire! Took me nearly a year to get over 50% understanding

  • @jackduncan4228
    @jackduncan4228 Před 4 lety +8

    I think it’s great that men like you carry on Scotland’s oral tradition. Really enjoyed both your stories.

  • @cryptic_daemon_
    @cryptic_daemon_ Před 3 lety +8

    I can listen to this man all day, telling stories about the fantastical!!

  • @HermelJaworski
    @HermelJaworski Před 8 lety +5

    Great video, very informative and with a cool touch of humour.

  • @FunkyGemini1985
    @FunkyGemini1985 Před 5 lety +25

    I live in Canada and I would say I understood about 75% of the first story he told. Some words I didn't recognize and other times his accent was too thick so I didn't catch it. The first story sounds like a captain on a boat is interviewing a man, and something about holy men. He asks the man if he smokes or drinks or...if he likes to have a lot of women. The man says no to all of the above, the captain is happy with that and gives him a job. There is a storm, the man is trying to bail water out of the boat, a big wave crashes over the boat and the skipper thinks the man with the bucket is bad luck even though he seems to be so good. I think there is a joke to this but it went over my head.

    • @padraigmaclochlainn8866
      @padraigmaclochlainn8866 Před 2 lety

      New England here, he sounds no different than some of our older folk, I too say 75% I'd got.

    • @debbevasquez9945
      @debbevasquez9945 Před rokem +3

      From my understanding of the story, the ending… the sailor who drank, smoked and chased women felt the Holy man who has done now of these things, wasn’t so Holy, he had left and stolen their bucket.

    • @ivandinsmore6217
      @ivandinsmore6217 Před rokem

      A Canadian saying someone else has a thick accent.😄😄😄😄😄😄😄

  • @ruairidhirwin250
    @ruairidhirwin250 Před 9 lety +281

    This isn't very broad Doric. He sticks to the accent but the vocabulary could be way more Doric.

    • @Charlie-yp6ub
      @Charlie-yp6ub Před 6 lety +11

      See am fae glesga but ah understood every word ae that

    • @Charlie-yp6ub
      @Charlie-yp6ub Před 6 lety +6

      Just dinnae know how to type and speak if masel

    • @foolofhearts8126
      @foolofhearts8126 Před 5 lety +3

      Ruairidh Irwin aye, yon’d be aa’t braider fae a gye mukkel chiel

    • @Aconitum_napellus
      @Aconitum_napellus Před 5 lety +1

      @@Charlie-yp6ub I struggle to write/type in Yorkshire dialect. I can understand quite a lot of what he's saying though.

    • @mathunt1130
      @mathunt1130 Před 4 lety +5

      Sounds like English with a Scottish accent.

  • @eilidhmac117
    @eilidhmac117 Před 7 lety +13

    This is absolute quality...

  • @lauralott2741
    @lauralott2741 Před 8 měsíci

    I loved your stories! ❤️

  • @MrDavidlfields
    @MrDavidlfields Před 9 lety +41

    Cheers for that. Well done. I think most Americans have little understanding of just how diverse a country Scotland can be. For such a small geographical area, there is a whole world of difference between some areas.

    • @aaron7317
      @aaron7317 Před 5 lety +2

      David Fields I, as an American, agree with you.

    • @elysium1384
      @elysium1384 Před 5 lety +1

      Not only Americans but most of the world

    • @mikhailabunidal9146
      @mikhailabunidal9146 Před 2 lety

      Most of them speak English
      But half of the population in Scotland can actually speak their own language there's a heavy influence
      To some extent, I could understand them

    • @kincaidwolf5184
      @kincaidwolf5184 Před rokem

      ​@@mikhailabunidal9146 Nah, you're mistaken. In Scotland, everyone speaks British English. 800,000 people can speak Scots. Scots is just the sister language of English; because they evolved together, they evolved into each other. Northern English and most British people can fully understand Scots. Which isn't a language. Scots is simply a dialect of British English. Now, Gaelic Scottish is spoken by like 2000 people.

  • @scr1b3notscribble93
    @scr1b3notscribble93 Před 5 lety

    I enjoyed listening to this, thankyou :)

  • @Teaslippers
    @Teaslippers Před 3 lety

    Great stories! I understood every word. 🙂👍 very nostalgic!

