Sayings
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maddymoss
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- Location: Northern Isles
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mistral
- Posts: 38
- Joined: Wed Jun 07, 2006 4:58 pm
- Location: Fife, Scotland
When the children asked what they were getting for Christmas or birthday presents, my mother-in-law would say "a bonny new nothing wi' a whistle on the end of it"
If anyone was being silly they would be referred to as a "daft skate"
And a tardy shop assistant might be referred to as "that slow the deid lice were drappin' aff her"
Could be back with some more, have got my husband thinking about it............hmm, may be some time!
If anyone was being silly they would be referred to as a "daft skate"
And a tardy shop assistant might be referred to as "that slow the deid lice were drappin' aff her"
Could be back with some more, have got my husband thinking about it............hmm, may be some time!
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mistral
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- Location: Fife, Scotland
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nancy
- Posts: 257
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- Location: paisley renfrewshire
My Mother would say,"we'll aw end up in the pairshoose"(poorhouse)when I kept asking for more money for sweets.When I ate an awful lot she would jokingly say,"I'd rather keep you for a week than a fortnight"
When someone got off his seat and someone else quickly sat down on it,you would say"that's how the rents are so dear" or sometimes say,"would you take ma grave as quick"
Ah used to listen to an old lady talkin to my mum and saying
"Whits for ye wull no go by ye" How true.
What will be will be!!
When someone got off his seat and someone else quickly sat down on it,you would say"that's how the rents are so dear" or sometimes say,"would you take ma grave as quick"
Ah used to listen to an old lady talkin to my mum and saying
"Whits for ye wull no go by ye" How true.
What will be will be!!
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SarahND
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I'll bow to all of your superior knowledge of Scots, but having no native knowledge to go on, I looked in my Concise Scots Dictionary and came up with:Jean Jeanie wrote:So what is your "wheesht?" How do you "hud it" Then when you've "hud it"how do you get in into the pail?
wheesht see WHISHT
So... moving onto the next page I find:
whisht interj be quiet! shut up!
1 vi utter the interj wheesht!, call for silence
2 vt silence, cause to be quiet, quieten
3 vi be quiet, remain silent
n, also ~ie chf in negative the slightest sound, the least whisper; the faintest rumour or report
adj quiet, silent, hushed
haud or keep one's ~ be quiet, keep silent, hold one's tongue
************
As far as the pail goes
Regards,
Sarah, who'd be better off haudin her wheesht
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nancy
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rye470
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Nancy,
I said that to my six year old son last week, and he did the same thing.
I find that I still use a lot of the phrases my mum and dad used. Stewart found "hold your tongue" funny, because he's usually told to haud his wheesht. He knows that one well.
My street cred went up somewhat in the playground recently. After most of the kids had been to see the movie 'Open Season'. One of the characters (Billy Connolly's), tells another that he'll kick his "big brown bahookey". Stewart had me saying it over and over to his friends because "I could say it right". I got some strange looks when he told them that I was born in the same place.
Christine.
I said that to my six year old son last week, and he did the same thing.
I find that I still use a lot of the phrases my mum and dad used. Stewart found "hold your tongue" funny, because he's usually told to haud his wheesht. He knows that one well.
My street cred went up somewhat in the playground recently. After most of the kids had been to see the movie 'Open Season'. One of the characters (Billy Connolly's), tells another that he'll kick his "big brown bahookey". Stewart had me saying it over and over to his friends because "I could say it right". I got some strange looks when he told them that I was born in the same place.
Christine.
Fyfe,Binnie,Stewart,McEwan -Fife, Perthshire, Clackmannanshire.
McFarlane,Reid - Dunbartonshire.
Alexander,Dawson,Hamill,Kennedy,McCulloch - Donegal,Down, Armagh to Renfrewshire,Lanarkshire.
McFarlane,Reid - Dunbartonshire.
Alexander,Dawson,Hamill,Kennedy,McCulloch - Donegal,Down, Armagh to Renfrewshire,Lanarkshire.
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Miss Poohs
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- Location: Clydebank, in Bonnie Scotland
Ohh I love these - I use quite a few of them.
I've never heard the "scittery coo" one before - 'love it.
My dad often says "aye yer no' as green as yer cabage lookin'" which I think means you're not as daft as you look.
I love "yer hair looks like a coo's sooked it" which is Scottish for having a bad hair day
One of my personal favs is "wuz the dug near ye when it bit ye?" in other words you're tad nuts.

I've never heard the "scittery coo" one before - 'love it.
My dad often says "aye yer no' as green as yer cabage lookin'" which I think means you're not as daft as you look.
I love "yer hair looks like a coo's sooked it" which is Scottish for having a bad hair day
One of my personal favs is "wuz the dug near ye when it bit ye?" in other words you're tad nuts.
Beveridge, Bonnar, Burns,Candlin, Colquhoun, Dewar,Graham,Hislop,Jackson & Robertson.
Martin & Nelson - all Liverpool
Allison, Beaton, MacLean, McLuskie & Todd.
Grant, McEwan, McLean & Syme.
Martin & Nelson - all Liverpool
Allison, Beaton, MacLean, McLuskie & Todd.
Grant, McEwan, McLean & Syme.
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StewL
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Another one I remember my mother using often to us when we played dumb was "Kid on yer daft and somebody will gie ye a hurl"
your no as green as yer cabbage looking was another I heard often
your no as green as yer cabbage looking was another I heard often
Stewie
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Searching for: Anderson, Balks, Barton, Courtney, Davidson, Downie, Dunlop, Edward, Flucker, Galloway, Graham, Guthrie, Higgins, Laurie, Mathieson, McLean, McLuckie, Miln, Nielson, Payne, Phillips, Porterfield, Stewart, Watson
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Bervonian
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