Minding Our Language - Ulster-Scots (Part 1)

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  • Опубликовано: 23 авг 2024

Комментарии • 327

  • @rileyhinds8616
    @rileyhinds8616 5 лет назад +34

    Here in America, many people who have Scotch-Irish ancestry, have no idea where their ancestors came from, and the struggles they went through. I had no idea. After doing my own family history, I have found out that my own ancestors were Scotch-Irish. Now, I try to share as much information as I can with my family about our Scotch-Irish ancestry. The Scotch-Irish have done so much for individual liberty for ALL. That is really something to be proud of!

    • @christinedorman3383
      @christinedorman3383 5 лет назад +12

      +Riley Hinds I applaud your family and your comment. I cannot help, however, reacting to one thing: your use of the phrase "Scotch-Irish." The correct phrase is "Scots-Irish." As my grandfather, who was from Port Glasgow, Scotland used to say,"People are Scots; scotch is a whiskey." Obviously, you are proud of your Scottish heritage so please call yourself a Scot.

    • @LordDirus007
      @LordDirus007 5 лет назад +4

      Yeah I found out I have 50% Scots-Irish.
      My family has been in the US on average 300 years.
      Ross, Jamieson, Evans etc

    • @elusiverenaulds4006
      @elusiverenaulds4006 4 года назад +2

      Yes and the elite hate them for this, the reason they are negatively stereotyped as hillbilly’s and inbreds in the media so much.

    • @gadpivs
      @gadpivs Год назад +1

      @@christinedorman3383 "The term Scotch-Irish is used primarily in the United States,[10] with people in Great Britain or Ireland who are of a similar ancestry identifying as Ulster Scots people. The term is first known to have been used for Scottish Catholics in Ireland. In a letter of April 14, 1573, in reference to descendants of "gallowglass" mercenaries from Scotland who had settled in Ireland, Elizabeth I of England wrote:
      We are given to understand that a nobleman named Sorley Boy MacDonnell and others, who be of the Scotch-Irish race ...[13]"

    • @baphomet66and6
      @baphomet66and6 Год назад +3

      @@christinedorman3383 he's an American of Scots /Irish ancestry /heritage. And Scotch is Whisky. Not Whiskey.

  • @Dharmanarchist
    @Dharmanarchist 8 лет назад +87

    I spent 3 days in Belfast a couple of years ago and had a great visit. The people were very friendly and I found them to be very interested in talking to me because I'm American. I have to admit that on many, many occasions I had to ask them to slow down because I was having trouble following what they were saying. Growing up in the northern end of Appalachia, I did here some faint echos in terms of cadence and accent.

    • @infobeam1902
      @infobeam1902 7 лет назад +7

      fu merican anchor! na oj glad you had fun.

    • @raleighburner1589
      @raleighburner1589 5 лет назад +2

      Your British not irish

    • @Para_Normal_Guy
      @Para_Normal_Guy 3 года назад +4

      @@raleighburner1589 you're

    • @CinCee-
      @CinCee- Год назад

      @@raleighburner1589 🇮🇪🇮🇪🇮🇪

    • @johndoe-ss9bz
      @johndoe-ss9bz Год назад

      @@raleighburner1589 ::The Irish that came to Scotland 300 years ago do not call themselves "Irish-Scots". The Irish that went to England 500 years ago do not call themselves Irish/English. It's time to drop the Scotch/Irish after one generation, and accept the country of your birth as your homeland. or Go Back to Scotland.

  • @Cartamandua
    @Cartamandua 3 года назад +33

    I'm from Northumberland and I can remember how the older people spoke when I was a bairn. Definately loads of 'Scottish words' but with a different accent.

    • @tommothedog
      @tommothedog 3 года назад +3

      Bairn is very close to the scandinavian which may be the source of many root words for scotts and irish as well.
      While england saw its own distinct invasions from scandinavia and the north germanic ('fresian'?) Coast from where much of the germanic of englishness comes from. Meanwhile the north of the british isles saw its own distinct invasion from germanic speaking tribes from scandinavia from which they get a distinct british language.

    • @yvonnefarrell1029
      @yvonnefarrell1029 Год назад +1

      Barn being the Swedish word for child! Lovely.

    • @DarrenRFC
      @DarrenRFC Год назад +3

      Susan we are the same blood only modern borders seperate us. We are one blood with the people of northurmbeland and much of northern england.

    • @Cartamandua
      @Cartamandua Год назад

      @@DarrenRFC That is very true.

    • @brother1ray
      @brother1ray Год назад +1

      It's your language too..............Geordies talk about "hame", "toon" and "who ye ken".
      Same roots...........and then there's the glorious "Snows that melt the soonest" folk song, well kent and loved by us aw' 😉

  • @breasthound
    @breasthound 5 лет назад +64

    Was trying to learn Spanish, now I'm here for some reason.

  • @mezzuna
    @mezzuna 7 лет назад +122

    As an Irish Republican, I found this very interesting and informative. Would like to see more pride being taken across Ultster in all her mother tongues

    • @emersonsfamily9724
      @emersonsfamily9724 6 лет назад +9

      mezzuna pity all of ulster isn’t british not just 6 county’s

    • @emersonsfamily9724
      @emersonsfamily9724 6 лет назад +2

      Kekistani nationalist yeoo 🇬🇧🇬🇧🇬🇧

    • @emersonsfamily9724
      @emersonsfamily9724 6 лет назад +2

      Árón isreal And Northern Ireland 🇬🇧

    • @AAA-fh5kd
      @AAA-fh5kd 6 лет назад +13

      wits wrang wi speaking Ullans, Scots, Gaelic and English all?.... why not?

    • @daithio.7378
      @daithio.7378 5 лет назад +5

      mezzuna If your an Irish republican I'm your fucking dad they shouldn't be here it's as simple as that Tiocfaidh ár lá ,

  • @dukadarodear2176
    @dukadarodear2176 7 лет назад +34

    The new Irish passport (page 28) has a short quotation from a poem by the Ulster Scots poet James Orr;
    "The hedge-hauntin blackbird,
    on ae fit whyles restin
    wad fain heat the tither in
    storm-ruffled wing"
    I don't understand every word but the verse as a whole has great poetic energy for me.
    I recently downloaded a translation of hundreds of Scots to English words. I have heard man of these Scots/Irish words used all over Ireland but mostly in Ulster of course.