  • @thevladraven
    @thevladraven Před 3 lety

    Hello ! Thank You for the Video for I Can Teach My Student !!!!! Many Blessings

  • @thedemongodvlogs7671
    @thedemongodvlogs7671 Před rokem +5

    It reminds me a lot of the Northern Dialects of English (Cumbrian, Geordie/Northumbrian, Yorkie, and Lancy) specifically older versions of the Dialects spoken by people in their 90s+. If you listen to recordings of proper Dialect speakers born in the 1800s, they really share a lot of similarities!! I probably understood about 95% of what he said

  • @SaxandRelax
    @SaxandRelax Před 3 lety +6

    It sounds like when the TV is on but you’re not listening

  • @marcuss9317
    @marcuss9317 Před 5 lety +2

    BELLISSIMA LINGUA !! FANTASTICA !!

  • @geokokinofridis4550
    @geokokinofridis4550 Před 9 lety +6

    I am a Doric Spartan Greek , Spartans were from the Doric tribe , and when they spoke in the Doric dialect other Greeks had a difficult time in ancient times to understand them. We also know that a Scotish Chieftain in 500 BCE. was named Ellinas meaning Greek . Doric Greeks who also were from the same tribe as the Spartans also went to Ireland some call them Doric others call them Dorian, and the English sometime call them sons of Mills . We also have writings of the Doric Greeks who went to Ireland , and Scotland , and also another Greek tribe the Danaus, or Danaan who went to Ireland in 768 BCE. we have detail information how they travel, and from what towns in Greece they came from... Still to this day we Doric Greeks are still proud , and strong like our gallant ancestors. It was the Maniati Spartans south of Sparta who began the revolution , and liberated Greece, and in the Gaelic dialect in Ireland there are many Greek words with a mixture with the Celtic - Celtic - Greek - , words like carotsa meaning wagon is identical in Greek, and Celtic- Greek , words mandua , a woolen long cloak the same, word for how are you kanis atatou in Celtic- Greek , is ti kanis in Greek, word for battle is mahan in Gaelec Celtic- Greek- , and the same in Greek mahan, Limeri a place where the chieftains met in Greek, it is the same in Celtic- Greek in Ireland , and many other words. Please leave a comment , and tell me more of the Doric connection with the Doric Greeks thanks

    • @Saor_Alba
      @Saor_Alba Před rokem +1

      Doric was so named because it was regarded as a commoner's way of speaking, less refined than "proper" English. It was meant to be a derogatory term referring to and regarded as a less sophisticated language than English. It was so named after the Greek Doric architecture and the Greek tribe that bore the name and was regarded, as unsophisticated. I myself speak English, Scottish Gaelic, and Scots Leid, sometimes called Lallans, which is very close to the Doric tongue. Alba gu bràth - Σκωτία για πάντα

  • @lorrainehamilton5051
    @lorrainehamilton5051 Před 2 lety +5

    Love it...took me back years, an old family friend was a Don and spoke Doric, he was gey fond of a wee dram, as the drams went doon, the Doric came oot stronger! Made me remember him and smile! And I did literally LOL at the punchline with the bucket 😂

  • @brucemacallan6831
    @brucemacallan6831 Před 3 měsíci +1

    In NE Buchan (Fraserburgh) we would not call it a bucket. We use the word 'pail'.

  • @MyFatherLooksLikeAPallasCat

    As someone whose first language isn’t English, this is extremely HARD for me to understand. I can imagine written Scotts might be easy for me but this is just impossible to comprehend. :))

    • @mikelmontoya2965
      @mikelmontoya2965 Před 5 lety +23

      Right?? English isn't my mother tongue either and I could not understand a single word.
      I've seen people commenting "well I don't think this qualifies as a different language, it just sounds as English with a thick accent" and I was like "really? To me this is complete gibberish lol guess I'm not as fluent in English as I like to think".
      Glad to see that it's normal for people who aren't native English speakers to find this unintelligible.

    • @LouisianaCreole
      @LouisianaCreole Před 5 lety +7

      @@mikelmontoya2965 Maybe you don't speak English well yet.

