I was born in Dundee and moved to Canada when I was 6. My Mum and Dad always spoke Dundonian. I love it and understood everything you said. It never leaves you
As a Dundonian, I actually think this is the best video on the subject of our dialect. It's an affae guid video an'yer right aboot us talkin fest. Eh dae it ah the time and naebody ivir kens what em sayin, so em eywas needin tae talk affae slow and clearly but when em talkin tae meh femily, eh just talk normaly. Also, another wiy tae say 'pass me the ba' would be 'pass is the ba' as the word 'is' can sometimes be used in place of 'me' when it comes to certain things.
My grandma was from Dundee and growing up I remember her talking like this even though I didn't understand her most of the time. I haven't heard her talk in YEARS so hearing your voice actually was comforting :) I wish she was still around.
I was a nice, middle-class English public schoolboy who had never been north of Worcester who got a place at Dundee University. Imagine how that went. Well, rather well, as it happens. I made a lot of friends, many from the toon and I am surprised that I understand what you are saying (though not all the dialect words). For me you are not talking Dundonian, you are talking Scoo'ish. Before I left Dundee for ever, I spent almost year working as a barman in The Galleon, now a wine bar or something and as half-German who grew up in Germany, many words made senes - echtie-echt (88) clüte (cloth). All the best. Might go back sometime before die.
I was born in Dundee but grew up in St Andrews, I've worked in a shop in Dundee for nearly 5 years now and I do still struggle with the words at times 🤣 I also get the "you're not from here are you" on a daily bases 😅
I'm from Edinburgh and spent a lot of my life in Dundee and i understand both accents and really there is'nt a lot of difference. There is only a dozen or so words that are different. I love Dundee.
I've lived away from Dundee for years and I just put on your video to listen to the accent in the background cos it makes me feel dead peaceful! I never hear it now
Lived in Dundee on Union street for nearly seven years and I effing love that city. I learned to understand Dundonian over the years I was there and I do miss Dundee, now, I want some stovies.
I was born in Dundee, was adopted and had to grow up in Glasgow, when I got in contact with my birth family I remember being very confused during convos cause I never understood them and they where the same with me 🤣4 years later I’ve picked up the dialect and can understand them no bother
the Cundeez (Dundee-Celtic-Oi!-Punk-Band) brought me here, nice Video , I really like the sound of scottish / nordic influenced languages, I`ll try to figure out why it`sounds so familiar to me (I`m German), ... guess it`s time to visit scotland very soon :)
Dundee avoided the great vowel shift that which changed the vowel sounds in most other dialects. There’s a theory that the Dundee accent is so quick and clipped because of the noise of the jute factories.
I grew up in in Dundee in the 1980s. Born 1981 in nine wells. I swear the Dundee accent used to be waaaaay stronger than it is nowadays. There’s a story of us leaving a French campsite - a big squad of us on a busman’s holiday. Anyways we left the campsite and a French woman said ‘au revoir’ and a wee lassie from Dundee waved back and said ‘ey, we’re awa’
Can't wait to move to Dundee as a non native speaker, I don't think the 5 years of me living in England will be enough, even tho I do pick up accent and dialects quite well, this is on another level 😂
Your video is brilliant!. Loved it so much, I just had to subscribe. I'm from down south, London. But I've lived here in Dundee for 8 years now. 8 years ago I would have thought, whaaat??! I can't understand a word he's saying, let alone the accent, lol, but now, it's so easy to understand. ❤️
I remember my Greek pal on the bus with me while 2 Dundonians were speaking to each other years back and his exact words were, 'what language is that?'
This kind of dundonian spoken today like most Scots is a sort of hybrid between Scots and modern English, the only true Scots dialect still spoken is Doric and to an extent possibly the insular variants on Shetland and Orkney
I lived in Dundee for about a year and a half. As an Austrian native I had quite a hard time with the dialect in the beginning. Buying a ticket on the bus could be quite challenging! Nevertheless, you get used to it quickly at least when it comes to understand it. Talking Dundonian is a completely different game, never managed it execpt for some words like univershity 🙂 Thanks for the wonderful video, it brings back lovely memories from way back in time! Love it!
I have a friend from Scotland that told me about Still Game show. Not only is it hilarious but I love the accent and the local lingo they use! I am on my third time watching the series in a year! 😂😊
In the vid description you said its like a second language, thats because it is! The Scots language, sharing many words with English its mutually intelligible in the same way Swedish/Danish is.