    • @buzzer1961
      @buzzer1961 5 лет назад +4

      The hedge-hauntin blackbird, on one foot whilst resting, would occasionally heat the other one in storm-ruffled wing, is how I, born in Galashiels in the Scottish Borders, would translate that to English ;)

    • @cigh7445
      @cigh7445 5 лет назад +5

      Man, I'm from Limerick with no knowledge of Scots and I can translate that for you.
      The hedge hauntin' blackbird
      On one foot while resting
      Would often heat the other
      In storm ruffled wing

    • @jondonnelly4831
      @jondonnelly4831 5 лет назад

      I can understand the words, but no idea what the poem is about. Any ideas?

    • @buzzer1961
      @buzzer1961 5 лет назад +1

      @@jondonnelly4831 Basically, the author is saying that when it was very windy, the Blackbird would first stand on one leg for a while, then the other, whilst heating the other leg, against it's body

    • @kieransavage3835
      @kieransavage3835 3 года назад +1

      Clabber to the knee was an expression to depict someone who appeared to have walked through a mucky patch of ground.

  • @danekeeper1
    @danekeeper1 8 лет назад +16

    Greetings from California...I enjoy your presentation and find it most interesting, I must admit that some of the ...no.....most of the inferences and humor examine my thinning top knot. Still this man on the street history is fun, entertaining and presented very well. thanks for making it...

  • @dacypher22
    @dacypher22 8 лет назад +41

    Holy crap! My dad used to say some of the things that were said at 1:21. I thought he had just made them up, even if he swore his family said them. Now I know where they came from!

    • @bobdole5350
      @bobdole5350 4 года назад +4

      There's a lot of Ulster Scots in the US!
      Mainly east coast / deep south regions.

    • @dacypher22
      @dacypher22 4 года назад +2

      @@bobdole5350 Very interesting. His family was from the deep south. He said they blended a lot of these sayings into an otherwise deep southern accent.

    • @bobdole5350
      @bobdole5350 4 года назад +3

      @@dacypher22 Yeah a lot of Dixie colonials had Irish / Irish Scots heritage themselves.
      It's quite strange, but where I come from, some people identify as British, and some Irish, and we both have folk music that is shared by us, and the Southern States (same tunes but with different lyrics!

    • @brucecollins4729
      @brucecollins4729 3 года назад +1

      @@bobdole5350 your forgettin the earlier scots who have been in the carolinas etc since the 1500s. many words and phrases in the south would have come from the scots just as the scots took them to ulster. a lot of your fiddle tunes are scottish in origins. i.e miss mcleods reel / high hop ladies in amerikay. the de,l amang the taylors/ the devils dream in amerikay. henry lee/soldiers joy/ cumberland gap/ and many more have their roots in scotland. many irish songs are actually scottish as are 100s of irish fiddle tunes. boxandfiddlearchive.weebly.com/scottish-fiddle-playing-and-its-irish-connections although it should read the other way. the fiddles been in scotland since the 16th century. the irishman that wrote this was 75 when he wrote this in 1995. the ruirdi person he mentions was actually scottish. you will also see where he writes one irish fiddler had a collection of 400 scottish fiddle tunes. so, you will here irish fiddlers play these tunes under a different title. so many irish fiddle tunes you hear are most likely scottish.

    • @bobdole5350
      @bobdole5350 3 года назад +1

      @@brucecollins4729 very true! I am an Ulster-Scot myself (Scotch-Irish if your American), so I fortunately have the best of both worlds, Scottish and Irish.. although I would be very partial to the banjo and some woodwind too.
      I find it very interesting how America has developed a true mix of culture in places, it's a pity the rest can't follow suit!

  • @fullthrottleinthemojave1138
    @fullthrottleinthemojave1138 4 года назад +6

    A Yiddish writer once stated that a language is a dialect with an army and a flotilla.

  • @michaelwilson4621
    @michaelwilson4621 5 лет назад +10

    In my early 50s. Just discovering the language - "Scots", that my grandmother spoke to me as a small boy in Canada. My grandmother was from Edinborough. My "uncle' Bill, whom I visited with my father every saturday morning until his death in 1977, was revealed to me as an adult to be my grandfather. Liam "Bill" Shaw was born near Slemish, in 1899. I always remember my being mesmerized listening to him speak with his funny talk, that sounded sort of like English, but definitely something else as well.. His "funny" talk I now realize was Ulster-Scots.
    So excited about this revelation now in my life. so saddened that this is not something I received earlier to pass on to my children.

    • @scotsexile1
      @scotsexile1 5 лет назад

      Edinburgh not Edinborough please. Burgh is Scots. Borough is English.

    • @ivandinsmore6217
      @ivandinsmore6217 4 года назад +2

      Where in England is Edinborough?

    • @georgejob2156
      @georgejob2156 2 года назад +1

      Edinburgh no Edinborough

    • @georgejob2156
      @georgejob2156 2 года назад

      Dunedin in New Zealand, Gaelic name

    • @NorthSon
      @NorthSon Год назад

      It’s never been called Edinborough. Your Grandmother wouldn’t be happy with you calling it that 😂
      Edinburgh please. It’s a phenomenal city that’s contributed massively to the world, it deserves respect.