    • @mikelmontoya2965
      @mikelmontoya2965 Před 5 lety +22

      @@LouisianaCreole well, I don't speak English flawlessly, I still make lots of small errors quite often (I bet you can spot a few on this comments alone), but I pride myself on having a very good level of English (at least for someone that has never even lived in an English-speaking country), and I do think I'm fluent enough to call myself an English-speaker. I mean... if I wasn't an English-speaker we wouldn't even be able to have this conversation on the first place, right? If I were to move to the UK or the US right now I'm pretty confident language wouldn't be even an issue tbh.
      Also, I spend lots and lots of hours every week watching CZcams videos, TV shows and films in English without subtitles and listening to music in English and I understand it just fine, so my oral comprehension is just as good as if not better than my written expression. This video (or rather Scots in general, I've searched videos of other people speaking in Scots and I had such a hard time understanding them as I did with this one) is the exception. My conclusion is that Scots is indeed a separate language rather than an English dialect and that that's the reason it's total gibberish to me.
      (P.S. Sorry if this comment came out somewhat pedant, I think I made it extra long in order to showcase my knowledge of English as much as possible xD)

    • @iliasbaker3870
      @iliasbaker3870 Před 4 lety +25

      @@LouisianaCreole You're a dick

    • @roryfitzpatric
      @roryfitzpatric Před 4 lety +10

      This is the closest language to English as far as mutual intelligibility goes.

  • @lindseycampbell7487
    @lindseycampbell7487 Před 3 lety

    I always love when I come across someone with my same last name from Scotland or Canada. And until now I thought my family only really spoke English and maybe Gaelic! This is interesting to see that the Campbell clan spoke other languages.

  • @ben_young
    @ben_young Před 9 lety +27

    It depends how you define language to be honest. Czech and Slovak are considered different languages yet they are completely mutually intelligible. Same goes for the Scandinavian languages they can understand each other to certain extents. So Scots is no different, depending on who is arguing it could be a separate language that is mutually intelligible with English, or a dialect of English. It's all politics.

    • @fangornthewise
      @fangornthewise Před 9 lety +3

      The same for Galician and Portuguese. but for scandinavian languages it is not as easy as you said.

    • @brerbunny
      @brerbunny Před 9 lety +2

      I agree that Scots shares a lot of similarities with English and it's hard to label. Ben is absolutely right.
      But to all those who say Scots is a dialect of English, you could just as easily say English is a dialect of Scots or (more politically correct) they are both modern dialects of an ancient language (but what would that language be called?)

    • @brerbunny
      @brerbunny Před 9 lety +1

      yep, in the end it is all down to semantics. What you can definitely say is that they are dialect/languages that share a common ancestor.

    • @romanr.301
      @romanr.301 Před 9 lety +2

      Indeed. In fact, the only reason that Spanish, Italian, Portuguese, French, etc. are considered separate languages is because when kingdoms were being formed, a common language was an excellent way to unify people and organize domestic affairs such as politics, records, religious practices, etc. They were used as nation-building tools. Thus, stress was made that the dialects of Latin were separate languages.

  • @algobo
    @algobo Před 3 lety +5

    He's an amazing story teller! I became a fan. Does he have more stories on the internet? And where can I find them?

  • @onlinemusiclessonsadamphil4677

    Parts of Aberdeenshire, the rhythm of the dialect is very similar to Swedish or Norwegian. We'll use words like 'trachel' 'chore' 'fleg' 'dochter' 'hoos' 'fecht' This man's accent sounds like a Highland one rather than an Aberdeenshire one.

  • @pravoslavn
    @pravoslavn Před 3 lety +1

    LOVE IT ! Thank you for doing this presentation. My ancestors came from Banchory, Deeside, to the Virginia Colony in America, almost 300 years ago, and I have always wondered how they spoke, and if they spoke both Scots Gaelic and English. (No need to inquire as to whether they spoke Pictish...)

    • @johncumming9987
      @johncumming9987 Před 3 lety +1

      Wild you traced your ancestors back so far. I’m from the Banchory area and as far as I’m aware my mums side never left

    • @robmcrob2091
      @robmcrob2091 Před rokem

      Your ancestors wouldn't have spoken Pictish unless you went back 1,000 years.
      They probably would've spoken Gaelic, Scots or both.

  • @brucemacallan6831
    @brucemacallan6831 Před 3 měsíci +1

    I recommend this channel to hear The Buchan tongue (my first tongue, called Doric by many) - Please be aware that almost all the people being interviewed are very often, substituting their indigenous words, for English words as they are on camera. As a native Buchan/Doric speaker, I can assure you that as a fact.

  • @leornendeealdenglisc
    @leornendeealdenglisc Před 7 lety +142

    Not many know this but Scots English comes from the Northumbrian Dialect of Old English. Where did that came from? The Angles from Northern Germany.