This brought a smile to my face. All my family are from Dundee and speaks exactly like this. I am Australian born. Weirdly you look like you could be my brother 🤣
Enjoyed the video I’m English from Essex but now live in Australia I’m heading to Dundee in January next year with my daughter My family going back to my 3 x Great Grandparents are from Dundee so going to see some family history 👍
As a north Irishman that supports Dundee United i love these lol Sometimes when im over i struggle to understand really really fast Dundonians, but usually only if they are pished lol Oh, and we say brew for the dole over here too and 'pure mental' for everything lol
ROOND = RUNED = SECRET = everything on the other side of a circle or sphere is always a MYSTERY until you get there... (square root of -1) ROONS = RUNES = used to PRE-MONITOR or PREMONITIONS of what secret mysteries lay AROON the corner (of the circle, sphere) of time... knowing the secret of what is going to happen, ahead of time, by using ROONS = RUNES, one may RUIN the plans of others... (having to do with gravity)
I'm from Kyiv, Ukraine. Yesterday I've met a young man, about 30, and I occasionally confused him with a local person whom I spoke by telephone few minutes ago. So, that guy started to speak to me. And at first I thought he is a Dutch or Swedish 😄😄😄 then he spoke English 😄😄 and then he said he is from Scotland. I hardly understood him. He said he is from town near Dundee) thanks you man for this video, it's interesting. That guy's accent is really dundonian)
I see that when be in Dundee or another places in Scotland, it'll be a pain in the ass to understand what people say hahaha I'll be constantly repeating this phrase: "Could you repeat what you've said, please?" Greetings from south of Brazil mate! I love Scotland.
Thank you for this of course. Although it may seem odd to compare accents/dialects with series on tv, I would guess most people in Dundee would not speak like they do on EastEnders say than they would in Taggart of old? Not that it matters of course really at all for sure!
No lie’ I’m born and raise in America atleast 3 generations and then it gets “foggy” with records… but I always struggled with English in public schools in the late 1990’s-…basically now🤷♂️ But I’ve noticed I had a stutter when I said certain words that my cheeks and throat were being told “that is wrong” And 20 years later I’ve noticed when I am fully relaxed the Maager blood from a father I’ve never know but is the only connection to this way of speaking: really opened my mind and I appreciate you posting this video for me to find it 🏴🏴🏴🇺🇸🏴🏴🏴🙈
My grandparents were born and raised in Dundee, after they immigrated to America, my mum was born and raised in New Jersey, USA. I vaguely remember meeting my granddad when he travelled to California where my parents and I lived. Being quite young I was facinated by him, but my mom said I didnt understand what he said. To this day I am proud of my Scottish heritage, even visiting Dundee in 1975 when I was 17 yrs old. Thank you for this video, I really enjoyed it and have subscribed. Oh, and I'm ADHD
a lot of the Scottish dialects have their roots in Flemish and old English. Scots is a Germanic language in its own right. Doric in the North-east is really similar to this. We would say Da for don't, simmit is vest, sark is a shirt and trousers are breeches.
Was on the phone with a Scottish fella a few years ago. Was pretty sure he was either from Glasgow or Edinburgh, but my ability to tell the difference has waned over the years. I knew though for sure he wasn’t from Dundee! Turned out, he was born in Glasgow, but went to Uni in St. Andrews, hence the kinda weird mishmash of Scots dialect he had. Plus living in the US for several years. I loved my time in Dundee and Fife. My bedroom window in Fife looked out over the Firth of Tay.
I was in Kirkton when "Dinghys" was first discovered! It started with people claiming they had a rubber ear and could not hear the request for a loan of a tenner or such. " ehh rubber ear"canna hear you. Then" ehh rubber dinghys" would be the reply..then just dinghys was adopted for canny hear you your talking pish. Ha ha
Not infectious to me. More of an irritant. Certain terms in the dialect may be intended to be amusing, but no dialect is inherently amusing as such. I may be wrong, but I take this speaker's laughter at the Dundee accent to be a sign of embarrassment about his own tongue. What a shame. One can relish one's own dialect without deriding it.
Really enjoyed this. I grew up in Aberdeen so I was comparing the phrases throughout the video and it's like 50/50 with similarities and differences! Would be interesting to compare Doric to Dundonian. I think since we're geographically a wee bit closer it does make sense!! My dad was born in Dufftown so he's a proper teuchter! My partner found it pretty interesting trying to understand him!!