  • @knockshinnoch1950
    @knockshinnoch1950 Год назад +3

    For over 300 years Scots language, customs, history and traditions have been systematically suppressed by the ruling English elite. This has been mostly successful in grinding down Scots many of whom know little of their history as it was almost entirely absent from the School curriculum as was the Scots language which was actively discouraged and its use often led to punishment by teachers if spoken in class. It resulted in Scots subconsciously seeing themselves as "less than" and 2nd class citizens in their own land. The idea of "talking slang" or ""talking polite/talking posh" rages to this day with many a Scots mother knocking the edges off their own local dialect rather than embrace it. The rich and the aristocracy sent their weans to English public schools or exclusive Scots versions and returned with a brand new "bools in their mooth" RP English with just a hint of Scots remaining such as "wee dram". As a result of this and the drive by the middle classes to "get on" Scots became the language of the poorer classes and the poorly educated working classes It remained strong in the most rural areas. This concerted effort was successful in subjugating the Scots for the majority of the past 300 years. Scots With the exception of a few Burns texts it had no artistic or cultural merit and certainly no place in the official life of Scots institutions, education or the law. It became a spoken language and not a written one. It is only within the past 30 years that a serious state sponsored effort to restore Scots and Gaelic to their rightful place has been funded and supported . There are still many who resist and look down upon those who promote and speak the language.Luckily there is a rich arts scene which has seen an explosion of works written and performed in Scots- all helping to restore Scots. Personally I cannot wait until we have an Independent Scotland in Europe and we can rebrand Police Scotland as THE POLIS.

  • @wingmanhoy3999
    @wingmanhoy3999 5 месяцев назад +1

    O hEachaidh Hoy, Haughey, Hoey, Tuatha De Danann, Red Branch, The Darini, Red God, and Galloway, Dal Fiatach Dynasty, 1st high kings of Ulster, and Hoy Island Haey Old Norse, East Iceland, I have alot of proud heritage and culture from here, looking forward to visiting at some point, very much enjoyed, thank you, all the very best, truly amazing thinking of where we come from and today able to trace my ancestry, truly amazing to me.

  • @geordieswhyfronts7654
    @geordieswhyfronts7654 3 года назад +5

    As a geordie am for the ulster scot, hard earned and never be lost!

  • @ulsterman7555
    @ulsterman7555 6 месяцев назад

    Gwan ya buck eejit ye. A great wee programme well done Tim, ya boy ye.

  • @bickybox
    @bickybox 8 лет назад +32

    Good to see the sinn fein man supports it. The Danes,Swedes and Norwegians all speak a similar language.

    • @sarban1653
      @sarban1653 7 лет назад +5

      The English and Lowland Scots too.

    • @daithio.7378
      @daithio.7378 5 лет назад

      Sarban that's who their talking about 😁.

    • @irishsteve209
      @irishsteve209 5 лет назад +2

      Yes true, Scots use many Norse words and Northern English too.

    • @adhamhmacconchobhair7565
      @adhamhmacconchobhair7565 3 года назад

      Of course they support it! My family supports sinn féin, I dont really support anyone. But we support it because we know what it's like to have your language taking away from you. Language shouldn be cultural not political.
      I really hope the language is kept alive. Theres a similar situation in wexford and fingal with the yola & fingalian languages

  • @johndaugherty4127
    @johndaugherty4127 4 года назад +9

    This Kentucky boy understands! I was always told we were Irish, but never knew the "rest of the story" until the last few years. From Donnegal and my family sailed to North Carolina in the 1700's.

    • @o-o2399
      @o-o2399 3 года назад +3

      your surname is literally the most Irish and the most common catholic name in Donegal.

    • @o-o2399
      @o-o2399 3 года назад

      @Noah Pritchett maybe but that's a Irish surname not Scottish or English unless his family converted before moving to the US.

    • @pengy4792
      @pengy4792 3 года назад +1

      So you are American.

  • @irishsteve209
    @irishsteve209 5 лет назад +9

    Glens of Antrim, big majority catholic, strong highland Scot bloodlines and you can hear it in the talk they use everyday.

  • @jsmcguireIII
    @jsmcguireIII 4 года назад +15

    Languages are always weaponized. Its up to us to take them back and use them to unite us on higher levels. Conquering armies always first outlaw the native languages.

    • @tiggergolah
      @tiggergolah 4 года назад +2

      That's second. First, they confiscate all your guns. Unless you didn't have any to begin with, which would explain how they.....oh....never mind. ;)

    • @paddymeboy
      @paddymeboy 3 года назад

      I don't see the application of that here: nobody has ever outlawed Scots. They don't need to, as it is just English spoken in Scotland. The Scots abandoned and suppressed their own actual native tongue, Gaelic.

    • @paddymeboy
      @paddymeboy 3 года назад +1

      @@tiggergolah Again, what's the application of that here? Scotland was never actually conquered anyway so these comments are irrelevant. On the other hand they did conquer and colonise parts of Ireland.

    • @Finderskeepers.
      @Finderskeepers. 3 года назад

      @@paddymeboy Gaelic was banned, in Scotland and Ireland in 1616. Scotland was conquered and an act of union forced on both countries subjugating both countries to the English monarch

    • @cherri2469
      @cherri2469 2 года назад

      @@paddymeboy No, Scotlands native tongue is Scots, a Brythonic/Germanic language. geals aren’t native to the British Isles. They were raiders from Spain, on one occasion led by Mil Espaine with his followers the Milesians. They invaded and colonised parts of Ivernia (Ireland) and Scotland with more raids happening between the 6th and 12th centuries.

  • @l.jboylan6704
    @l.jboylan6704 4 года назад +23

    Scots is a language
    Ulster-Scots is a dialect of Scots

    • @user-ue5be1qc1x
      @user-ue5be1qc1x 3 года назад +1

      No it isn’t it’s a language

    • @Jimmy_Cooper
      @Jimmy_Cooper 3 года назад +1

      I’m Scottish , I speak what’s regarded as Scots and it isn’t a language , it’s a dialect of English

  • @swissnor
    @swissnor 8 лет назад +13

    Well they use to say the something about Afrikaans, that Afrikaans was not a language but a dialect of Dutch. And there still some dummies who say Afrikaans is only a dialect of Dutch to this day.

    • @robwyyi
      @robwyyi 7 лет назад

      swissnor I've seen kind of dialogue but with Portuguese. Between Brazilian Portuguese and Portuguese of Iberia with folks from Canary Island also.
      Most time linguist simply state Brazil Portuguese grew from Portuguese of Europe. Meaning Brazilian Portuguese is junior to Portuguese of europe. Being junior would mean it being not a separate language. So how ever you like Afrikaans is Dutch.