    • @historywithhilbert146
      @historywithhilbert146 Před 7 lety +30

      Leornende Eald Englisc Who be this knowledgeable gentleman before me?

    • @Compl33tR4nd0mZ
      @Compl33tR4nd0mZ Před 7 lety +16

      Leornende Eald Englisc
      Scots English isn't what you mean, you mean simple "Scottish" of which there are dialects such as Doric and Lallans, it also descends from old Norse and old Gaelic along with Northumbrian (:

    • @wallacepearse
      @wallacepearse Před 7 lety +7

      Compl33tR4nd0mZ Gaelic was called Scots in English up until the 1500s.

    • @mustyfan1584
      @mustyfan1584 Před 6 lety +7

      Leornende Eald Englisc I’m sure you know this, just clearing this up. But he’s not speaking “Scots English” speaking *Scots*, a distinct language in the Anglo-Frisian language family. As you say, it’s also descended from Northumbrian Anglo Saxon. “Scots English” however is English with a Scottish accent.

    • @indeed7289
      @indeed7289 Před 6 lety +1

      scots sounds nothing like old English

  • @sicgc7658
    @sicgc7658 Před 8 lety +80

    Wi, the Scottish fowk, neit tae brin bawk Lallans an' a' the leid landart. Fir i' naw tae bie bu' oor loue fir oor kintra an' bygane faimilie. Neo-eisimeileachd na h-Alba. Two Scottish languages.

    • @jamesmacgregor3911
      @jamesmacgregor3911 Před 8 lety +16

      I'm fae Aiberdeen and I dinna understand a word you said. Ats like a country dialect. Oot in places like Inverurie and stuff. Toonzers dinna spik like at.

    • @sicgc7658
      @sicgc7658 Před 8 lety +21

      James Macgregor Thats because you don't speak Scots. You speak a Scots English dialect form, which is neither true English nor Scots. Scots is a language that isn't English; and the second sentence was Gaelic.
      Yes, there are three languages in Scotland, Scots, English and Gaelic. Your comment was in Aberdonian Scots English; which is English with Aberdonian Scots nouns, verbs and clauses.
      So unless you speak Scots and/or Gaelic, you'll only understand the last sentence.
      Nue anyi wid'a i'in Lallans, nen yid bie haw'n'i niswie, bit sen ya dinnae confab'n nor ken nis, nen'ye maeste belike dinnae.
      Scots ^
      Now, if you were to have this in Scots, then you could have it like this, but since you don't speak nor understand it, you then probably most likely do not.
      Translation ^

    • @sdrtcacgnrjrc
      @sdrtcacgnrjrc Před 7 lety +1

      +Yoda I am, sounds/reads a lot more exteme than what's in the video (?)

    • @sicgc7658
      @sicgc7658 Před 7 lety +4

      sdrtcacgnrjrc Because he speaks Shetlandic, which isn't Scots. Doric Scots is a dialect of Scots English, which is a mixture between English and Scots. The second last sentence is Gaelic, whilst the first 2 are in pure Scots.

    • @sdrtcacgnrjrc
      @sdrtcacgnrjrc Před 7 lety +1

      +Yoda I am, had Gaeilge at school for 13 years, still cant speak it :-/ but got the difference/s in your post :-) I'm still trying to find a video with someone speaking the more authentic version Scots though (have you any suggestions?)

  • @cameronreekie6519
    @cameronreekie6519 Před 6 lety +7

    My family are from fife. The older generation I still can’t understand to this day, so this guy was really pleasant to listen to in comparison! Sorry family🤣

  • @mattikallio4812
    @mattikallio4812 Před 3 lety

    Wonderfull!

  • @davidalen9279
    @davidalen9279 Před 6 lety

    love it...

  • @liamriddell8856
    @liamriddell8856 Před 3 lety +8

    Im from the Northeast of England (Sunderland) and I understood 95% of that.. so many words I heard him say that we say the same now - Apparently some Scottish people migrated and settled in NE England in the 17-1800s. Maybe it's the left over bits of the language still present in my own dialect today. Interesting.

    • @UkSapyy
      @UkSapyy Před 2 lety +1

      I'm from North Yorkshire and it reminded me of old North Yorkshire lads speaking between mates. It's English but sounds like a different language until you tune in. But considering Scots is derived from Old English spoken by Anglo-Saxons in the North it's likely the North East of England had the same shift in language when Scots started diverging, it's just for you the words are part of your dialect because English is the national language but for the Scottish it is seen as a break away of English and a new language instead of a dialect shift.