I from Dundee lived here all my life . This language is natural to me but see trying to listen to you speak it I cannae understand it. Imagine having to learn it haha
your versions of words sound like norwegian. In stead of saying move in English, you would say flytt, flytte in Norwegian. Ein(own) is egen in Norwegian. Great video! Thank you
As a Norwegian this was quite easy, but also coming from a country with hundreds if not thousands of dialects, this sounded more like slang when one cuts out the endings or certain letters/sounds. We do that to here if certain dialects. For the most part we can understand each other without ease, but if not people are just lazy or prejudice and don’t want to understand. Going to Scotland for the 1st time next month, and zero expectations except it will feel like home as Scotland, as well as Ireland, is quite similar in nature, mentality and culture, but also history as the Norse invaded, plundered, raped, killed and colonized My bf is Icelandic and he’s part Irish/Scottish as all Icelanders are. I love Scottish Gaelic, and the Scottish English accent. I grew up with Monarch of The Glen back in the 2000’s, so that’s the only reference I have besides Hollywood shows which probably aren’t accurate nor authentic anyway.
I live in between Stirling & Edinburgh and ur dialect is mostly the same as mine apart from the 'ie' sound becoming 'eh' but i have 2 dundonian mates so i can purely understand it, and you're not joking about you speaking fast, whits the hurry man haha, and "take & make" becomes "tack & mack" we associate that wi Fife, but here we say roondaboot anaw, Great video tho bud, i always love these "Meh mooth is as dreh as a camels sandal!!!" pmsl
I was born dundee to dundee ma and pa,moved to Kent when young.dont have problem with lingo. Good chat up line is, seez a squeeze o yer paps hen . Try that one and see what happens. Viva dundee ya bas .
I heard that some TV programmes would have been set in Dundee but the actors found the accent too hard to copy! - up too our knees in candle grease and pockets full of cheese.
Would "tall," "tile," and "towel" all sound similar in Dundonian accent? Your pronunciation of "tall" sounded exactly like how it is said in Pittsburgh (US), and in Pittsburgh, tall, tile, and towel are homonyms.
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Remember to check out my music and mixing channel 🤓🤓
I was born in Dundee and moved to Canada when I was 6. My Mum and Dad always spoke Dundonian. I love it and understood everything you said. It never leaves you
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As a Dundonian, I actually think this is the best video on the subject of our dialect.
It's an affae guid video an'yer right aboot us talkin fest. Eh dae it ah the time and naebody ivir kens what em sayin, so em eywas needin tae talk affae slow and clearly but when em talkin tae meh femily, eh just talk normaly.
Also, another wiy tae say 'pass me the ba' would be 'pass is the ba' as the word 'is' can sometimes be used in place of 'me' when it comes to certain things.
This video was just scratching the surface mate haha 😅
Are ye hacky or blackie gan doon and get me twa pes en ingin en plen sen thim tae me in Canada
My grandma was from Dundee and growing up I remember her talking like this even though I didn't understand her most of the time. I haven't heard her talk in YEARS so hearing your voice actually was comforting :) I wish she was still around.
Thir wiz a boabee in the loabbee in the Stobbee playing wee his tobee!👍🤣
tobee hahahaha forgot about that one
FYI - Brew or buroo comes from the old name of the Jobcentre... the Bureau Of Unemployment.
I love that you’re as entertained by your dialect as I am watching this. Heading to Dundee tomorrow, working on the language ahead of time.
Good luck 😂
Mind and ask for twa
pes en ingin en plen
I was a nice, middle-class English public schoolboy who had never been north of Worcester who got a place at Dundee University. Imagine how that went. Well, rather well, as it happens. I made a lot of friends, many from the toon and I am surprised that I understand what you are saying (though not all the dialect words). For me you are not talking Dundonian, you are talking Scoo'ish. Before I left Dundee for ever, I spent almost year working as a barman in The Galleon, now a wine bar or something and as half-German who grew up in Germany, many words made senes - echtie-echt (88) clüte (cloth). All the best. Might go back sometime before die.
I was born in Dundee but grew up in St Andrews, I've worked in a shop in Dundee for nearly 5 years now and I do still struggle with the words at times 🤣 I also get the "you're not from here are you" on a daily bases 😅
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My son,s family is in Dundee, we are srilankans, your video is very important, can' t we speak with you please
The word ‘fook’ is just a warning that a noun is on the way
I'm from Edinburgh and spent a lot of my life in Dundee and i understand both accents and really there is'nt a lot of difference. There is only a dozen or so words that are different. I love Dundee.