    • @robmcrob2091
      @robmcrob2091 5 лет назад

      Yes and Afrikaans is more similar to Dutch than Scots is to English, for sure. I speak Dutch and Afrikaans is easy to understand, especially written.

  • @tblairhug1
    @tblairhug1 4 года назад +2

    heading to Tyrone this June-- so helpful!!!

  • @honeybear200
    @honeybear200 3 года назад +22

    God bless scotland,ulster,and Appalachia!!!

  • @hamilax156
    @hamilax156 4 года назад +4

    Born in England, to an Irish English mother, and a Ulster Scot from Donegal, then adopted by Scots.

  • @NOTJustANomad
    @NOTJustANomad 6 лет назад +9

    A lot of Skellige islanders here :D

  • @Patrick_B687-3
    @Patrick_B687-3 7 лет назад +7

    There is so much history of GB, no one can ever learn it all. Fascinating stuff and I know I've got some Scotch blood running through me. Being the heratic that I am, I have a great preference for Irish whiskey. Damn Peat smoked malt!

    • @Patrick_B687-3
      @Patrick_B687-3 7 лет назад

      Well, which one? Ive tried the White Labeled one, and not crazy about it. Hopefully, they make a better one. Thanks for the reply mate! 👍🏻

    • @scottymacg28
      @scottymacg28 6 лет назад +4

      You can't have scotch blood mate! You'd die of alcohol poisoning, you can have Scottish blood maybe!!!!!!

    • @JM-gu3tx
      @JM-gu3tx 6 лет назад

      Scots also make that. Scotland is world famous for its whiskey. Scots also invented the modern world and there is a book about it.

  • @Hellbillyhok
    @Hellbillyhok 3 месяца назад +1

    I'm a Fifer and a country boy, I recognise a lot of ulster Scots sayings and words, it sounds mare like a country fied lingo like we use, the toonys speak different tae us 3 mile doon the road 😂

  • @tomgreene6579
    @tomgreene6579 5 лет назад +2

    Did Ulster Scots arrive around the time of the lowland clearances.....any info out there?

    • @buzzer1961
      @buzzer1961 5 лет назад +1

      Ulster Scots arrived before that, when James I and IV took the English throne, then decided to clear out his troublesome subjects in the Scottish Borders, utilising the former Reiver chiefs, Scott of Buccleuch, and Kerr of Cessford, probably with other lesser Lairds, to round up their former minions, and have them transported to Ulster. Many former Reivers were also conscripted into armies fighting in the Lowland Countries in Europe, and were noted as the finest light horsemen in the armies.

  • @baphomet66and6
    @baphomet66and6 Год назад

    An interesting vid & perspective. Language, dialects et al are so interesting, part of our locational/cultural identity & such.. The dialects we use are ever evolving. As a native Doric speaker born, brought up & living in Aberdeenshire, you have to accept that my dialect of Scots, is not same one that was used a century ago., caused by influxes of people, influences from elsewhere. But we still use loan words from other parts of Scotland. As I said..... interesting. Use it or lose it is another pertinent phrase.

  • @ricksanchez525
    @ricksanchez525 6 лет назад +7

    "people seem to like it" best accent.

  • @rogerdavies8586
    @rogerdavies8586 3 года назад +2

    As I said on another site there is no scientific way to distinguish a language from a dialect. A language is a dialect with an army, a navy and an air force. My ex-husband grew up speaking Serbo-Croat in Yugoslavia. Now he calls it Croatian because Croatia is its own country.
    Gavin Douglas translated classical literature into the Scots of Scotland in about 1500. William Dunbar wrote Chaucerian poetry in Scots in the same time. The Spanish ambassador Pedro de Ayala at that time wrote that it was as much like English as Aragonese was like Castilian. Castilian is now called Spanish and Aragonese is an endangered language.
    What on earth made anyone think Scots was only a dialect? It was the union with England of course!
    A long and painful experience has shown men that when people disparage how other people speak, it is based on ignorance. I don't see why Ulster Scots should not be seen as its own language. Afrikaans is seen as a language although Winston Churchill was still calling it Dutch in 'My Early Life'. Cornish and Breton are descended from Old Welsh but are seen as different languages.
    Marianne borrowing Roger's computer.

    • @kieransavage3835
      @kieransavage3835 Год назад

      He’s as lazy as shough water,referring to very slow flowing water.

  • @glennrivington6763
    @glennrivington6763 3 года назад +4

    The Ulster Scot and Scottish ways of speaking remind me of how country people of North and South Carolina speak.

    • @doclittlejohn3261
      @doclittlejohn3261 Год назад +3

      I’m from South Carolina and when I went to Scotland 🏴󠁧󠁢󠁳󠁣󠁴󠁿 I could understand everything, while my English friends struggled lol 😂

  • @Grey_M0user
    @Grey_M0user 4 года назад

    Please tell me what music played in the beginning & in the ending of this video? I can't sleep by two days to seeking it!

  • @tiggergolah
    @tiggergolah 4 года назад +9

    "The part of me that hates paying for things.." Oh my gosh, now I know where I get that! My family has always taught me that its better to learn a skill and do it yourself "so you don't have to pay someone else to do what you can do for yourself!"

  • @bigfoxgamingbroplays8802
    @bigfoxgamingbroplays8802 3 года назад +1

    ‘Tis another dialect of the Scots leid

  • @Atomic568
    @Atomic568 5 лет назад +6

    Ballymena people speak ulster Scott’s naturally.

  • @MossyKong
    @MossyKong 3 года назад +2

    It is a dialect.

  • @patriciajrs46
    @patriciajrs46 Год назад

    As an American, I love the sound of you folk's language. I just can't understand most of what you say in English, and no part of what you actually say in your own language.

  • @tommothedog
    @tommothedog 3 года назад +1

    Nationalists are nationalists scot, irish or german. It is an exclusionary, ethno-centric position based upon idealism.