    • @everettduncan7543
      @everettduncan7543 Před rokem

      @@UkSapyy scots is derived from middle English speakers of Scotland. Middle English is birthed from Mercian

    • @drrd4127
      @drrd4127 Před rokem

      @Al S It is not derived from old English. it is derived from middle English

    • @robmcrob2091
      @robmcrob2091 Před rokem

      The reason for the similarity is probably that the northern English dialects and Scots all descend from Northumbrian Old English.

  • @TheEdgarMueller
    @TheEdgarMueller Před 5 lety +1

    Nice stories! And surprisingly intelligible. I would have thought I understand far less.

  • @phoenix-xu9xj
    @phoenix-xu9xj Před 3 lety +1

    So many similarities to my native Northumbrian . I though they gave it to us but it’s the other way around / aroond

  • @maddog5284
    @maddog5284 Před 4 lety +3

    I used too live in the east by Huntly in Aberdeenshire and my Grandfather whould always speak Doric too us altho he was sad that Doric was dying and that the youth didnt speak it

    • @skyethain1221
      @skyethain1221 Před 2 lety +1

      Know this is ages ago now but i live in huntly and my grandparents speak Doric. It’s pretty much completely dead among young people tbh, went to school in huntly and pretty much never heard it. It’s a shame.

  • @christocr
    @christocr Před 6 lety

    Cool. Very cool...

  • @petermacleod2402
    @petermacleod2402 Před 3 lety

    Your just an east coast scots man. Much respect x

  • @mori6154
    @mori6154 Před 7 lety +21

    It sounds a little bit like low german/low saxon (Plattdeutsch).

    • @mori6154
      @mori6154 Před 6 lety +1

      yes, Plattdüütsch is closer to Hochdeutsch

    • @mori6154
      @mori6154 Před 6 lety +1

      yes, and a closer relationship with frisian (west frisian in the netherlands, or north and east frisian in germany)

  • @pope3529
    @pope3529 Před 5 lety +1

    I have ancestors from North Eastern Scotland and the border lands. Its comforting to learn about and hear my mother tongue.

  • @laurad1487
    @laurad1487 Před rokem

    I hear echoes of an old Scandinavian influence in the cadence and some of the words

  • @maddie9602
    @maddie9602 Před 2 lety +3

    It's really interesting listening to Scots and being able to sort of get the gist, while only understanding maybe one in three words. I wonder if it's similar to how Portugese sounds to a Spanish speaker?

    • @GoldenGod69
      @GoldenGod69 Před rokem

      Nah probably more like Cantonese and Mandarin, different dialects but same base language.

    • @kincaidwolf5184
      @kincaidwolf5184 Před rokem

      It is not the same, lol. Scots is the sister language derived from old English. Old English which was primarily brought to Scotland by the Northern English. As a Northern English person, I understand the whole thing. It is simply a dialect, not a language.

    • @drrd4127
      @drrd4127 Před rokem

      @Kincaid Wolf Em no that is completely wrong! It was not brought to Scotland by the northern English!
      England did not Exist at the early inception of Scots!
      The Anglo-saxons Kingdoms didn't just occur in England but extended to Scotland!
      Well the Anglo/ic Kingdom of Northumbria territory extended into southern Scotland and when the Kingdom of alba was formed as then the Kingdom of England there was a hard border between the two parts of Northumbria so northern England developed different from Scots (at that time was actually called, Inglis).
      My point was Scots was always in Scotland and NEVER brought to Scotland so it's a true indigenous tongue.

  • @gameon2000
    @gameon2000 Před 2 lety

    Enbro. A nice town.

  • @BallisticSheriff
    @BallisticSheriff Před 2 lety

    Worked in Aberdeen for nearly 5 years and met an auld wifey from Ellon that spoke Doric like that and I couldn't understand her at all. The lad I was working with from Torry thought it was hilarious.

  • @martialkintu2035
    @martialkintu2035 Před 6 lety +16

    I swear, I understand this better than Jamaican.

    • @sonikku956
      @sonikku956 Před 6 lety +9

      Martial Kintu That's because Jamaican patois isn't English, it's a creole language.

    • @siriusblack2812
      @siriusblack2812 Před 5 lety +2

      sonikku956 it‘s broken english

    • @sonikku956
      @sonikku956 Před 5 lety +9

      @@siriusblack2812 No it's not. Pidgin English is broken english, creole languages are more developed.