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Enjoyed hearing Dundonian, understood every bit of it even after 33 yrs in Amsterdam.
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I've lived away from Dundee for years and I just put on your video to listen to the accent in the background cos it makes me feel dead peaceful! I never hear it now
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Lived in Dundee on Union street for nearly seven years and I effing love that city. I learned to understand Dundonian over the years I was there and
I do miss Dundee, now, I want some stovies.
I was born in Dundee, was adopted and had to grow up in Glasgow, when I got in contact with my birth family I remember being very confused during convos cause I never understood them and they where the same with me 🤣4 years later I’ve picked up the dialect and can understand them no bother
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the Cundeez (Dundee-Celtic-Oi!-Punk-Band) brought me here, nice Video , I really like the sound of scottish / nordic influenced languages, I`ll try to figure out why it`sounds so familiar to me (I`m German), ... guess it`s time to visit scotland very soon :)
Dundee avoided the great vowel shift that which changed the vowel sounds in most other dialects. There’s a theory that the Dundee accent is so quick and clipped because of the noise of the jute factories.
Any time I try to explain the Dundonian dialect to friends, I find the best example is when you turn "I'm about to be sick" into "eh'm awa'ae be seek"
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I grew up in in Dundee in the 1980s. Born 1981 in nine wells. I swear the Dundee accent used to be waaaaay stronger than it is nowadays. There’s a story of us leaving a French campsite - a big squad of us on a busman’s holiday. Anyways we left the campsite and a French woman said ‘au revoir’ and a wee lassie from Dundee waved back and said ‘ey, we’re awa’
Living in Leeds now but I’m from Arbroath and needed to hear some of the dialect for homesickness sake!!! Pure dead brilliant min
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Can't wait to move to Dundee as a non native speaker, I don't think the 5 years of me living in England will be enough, even tho I do pick up accent and dialects quite well, this is on another level 😂
I'm Hilltown born .an bred 1962 I love his wee laddie x
Your video is brilliant!. Loved it so much, I just had to subscribe.
I'm from down south, London. But I've lived here in Dundee for 8 years now.
8 years ago I would have thought, whaaat??! I can't understand a word he's saying, let alone the accent, lol, but now, it's so easy to understand.
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As a Dundonian, still here after 53 years, made me laugh.
Glad you enjoyed it 🤓🤓
I remember my Greek pal on the bus with me while 2 Dundonians were speaking to each other years back and his exact words were, 'what language is that?'
I've had fifers struggle to understand me back in the day haha
Dundonian is not "almost" like a second language. It's Scots, so it is a second language.
This kind of dundonian spoken today like most Scots is a sort of hybrid between Scots and modern English, the only true Scots dialect still spoken is Doric and to an extent possibly the insular variants on Shetland and Orkney
@jackmc10 eh!? all Scots & all English dialects are all derived from the same root. One is not older than the other.
Scots isn't a language.
mental note .. Watch this video before ever going to Dundee .. must eat pehs and ask for stovies. Brilliant dude. enjoyed it
If anybody says.. 'n an ingin aine n ah'.. Just say yeah 😂
I lived in Dundee for about a year and a half. As an Austrian native I had quite a hard time with the dialect in the beginning. Buying a ticket on the bus could be quite challenging! Nevertheless, you get used to it quickly at least when it comes to understand it. Talking Dundonian is a completely different game, never managed it execpt for some words like univershity 🙂 Thanks for the wonderful video, it brings back lovely memories from way back in time! Love it!
Surprised at how similar a lot of this is to how we speak in Newcastle, though tbf I still struggle to understand Dundonians after a few
Tbh when I was Newcastle I was the same 😂
Probably cause newcastle used to be part of scotland. So no surprise they have a lot of scots words
You forgot Mulk instead of milk and the iconic fil-um for film lol 😂
Go geez a gless o mulk while eh pause this filum 😂😂
Eh definitely say filum.. I Canna say it any other way 😂
I am not from Dundee and say Milk and Fil-um. That is not uniquely Dundee accent.
My wife's posh though 😂
Or 'me-jum' instead of 'medium.'
'eh bought a shirt but it was affae big for is and it was meh sehz tae! Em a me-jum!'
Very similar to the Aberdonian accent/dialect.
this is great. my grand uncle is scottish and he always used to say something about a mouse with a blouse in the house.