  • @bloodaxe5028
    @bloodaxe5028 8 лет назад +14

    Scots developed from a dialect of Old English or the Anglo-Saxon tongue .

    • @GreatKhanMatt
      @GreatKhanMatt 7 лет назад +10

      not thats scottish gaelic not scots

    • @alanvt1
      @alanvt1 7 лет назад

      What language would that be then?

    • @AAA-fh5kd
      @AAA-fh5kd 6 лет назад

      but it also has French, Gaelic etc in it as well

    • @palepilgrim1174
      @palepilgrim1174 4 года назад

      @Azzury Street True but the Celts were far from the original inhabitants of the islands. Celtic languages only came into the British Isles around 500 BC at the earliest, and guess what they were brought through invasion and conquest JUST like Germanic languages were slightly later.

    • @palepilgrim1174
      @palepilgrim1174 4 года назад +1

      @@AAA-fh5kd It has barely any Gaelic. Like 100 loanwords or something. That might sound like a lot to you, but it's really not, there's very very little Gaelic influence on Scots. It's overwhelmingly Germanic with a substantial Latin influence (from both Latin directly and via French), albeit ironically fairly less Latinized, thus more traditionally Germanic, than standard English is.

  • @jameshudson169
    @jameshudson169 2 года назад

    14:52 what's this i heard about the chevy chase? nobody ever says nothing about it. i only hear hints.

  • @tomgreene1843
    @tomgreene1843 4 месяца назад

    How does one count in ulster Scots ??

  • @LDcorx
    @LDcorx 6 лет назад +7

    If you go up Inverness you'll hear "Scottish" people talking and they sound northern Irish, I always thought that the mix of Irish immigrants made up most of the glasgwegian accent but looks like it's always been there and there not actually immigrants in the first place, the Scottish Irish thing is actually so confusing tbh, who even was the picts and who even are the Scottish 😂

    • @gazlink1
      @gazlink1 5 лет назад +2

      The Picts were a P-Celtic speaking group, so like Welsh or Cymbric (spoken in much of northern England), or the Britons of Ystrad Clud (modern day Strathclyde), the Old North. Just one of the groups that went into modern Scottish, but got taken over culturally by Q-Celtic language i.e. Gaelic from Ireland.. then Northumbrian/Scots etc.

    • @lewistaylor2858
      @lewistaylor2858 4 года назад +2

      the Highland accent does not sound Irish...

  • @gval900
    @gval900 6 лет назад +1

    Did he distinguish Scotts from Gaelic? These go way back right? Is it discernible? The Angles imposed just as the Normans right?

  • @alanthomas2064
    @alanthomas2064 5 лет назад +5

    SEEMS TO HAVE FORGOT THE STRATHCLUD BRITONS! also lallanders /Angles never wore kilts or played bagpipes! indeed in 1746 after Culloden, there were celebrations in Edinburgh! Highlanders were never liked in the Lowlands!

    • @palepilgrim1174
      @palepilgrim1174 4 года назад +2

      They also considered themselves English/Saxons/Teutonic/Germanic and so on too... but don't let real history get in the way of national revisionism and Celtwashing, lmao. The Gaelic term for the Lowlands is also 'the Place of the Foreigner', and they referred to Lowlanders as 'goill' (foreigners/strangers/aliens), the same term they used for the Norse and Anglo-Saxons (which the Lowlanders were/are).
      These were totally distinct ethnic groups, in the same way the Walloons and Flemish of Belgium are very distinct ethnic groups sharing a Belgian political identity.

  • @nicholahenry539
    @nicholahenry539 2 месяца назад

    Well I’m off both heritage and my mum and dad where from Derry/Londonderry

  • @johnkelly879
    @johnkelly879 5 лет назад +5

    I have no issue with the Irish language or the Ulster Scotts and we need to understand the difference

    • @stuartlawsonbeattie6200
      @stuartlawsonbeattie6200 4 года назад

      Scott is a name.

    • @palepilgrim1174
      @palepilgrim1174 4 года назад

      We also need to understand the difference between Celtic and Germanic. If you speak Celtic languages you are a Celtic person, if you speak Germanic languages you are a Germanic person. You are not Celtic nor is your language or culture just because it is a Germanic language dialect which exists in a region traditionally considered Celtic.

    • @YTistooannoying
      @YTistooannoying 4 года назад

      @@palepilgrim1174 that don't make a lick of sense. I do not speak German yet I am of Germanic heritage (Dutch mostly) but my maternal family is English and something called, Scots Irish, which is a term here for Ulster Scot immigrants who migrated to the US. I speak American English yet I am Germanic, Scot, English. So, sorry you language and your heritage are not the same thing.

    • @palepilgrim1174
      @palepilgrim1174 4 года назад

      @@YTistooannoying German and Germanic mean 2 entirely different things, stop confusing them. Germans are just one of many modern Germanic ethnic groups. The English, Dutch and Scandinavians are also Germanic peoples. All Germans are Germanic but not all Germanic peoples are German, to put it simply.
      No Celtic and Germanic are ethnolinguistic terms so in this case they absolutely are the same thing and language is a crucial identifier of what your ethnolinguistic category is.
      Your heritage means nothing, it tells you what a small percentage of your ancestors were, it doesn't tell you what you are today, which is just English (American subgroup).

    • @palepilgrim1174
      @palepilgrim1174 4 года назад

      @@James-nw1oj Languages change and die out and merge and diverge all the time. You can't prevent the inevitable. Language will go down the natural route it goes down.

  • @amonster8mymother
    @amonster8mymother 8 лет назад +10

    Ach yed better tech teh wee'ens.

  • @rondarawson6236
    @rondarawson6236 4 года назад

    I love how they speak😁😁😁😁😁❤❤❤

  • @jashall3804
    @jashall3804 Год назад

    What about mad jack Hall?.

  • @tammycaraway8476
    @tammycaraway8476 6 лет назад +3

    My DNA is 99.6% western European. My mothers family immigrated to America from County cork Ireland. My fathers family immigrated from Scotland. I discovered recently that they were born in sterling castle.