    • @mikelmontoya2965
      @mikelmontoya2965 Před 5 lety

      As a person whose mother tongue isn't English and that have never lived in an English-speaking country, I couldn't understand this, like at all. Not a single word.

    • @ajoajoajoaj
      @ajoajoajoaj Před 5 lety +1

      Synchronically speaking Jamaican is to English what Catalan is to Spanish, while braid Scots is to English what Portuguese is to Spanish.

  • @barryleslie7727
    @barryleslie7727 Před 3 lety

    I didn't think I understood the Doric very well but I could follow this no problem. I think because it was spoken slightly slower it was easy to ken whit ye were on aboot.

  • @treyygooner3
    @treyygooner3 Před 4 lety +1

    Did he say yins in the beginning like someone from Pittsburgh?

  • @Blueridge4000
    @Blueridge4000 Před rokem +9

    Scots & English are actually twins. Closer than even Frisian, Norwegian & Dutch.

  • @uuw_
    @uuw_ Před 2 lety +1

    Really weird, as a guy from Northern Ireland i can understand it very well, exactly the way my granda would speak or really anyone accept on a lower scale

  • @asheiou
    @asheiou Před 2 lety

    His manner of speech reminds me of Colm from Derry Girls

  • @b_ergo
    @b_ergo Před rokem

    I understood every single part of this and I'm from the south west

  • @thelonegroover
    @thelonegroover Před 5 lety +4

    I grew up in the Buchan area of North-east Scotland and although David is close, I can tell he's not from the north-east.
    Here's the fishing Doric from the late Peter Buchan of Peterhead.:
    czcams.com/video/wFWjGEvLw3I/video.html
    The same channel has equally as good interviews from the farming community whose dialect is subtly different . Here is Willie Low from the farming village of Strichen:
    czcams.com/video/pgPqJmAL2Vg/video.html

    • @DavidFraser007
      @DavidFraser007 Před rokem

      I agree he's just some well educated man and is more comfortable speaking pan loafy English. . I'm from East Angus, apparently we speak South Doric. My Grandparents were from the Mearns, they spoke the same language but with a different accent.

  • @mysticpizza02
    @mysticpizza02 Před 7 lety +1

    Fit like min?

  • @PaperParade
    @PaperParade Před 3 lety

    My maternal grandmother’s lineage is from Aberdeen. They immigrated to the US in the late 1880s. I wonder if this was what they spoke, then!

    • @Mejox
      @Mejox Před 2 lety

      Yes, they would but a bit broader

  • @Baltic_Hammer6162
    @Baltic_Hammer6162 Před 7 lety

    In the first half he sounds a little bit like the cadence of old Norwegians in the north central U.S. Some first generation descendants picked up some speech mannerisms from their families.

  • @Dunsapie
    @Dunsapie Před 9 lety +58

    Dutch and Scots have a lot of common words.

    • @gustavovillegas5909
      @gustavovillegas5909 Před 6 lety +4

      @shlibber they both say "kirk" or some variation for "church" is an example I know

    • @olivier5428
      @olivier5428 Před 5 lety +2

      @@gustavovillegas5909 also 'skipper' probably from dutch 'schipper'

    • @hansfranz8795
      @hansfranz8795 Před 5 lety +12

      As do Dutch and standard English. Dutch, English, German and Scandinavian are very closely related.

    • @CocoaHerBeansness
      @CocoaHerBeansness Před 5 lety +6

      @@gustavovillegas5909 its from old Norse. I found it really easy to read maps when i went to Norway since my family are Gaelic speakers

    • @iceomistar4302
      @iceomistar4302 Před 5 lety +13

      Everyone is forgetting the Frisians.

  • @foreverandever5548
    @foreverandever5548 Před 6 lety +1

    Am a Ayrshire Scots speaker and a ken wit he's talking aboot despite a masel dinnae speak Doric ye ken. Fir mast folk ootside the North East we can unnerstaun Doric.

  • @maxaronow712
    @maxaronow712 Před 8 lety +1

    Groundskeeper Willie?

  • @quranreader7616
    @quranreader7616 Před 3 lety

    nice

  • @ScarlettTheViewer
    @ScarlettTheViewer Před 4 lety +3

    Reminds me a little of my older family members in the Appalachian region of the US

  • @johncox2284
    @johncox2284 Před rokem

    My grandfather's accent grew so heavy as he got older it sounded more like Norwegian than. English.