Moose wi a bloose in the hoose 🤓
There’s a moos loos about the hoos
Canadians say it exactly the same way.
Dundonian with 'ASD'? Yessss! ...Subscribed.
Moved to the USA from Dundee in 1979 and understood everything you said except for the sim bit, that's a new word
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I have a friend from Scotland that told me about Still Game show. Not only is it hilarious but I love the accent and the local lingo they use! I am on my third time watching the series in a year! 😂😊
It's a staple in Scotland Haha 🤓
eh bit its no oarie
In the vid description you said its like a second language, thats because it is! The Scots language, sharing many words with English its mutually intelligible in the same way Swedish/Danish is.
Im pretty sure there was a study done and many claimed that dundonian is akin to a second language but if that made it a fact I dunno haha 🤓
This brought a smile to my face. All my family are from Dundee and speaks exactly like this. I am Australian born. Weirdly you look like you could be my brother 🤣
Enjoyed the video
I’m English from Essex but now live in Australia
I’m heading to Dundee in January next year with my daughter
My family going back to my 3 x Great Grandparents are from Dundee so going to see some family history 👍
As a north Irishman that supports Dundee United i love these lol Sometimes when im over i struggle to understand really really fast Dundonians, but usually only if they are pished lol Oh, and we say brew for the dole over here too and 'pure mental' for everything lol
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North Irishman?
Donegal or Cavan?
@@geordiewishart1683 County Down.. let me guess.. that's not Ireland. Have a day off
I'm asking cos my family are from Donegal and Cavan.
I myself live in Bristol, in Wales.
I am off this week for Xmas.
Thanks
I'd argue that it's 'Just go roond that circle'
Even in my head I'm going 'just go roond that circle' haha.. your right 😂
Deffo
ROOND = RUNED = SECRET = everything on the other side of a circle or sphere is always a MYSTERY until you get there... (square root of -1)
ROONS = RUNES = used to PRE-MONITOR or PREMONITIONS of what secret mysteries lay AROON the corner (of the circle, sphere) of time...
knowing the secret of what is going to happen, ahead of time, by using ROONS = RUNES, one may RUIN the plans of others... (having to do with gravity)
Apparently one of the first places in Britain to have it as a road feature (from the old 'Turning Circle' of age-old horse and cart days). ;-)
I'm from Kyiv, Ukraine. Yesterday I've met a young man, about 30, and I occasionally confused him with a local person whom I spoke by telephone few minutes ago. So, that guy started to speak to me. And at first I thought he is a Dutch or Swedish 😄😄😄 then he spoke English 😄😄 and then he said he is from Scotland. I hardly understood him. He said he is from town near Dundee) thanks you man for this video, it's interesting. That guy's accent is really dundonian)
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@@thisscottishaspie5961 that's why m here) cheers man, welcome to Kyiv)
I see that when be in Dundee or another places in Scotland, it'll be a pain in the ass to understand what people say hahaha
I'll be constantly repeating this phrase: "Could you repeat what you've said, please?"
Greetings from south of Brazil mate! I love Scotland.
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Brilliant. Greeting fae Perth! As soon as eh hit ruversehd drehv ah stert callin thum circles! haha
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Thank you for this of course. Although it may seem odd to compare accents/dialects with series on tv, I would guess most people in Dundee would not speak like they do on EastEnders say than they would in Taggart of old? Not that it matters of course really at all for sure!
Pure magic! 🏴💙
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No lie’
I’m born and raise in America atleast 3 generations and then it gets “foggy” with records… but I always struggled with English in public schools in the late 1990’s-…basically now🤷♂️
But I’ve noticed I had a stutter when I said certain words that my cheeks and throat were being told “that is wrong”
And 20 years later I’ve noticed when I am fully relaxed the Maager blood from a father I’ve never know but is the only connection to this way of speaking: really opened my mind and I appreciate you posting this video for me to find it 🏴🏴🏴🇺🇸🏴🏴🏴🙈
get awa you right, squeaky lassie voice, spine shivers
That's why i fucked off to errol and married a lassie with nae twang 😂
My grandparents were born and raised in Dundee, after they immigrated to America, my mum was born and raised in New Jersey, USA.
I vaguely remember meeting my granddad when he travelled to California where my parents and I lived. Being quite young I was facinated by him, but my mom said I didnt understand what he said. To this day I am proud of my Scottish heritage, even visiting Dundee in 1975 when I was 17 yrs old.