    • @brysonmacdougal7898
      @brysonmacdougal7898 6 лет назад

      Tammy Caraway - your DNA should be mostly Northern European if you're Scots/Irish. I've had mine checked by three separate DNA tests and am part of the Scotland's People study. Your DNA should show some Norwegian or Danish as well and a conciderable number of Scots show a small % of North African DNA (Moroccan/Berber/Amazigh). Google the "Celtic-Berber connection". 6% of my DNA is North African.

    • @brysonmacdougal7898
      @brysonmacdougal7898 6 лет назад +1

      James O'Keeffe - Ancestry.com has the latest technology that allows both mitochondrial and Y - DNA to be tested (both maternal & paternal sides from everyone). Older technology could only check paternal DNA from males and maternal DNA from females.

    • @jameswilson3991
      @jameswilson3991 5 лет назад

      tammy you are a wee scots lassie be proud of your scots heritage linda wilson x been to stirling castle many times

  • @electricrussell
    @electricrussell 4 года назад

    I'm a native English speaker, but I would love to learn Ulster-Scots because of my heritage. But coming across courses to learn is proving difficult. Are there courses I can take in Ulster-Scots? Duolingo or Rosetta Stone don't seem to have any.

    • @kieranwalker3953
      @kieranwalker3953 4 года назад

      electricrussell you might have more luck if you broaden your learning to Scots more generally, unfortunately I don’t think the resources are there like they are for Irish (which are plenty and have been helpful to me in a similar pursuit), I hope someone can correct that though all languages are treasures

  • @YangSing1
    @YangSing1 7 лет назад +4

    why was french in scotland

    • @richardrich1384
      @richardrich1384 6 лет назад +2

      YangSing1 Normans.

    • @AAA-fh5kd
      @AAA-fh5kd 6 лет назад +1

      catholic rebellions duh..

    • @fromtheashes2555
      @fromtheashes2555 3 года назад +1

      Because they were friends and allied! Unlike the English who were invaders!

  • @DavidHoodEdinburgh
    @DavidHoodEdinburgh 3 года назад

    Love this - braw!

  • @genann_1441
    @genann_1441 7 лет назад +2

    I like how the Scottish people don't tear down their old homes and replace them with bland tin cans, which they are doing where I live now.

  • @patriciajrs46
    @patriciajrs46 Год назад

    That Robert the Bruce monument looks like it says 1306- 1726 (or something). He could not have ruled over 400 years! Nobody lives that long.

  • @andyt6191
    @andyt6191 4 года назад

    It isn't "Ruth"well cross! The name Ruth pronounced Rooth! In Ruthwell its pronunciation think of rush as in bullrush ?? More Ru than Roo?

  • @Guardabosque
    @Guardabosque 5 лет назад +4

    Kin ah cawl Southeron a languige if ah speyl I phonetically

    • @cigh7445
      @cigh7445 5 лет назад

      Ah dinnae ken mon. Ah supoose ya can. Dis lieks liek wrengly spelt Inglis, och it's relly Scots mon. An am maekin t up as ah goo. Ken?

  • @jamesmurdoch9805
    @jamesmurdoch9805 5 лет назад

    Braw stuff Tim.

  • @deanwhale367
    @deanwhale367 2 года назад +1

    Irish were scots. Thats their original name. The old area.

  • @skullman322
    @skullman322 4 года назад +1

    Salmond the beast.

  • @douglasfell4199
    @douglasfell4199 3 года назад +2

    Old Scots is Brythonic and is older than the saxon invasion. You can also say it desends from the same route as Welsh and Cumbric. Old Scots takes this older language and incorporates English, norse, French etc.

  • @alanvt1
    @alanvt1 7 лет назад +1

    Yet again no mention of the Strathclub BRITONS!...AH! deBruys! Normans a pestilence on us all!

  • @ericsalles3393
    @ericsalles3393 8 лет назад +6

    it comes from germanic .mak ken nacht loch lang gang ...robert the bruce spoke norman french wallace comes from walesa which is germanic for welsh they were welsh mercenaries .

    • @TheXitone
      @TheXitone 8 лет назад +2

      +eric salles fuckin bollox where do get that??

    • @St99785
      @St99785 6 лет назад

      bollocks, i say

    • @AAA-fh5kd
      @AAA-fh5kd 6 лет назад +2

      its a fusion. there are gaelic words in it too

    • @thomasmccauley414
      @thomasmccauley414 5 лет назад +2

      Wallace is a surname from the original inhabitants of Strath-clyde Britons. They spoke a Brythonic Celtic language related to cymric or in English-Welsh. There are still many Strath-clyde British surnames in southern Scotland. For example: Wallace, Campbell, Abernathy, Abercrombie, Carmichael etc. Strath-clyde briton got taken over by Gaels from Ulster in around 400 A. D. whose leader was Nial of the 9 hostages. One of Nails hostages was Patrick who later Christianized the wild Gaels. Under Nial ,Strath-clyde became a Gaelic speaking area, but the place-names retained the original p-celtic influence.

    • @AAA-fh5kd
      @AAA-fh5kd 5 лет назад +1

      @@thomasmccauley414 cheers for that sum up! ...as it turns out I'm a Wallace who went over to Ulster,,,,, as well as gael-celt, Pict-celt, brythonic celt, Gall-gael...and oan ;)

  • @Craicfox161
    @Craicfox161 2 года назад

    2:43 no way it’s the lady from BBC news

  • @letozabalmaty
    @letozabalmaty 4 года назад +6

    LOL that is actually English suppose to sound!!! truly germanic core and pronunciation

    • @celticbastardson2599
      @celticbastardson2599 3 года назад

      I grew up in a German neighborhood - It ain't German or Germanic pronunciation: It's the Anglo language with a Celtic accent.