  • @alexschonski3637
    @alexschonski3637 Před rokem

    First part was not hard for me to understand . Video very interesting .

  • @RijuChatterjee
    @RijuChatterjee Před 5 lety +14

    Sounds weirdly like Patois xD

    • @stonefaceBRC
      @stonefaceBRC Před 3 lety

      I've noticed Patois is weirdly similar to a Scottish accent!

  • @hollynonya6991
    @hollynonya6991 Před 2 měsíci

    I have many Campbell's from South East Kentucky in my ancestry

  • @harmoniedingui8476
    @harmoniedingui8476 Před rokem

    Lol😂 the last story 😂😂😂

  • @mooneagle31
    @mooneagle31 Před 5 lety

    I can actually understand this.

  • @Peggyanns
    @Peggyanns Před 6 lety +1

    My great grandmother was from around Saint Nicholas, Aberdeenshire. She would say 'Whist!' to my mother and her brothers. My mother thought her grandmother was telling them to quiet down. Is this correct?

  • @tomasbyrom3954
    @tomasbyrom3954 Před 5 lety +1

    Is this Argus Filch?

  • @creeper50
    @creeper50 Před 2 lety

    holy man stole the bucket!!!))))))

  • @peterchase4210
    @peterchase4210 Před 9 lety +4

    I'm really interested in this, and I'm in no way trying to start an argument or diminish Scots in any way, but if it's considered to be a separate language from (and not just a dialect of) English, why am I able to understand Scots so well? English and Scots appear to be much closer than, say, Mandarin and Cantonese, and they're considered only to be separate dialects. What exactly qualifies Scots as being a separate language?

    • @EngagedMage78
      @EngagedMage78 Před 6 lety +3

      He is not particularly speaking in a very broad form of Scots, He could be using more of the Scots vocabulary. Were he to do that, you would most likely not understand as much as he is speaking. You would still know some of what he spoke, being that English and Scots are mutually intelligible (like Norwegian and Swedish).

    • @jakeross8061
      @jakeross8061 Před 5 lety

      The trouble with Scotland...is that it's full of Scots!

    • @mikelmontoya2965
      @mikelmontoya2965 Před 5 lety +1

      English isn't my mother tongue and I've never lived in an English-speaking country, but I've been studying it since I was three yo and I think I'm very fluent (as you see I can write in English without making many errors lol so yeah, believe me, I speak English very well xD). I couldn't understand any of this though. Like, not at all, not even a single word. I can tell it's phonologically similar to English, but to me it sounds as if all the words were made up or as if he was talking backwards. As much as I tried I just couldn't understand anything, it's complete gibberish to me. So I'd say Scots absolutely qualifies as a separate language from English.

    • @grahamfleming7642
      @grahamfleming7642 Před 4 lety +2

      Gan get som Witter fae da spicket fur da cuddies,div ee ken noo(,go and retrieve water from the out door tap,for the horse's, does one know now )

    • @grahamfleming7642
      @grahamfleming7642 Před 4 lety

      @@jakeross8061 and your wee world is foo o' knobs.

  • @Bellecher
    @Bellecher Před 5 lety

    Kinda sounds like the speech pattern of the Gungans from Star Wars Phantom Menace.

  • @TheJthom9
    @TheJthom9 Před 4 lety

    Did he say 'gan' for 'go'? If so, it is common with North Eastern accents, particularly Northumbrian and Geordie.

  • @danielhalverson406
    @danielhalverson406 Před 9 lety

    Wow

  • @mandisathornton4088
    @mandisathornton4088 Před rokem

    This shows me where a lot of English speaking West Indians (Caribbeans) get their accents from. And I certainly understood about 97% of what he said, so I wonder that Scots is considered another language. Whereas deep Patois, I may not understand even 5%. My family and I have been in the US for idk-how-many-more-than-6 generations on both sides. While I was learning Spanish, I realized I understood more than half of what was said in Portuguese. So I see them sort of like dialects. Yes, there is a very big gap of difference between them and many factors can affect the unintelligibility between the two.

  • @braydons5825
    @braydons5825 Před 6 lety

    Gerald is that you?!?!?!

  • @whatshouldidowithmychannel

    If you want to distinguish this language from Scottish Gaelic, you call it Lowland Scots.

  • @RobinFlysHigh
    @RobinFlysHigh Před 6 lety

    5:20 I saw it coming, but nevertheless, a very sweet story. It was very interesting.......... Cheers!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! Lol. :).

  • @red_light_3937
    @red_light_3937 Před 3 lety

    I’m curious to see other types of English speakers read some of these critical comments/listen to this video. Other than Brits & Americans I mean.

  • @Libruhh
    @Libruhh Před rokem +4

    Incredibly interesting how similar this sounds to modern Anglo-Caribbean accents

    • @inioluwaolufemi4650
      @inioluwaolufemi4650 Před rokem +1

      Read up on the connection of the Irish/Scot and Carribeans(Jamaica)

  • @lauralott2741
    @lauralott2741 Před 8 měsíci

    Isn’t old Englishfor what_Hwaet? Something like that and it almost sounds like fit in Doric or wh..it in scots. Sorry I don’t know what the sound symbols look like. Language is so interesting.

  • @AbhilashNoxBaruahnx1ee7

    'Whale Oil Beef Hooked' Ye ken?

  • @charliechats9910
    @charliechats9910 Před 5 lety

    I min' gyaun back noo ten ear, I wis in Macduff Post Office. Een o the Staff speirt at me gin I cam fae Orkney. "Na, na," says I, "I wis fessin up oot here in Macduff, but left here a lang time ago." Charlie noo in Aiberdeen!

  • @Pendragon88
    @Pendragon88 Před 8 lety +5

    I love listening to doric, im from Aberdeen and wish i could speak it properly (raised in a diffrent place).

    • @Gint3r
      @Gint3r Před 8 lety +3

      I'm moving to Aberdeen from Poland in 1month and I'm terrified of this focking accent...

    • @Pendragon88
      @Pendragon88 Před 8 lety +1

      Its quite easy to pick up, I wouldn't worry too much

    • @Gint3r
      @Gint3r Před 8 lety +1

      Thanks for the kind words honey:) I'm gonna go for a job when I won't be required to speak too much:)

    • @Pendragon88
      @Pendragon88 Před 8 lety

      You're more then welcome.
      If your looking for a job like that then your pretty much left with trawler man. No one can hear over the machinery lol

    • @Gint3r
      @Gint3r Před 8 lety

      well I have a good ear for languages so I'm sure I'm gonna adapt to this evil scotish accent in a few weeks, but the ride gonna start little more rough than I expected when I was thinking about moving to the UK ;p maybe we'll meet some day in Aberdeen ;p

  • @brookew1219
    @brookew1219 Před rokem

    I understand a lot of what he is saying from watching Outlander. lol

  • @ThisOldHat
    @ThisOldHat Před 5 lety

    The cadence is very close to West Indian dialects, i.e. Jamaican.

  • @darksydesamy
    @darksydesamy Před 5 lety +1

    YER DA.

  • @cararobinson6956
    @cararobinson6956 Před 7 lety +5

    When you know Ulster Scots xD

  • @cl2raven266
    @cl2raven266 Před 5 lety

    Es awa wee wir bucket.... I nearly lost a kidney

  • @aadil3569
    @aadil3569 Před 7 lety +12

    What's the difference between Doric and just normal Scots?
    (Even though I'm from Glasgow so I have no right to talk about normal Scots)

    • @James-gc5if
      @James-gc5if Před 7 lety +2

      I'm no expert, but I think it's just a dialect (of Scots) spoken in the north east of Scotland.

    • @Banginyermamsince93
      @Banginyermamsince93 Před 7 lety +1

      Aadil Saleh the difference is if you came to the North East then you'd probably not have a clue what's being said by your average person haha.

    • @aadil3569
      @aadil3569 Před 7 lety

      Banginyermamsince93
      And if you come to Glasgow you'd have no idea what most of us are saying 😅

    • @Banginyermamsince93
      @Banginyermamsince93 Před 7 lety +1

      Aadil Saleh Glaswegian is Extremely easy to understand. Probably because my dad is a weegie but still, he struggles to understand me haha

    • @TheFaceSoap
      @TheFaceSoap Před 5 lety +3

      @@aadil3569 Weegies are gie muckle easier tae unnerstan fir Doric spikirs than the ither wie roon. Fan A first cam doon tae the Lollans, the Lolllan'ers didna kain hef o fit A wis on aboot. Hid tae chinge ma spikin tae fit aroon them.

  • @DF_UniatePapist
    @DF_UniatePapist Před 2 lety

    I can’t tell if I understand it or not 😂