    • @letozabalmaty
      @letozabalmaty 3 года назад

      @@celticbastardson2599 lol dude, the first of all your neighborhood speaks modern High German language which undergone with a huge phonetical changes, and comparing to other germanic tongues German is too different and it can not be a standard of pronouncing or something. The second thing is - people how speak scots are descended from Anglian tribes which moved deep in north of Britain island, they spoke Northumbrian old English dialect and unlike modern English which based on Mercian dialects, Scots have not been affected by the Great Vowel shift that caused the change of phonetics so heavily as English did. Just google at least lol

  • @defariadefaria2328
    @defariadefaria2328 4 года назад +1

    Eireland is a gaelic land and theyr language is the eire gaelic language, not the viking's language.
    The same is the English Language. It isn't eire language.

  • @iamjustsaying4787
    @iamjustsaying4787 Год назад

    Yeah. For better or worse the research shows that conformity is a key component of unity.

  • @19grand
    @19grand 5 лет назад +7

    Ulster Scoots, ey. Highly politicised. Tooing and froing between Ireland and Scotland for thousands of years. Yet soo much division, sectarianism and violence. Second thoughts, this documentary has given me a headache. Irish Gaelic, Picts, Scots Gaelic, Scots, English, Anglos, French, Saxons...

  • @deplorabled1695
    @deplorabled1695 4 года назад +3

    SNP wants to be independent of UK; where it has a devolved Parliament, is a noisy neighbour with great influence and enormous sympathy and fraternity.... and yet now wants to remain in a European Union where it will be a minnow, amongst a conglomerate of nations most of whom have nowt in common with them. Literally trading in a slightly banged up old motor for a shiny expensive wheelbarrow with a dodgy wheel being pushed by a dozen infighting blind folk.

  • @marierobertson8267
    @marierobertson8267 6 лет назад +4

    Its gaaaelic not gaelic! Love th irish, im a quarter irish xx love ireland xxx

    • @AAA-fh5kd
      @AAA-fh5kd 6 лет назад +6

      Gah lic .its scottish. Gay lick is irish.

    • @grahamandrewsharpe1941
      @grahamandrewsharpe1941 Год назад

      @@AAA-fh5kd the Irish language is known as Gaeilge in Irish.

    • @AAA-fh5kd
      @AAA-fh5kd Год назад

      @@grahamandrewsharpe1941 It was known as GAELIC by "irish" (gaeilge) speaking Irish people through the 20th century.
      "IRISH" is not the "gaelic"< Gaeilge/Gahlig language. It's not true to say that GAELS call ALL Gaelic any thing other than GAELIC< in their respective branches.
      "IRISH" is a political construction. the langauge is GAELIC in English Gaeilge in "Gaeilge"

    • @AAA-fh5kd
      @AAA-fh5kd Год назад

      @@grahamandrewsharpe1941 Wha the f ye think yer taak'n tae? Awa tae F! havers. F off!

  • @tomgreene2282
    @tomgreene2282 2 года назад

    Can someone count for me in Ulster Scots?

  • @michaelhicks6699
    @michaelhicks6699 4 года назад

    needs close captioning and translating inta anglish

  • @JmO-ee1bi
    @JmO-ee1bi 2 года назад

    As an American, Ulster-Scots and Scots sounds like someone trying to be funny and witty and to mock the Gaelic (particularly Scottish Gaelic) language in English with semi-gibberish lol.

  • @SP-my5gb
    @SP-my5gb 4 года назад

    Interesting.
    Guess I’m Scots-Irish or some such.

  • @martinderry6728
    @martinderry6728 5 лет назад

    .. is it MAMMARY GLAND or is it MEMORY GLAND ?? ...

  • @molecatcher3383
    @molecatcher3383 4 года назад

    The Ruthwell Cross was made by Angles, not Saxons.

    • @markirving249
      @markirving249 2 года назад

      Also it is in the Brythonic (Cumbric, a bit like old Welsh) speaking Kingdom of Strathclyde. Not Part of Scotland till 1018AD.

  • @billiecrouse8002
    @billiecrouse8002 7 лет назад

    oh, excuse me, gallic..

  • @billiecrouse8002
    @billiecrouse8002 7 лет назад +3

    you must learn welsh.

  • @ericsalles3393
    @ericsalles3393 5 лет назад +1

    🤔

  • @jthomas4361
    @jthomas4361 Год назад

    Found out I have ulster Scot heritage and I’m black

  • @aperson5078
    @aperson5078 Год назад

    Kentucky here.
    Child me: Daddy, what are we?
    Dad: Scotch-Irish. Didn't hesitate.
    We are not that different from each other.
    My direct ancestors helped settle the state. The families stayed together. Clan habits are alive and well. 🙂

  • @dazpatreg
    @dazpatreg 5 лет назад

    Ara shtop hay sure that's puure shtones. I spake a bit of hiberno connaughtian mesel

  • @gailgray2438
    @gailgray2438 2 года назад

    Carruthers

  • @westbrit4714
    @westbrit4714 7 лет назад +4

    Tim McGarry is a professional comedian who plays a Sinn Fein character in a sit com , I have no idea about his own political views but I imagine real SF types would be hostile to the Ulster Language as they are to the people

    • @wallacepearse
      @wallacepearse 7 лет назад

      Many of their heroes before the 20th century are Scots Irish like Henry Joy McCracken and John Mitchel though.

    • @westbrit4714
      @westbrit4714 7 лет назад

      wallacepearse Do you think that your average SF voter realises that the United Irishmen were on the whole Prod's and other than Tone mostly Dissenters ( and Ulster-Scots) not even Anglicans?

    • @rivkahsari
      @rivkahsari 7 лет назад +1

      Hi, Can you please spell this out a bit for those who are a bit thick/far away? What are the implications? I know about the United Irishmen as I have an ancestor (Presbyterian) who was one. Thank you.

  • @del5582
    @del5582 7 лет назад +2

    1:22 As an American, I can only make out a word here or there. I can barely tell it's English.

    • @MultiLittlebopeep
      @MultiLittlebopeep 7 лет назад +4

      That's because it's not English.

    • @AAA-fh5kd
      @AAA-fh5kd 6 лет назад +1

      as an american I have no trouble with any of it

  • @johnminehan1148
    @johnminehan1148 6 лет назад +4

    Wow, a native German speaking English with a noticeable Scots accent . . . .

  • @Red-Bird-October
    @Red-Bird-October Год назад

    0:35 😂

  • @AnnesleyPlaceDub70
    @AnnesleyPlaceDub70 Год назад

    Hogwash. it's just another dialect of the Gaelic Language.

  • @deanwhale367
    @deanwhale367 2 года назад

    Scots actually from the irish word over Ireland. Scotland is picttish the picts people.

  • @amonster8mymother
    @amonster8mymother 8 лет назад +1

    Ach gear off!!!

    • @alanthomas2064
      @alanthomas2064 5 лет назад

      Owen the bald! king ofStrathclud! capital Dumbarton! Briton! p/ Celtic as was William Wallace!

  • @richardhendrix7620
    @richardhendrix7620 4 года назад +1

    Why do I get angry where The Bruce is esteemed? He abandoned Wallace and killed Comyn all so he could usurp the Scotts throne for his own. Imagine what a United Scotland would look like today if we had a victory at Falkirk or if Comyn Wallace and Bruce had joined their armies.

    • @deplorabled1695
      @deplorabled1695 4 года назад

      It's an interesting question! I had to google your comment here to even get a vague idea of what you were talking about. However, I think it's moot. Scotland joined England and Wales in great part because there was a very real desire to stop the border conflicts which had afflicted that part of Britain for hundreds of years. A not often spoke part of the long history between the two nations is that Scottish brigands were involved in an ongoing and unrelenting campaign of harassment that lasted decades against settlements within English Crown land.

    • @neilanderson841
      @neilanderson841 3 года назад +3

      @@deplorabled1695 Wrang??!!!. The border troubles involved reivers from both countries, and had absolutely nothing to do with union of crowns.

  • @amonster8mymother
    @amonster8mymother 4 года назад

    👍😎🇨🇦

  • @Bcfcuklhpwalker
    @Bcfcuklhpwalker 2 года назад

    They didn't take that land from Rome but from Welsh brothonic peoples gododdin this could be bs program saxons an the rest there Different force to Rome also wtf

  • @miseisean2847
    @miseisean2847 7 лет назад +3

    2:29 Wayyyyyyyy you "Ulster Scots" can't even recognise your own "language". Haha

    • @AAA-fh5kd
      @AAA-fh5kd 6 лет назад +3

      because they didnt let them teach it in schools...

  • @tommcguire6773
    @tommcguire6773 4 года назад +1

    Couldn't understand a damn word.

  • @martinderry6728
    @martinderry6728 5 лет назад +3

    ... it´s NORTHERN IRELAND N O T ULSTER, it´s DERRY N O T Londonderry ...

    • @Anna-ug8cq
      @Anna-ug8cq 4 года назад +3

      martin derry I agree that it’s Derry but you do realise that Ulster is just one of the 4 kingdoms of Ireland? Like Munster?

    • @ayylmaotv
      @ayylmaotv 4 года назад +4

      it can be referred to as northern ireland/ulster and derry/londonderry, nobody gives a shit about the fact that your whole personality is based around your religion

    • @kieranwalker3953
      @kieranwalker3953 4 года назад

      Ayy Lmao actually northern ireland and ulster are not interchangeable, Ulster includes regions in both the UK and the Republic of Ireland while Northern Ireland is just the region of Ulster that is part of the UK... But I won’t step into the Derry v. Londonderry debate there are no winners there lol

    • @adhamhmacconchobhair7565
      @adhamhmacconchobhair7565 3 года назад

      @@ayylmaotv Ulster is an ancient irish province which consists of northern ireland and 3 roi counties

    • @adhamhmacconchobhair7565
      @adhamhmacconchobhair7565 3 года назад +1

      I think we should understand eachothers different perspectives.

  • @wlicksilly
    @wlicksilly 2 года назад

    😆😆

  • @christopherphillipskeates9194
    @christopherphillipskeates9194 3 года назад

    I am christopher phillip skeates the son of man revelation 12 and I wear the coat of blood and bubbygoddess is my imaginary daughter the one upon the throne and I am white prodestant anglo saxon male with maori in my blood from new zealand where my father maxwell skeates was born with a russian name skeatez.. and my mother patricia skeates originaly o'farrel and her father was born a catholic from the center of ireland and she is the new wonder of heaven in revelation 12 who gave birth to me on the 19th of december /1953 ...at bendigo victoria australia and I have lived in canberra the new jerusalum in revelation ... of the king james bible ... my wife is the one in white in revelation whom I die so she lives ...skeatesybubbygoddess 2021 ...

  • @Ulstermanone
    @Ulstermanone 7 лет назад +8

    Ulster Gaelic was spoken from 1200BC to moderen day ---------When you understand Ulster created Scotland as part of the Dalirada Kingdom then you are half way there -----When England invaded that is were you get the two coming together but in no way are we Irish Gaelic

    • @Ulstermanone
      @Ulstermanone 7 лет назад +2

      Not to bright are we -There was no such place as Ireland before Ulster of did you think they came first --what an idiot

    • @MrBG998
      @MrBG998 7 лет назад +5

      Ulstermanone your comments made me stupider. Ireland is an island. It's been around for god knows how long. Ulster was Gaelic and Gaelic speaking until the plantation

    • @Ulstermanone
      @Ulstermanone 7 лет назад +2

      Really ?-----------With your thinking the irish came before Ulster ---Just think how fucking stupid that sounds !!!----Not even a logical idea

    • @Ulstermanone
      @Ulstermanone 7 лет назад +2

      Really ?--------------So American came before Kentucky ? Really you fucking Republicans are that Stupid and dont even know the Hibernians came from Iberia or let me make it easier Spain -----Black Irish alright more like thick !

    • @Ulstermanone
      @Ulstermanone 7 лет назад +2

      Really as an Invader of Ulster -leave and take your language with ya -----Ullish all the way

  • @Chanamasalex117
    @Chanamasalex117 7 лет назад

    Heheheheh. Were fuckin cheap. 😇 The scotch-irish share yer Ulster-Scot cheapness. 👍🏻

    • @ryacus
      @ryacus 7 лет назад

      I see that's where it comes from haha.