Thank you for this video, I really enjoyed it and have subscribed.
Oh, and I'm ADHD
a lot of the Scottish dialects have their roots in Flemish and old English. Scots is a Germanic language in its own right. Doric in the North-east is really similar to this. We would say Da for don't, simmit is vest, sark is a shirt and trousers are breeches.
What aboot the scaffy, that fell doon a cundy.
Left Dundee in 88, are these words still in use
Was on the phone with a Scottish fella a few years ago. Was pretty sure he was either from Glasgow or Edinburgh, but my ability to tell the difference has waned over the years. I knew though for sure he wasn’t from Dundee! Turned out, he was born in Glasgow, but went to Uni in St. Andrews, hence the kinda weird mishmash of Scots dialect he had. Plus living in the US for several years. I loved my time in Dundee and Fife. My bedroom window in Fife looked out over the Firth of Tay.
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I was in Kirkton when "Dinghys" was first discovered! It started with people claiming they had a rubber ear and could not hear the request for a loan of a tenner or such. " ehh rubber ear"canna hear you. Then" ehh rubber dinghys" would be the reply..then just dinghys was adopted for canny hear you your talking pish. Ha ha
Idk if I speak for most Americans but Scottish is such a great accent as an American English speaker.
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Sent this to my mate from overseas. They're already bilingual so as theyre moving there... challenge made! ;)
Your laugh is infectious! Coseyedinnaekenawayrd it sounds like you're telling jokes!!
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Not infectious to me. More of an irritant. Certain terms in the dialect may be intended to be amusing, but no dialect is inherently amusing as such. I may be wrong, but I take this speaker's laughter at the Dundee accent to be a sign of embarrassment about his own tongue. What a shame. One can relish one's own dialect without deriding it.
No it's just how i talk in front of camera...
Your dialect sounds so quaint!!!
Really enjoyed this. I grew up in Aberdeen so I was comparing the phrases throughout the video and it's like 50/50 with similarities and differences! Would be interesting to compare Doric to Dundonian. I think since we're geographically a wee bit closer it does make sense!!
My dad was born in Dufftown so he's a proper teuchter! My partner found it pretty interesting trying to understand him!!
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I was actually surprised that I could almost fully understand WRITTEN Doric. Spoken Doric is a totally different kettle of fish. 😉
I from Dundee lived here all my life . This language is natural to me but see trying to listen to you speak it I cannae understand it. Imagine having to learn it haha
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I wonder if we are related?! Lol
I'm from Northern Ireland but lived in Dundee several years.
Best time of my life
We are srilankans , from Dundee campus we like to share your information
Wow! I love Scottish accent! ❤️❤️❤️ Plus I have been to Aberdeen 8 times so far whilst working on British Petroleum account! ❤️❤️❤️❤️
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your versions of words sound like norwegian. In stead of saying move in English, you would say flytt, flytte in Norwegian. Ein(own) is egen in Norwegian. Great video! Thank you
As a Norwegian this was quite easy, but also coming from a country with hundreds if not thousands of dialects, this sounded more like slang when one cuts out the endings or certain letters/sounds. We do that to here if certain dialects. For the most part we can understand each other without ease, but if not people are just lazy or prejudice and don’t want to understand. Going to Scotland for the 1st time next month, and zero expectations except it will feel like home as Scotland, as well as Ireland, is quite similar in nature, mentality and culture, but also history as the Norse invaded, plundered, raped, killed and colonized My bf is Icelandic and he’s part Irish/Scottish as all Icelanders are. I love Scottish Gaelic, and the Scottish English accent. I grew up with Monarch of The Glen back in the 2000’s, so that’s the only reference I have besides Hollywood shows which probably aren’t accurate nor authentic anyway.
Aye dinnae be leavin oot ‘ehhhhhh’ on anyhing ye blether 😂😂😂. My mum used to slap back of my head when I’d say ‘ehhhhhh’ 😂😂😂😂
I live in between Stirling & Edinburgh and ur dialect is mostly the same as mine apart from the 'ie' sound becoming 'eh' but i have 2 dundonian mates so i can purely understand it, and you're not joking about you speaking fast, whits the hurry man haha, and "take & make" becomes "tack & mack" we associate that wi Fife, but here we say roondaboot anaw,
Great video tho bud, i always love these
"Meh mooth is as dreh as a camels sandal!!!" pmsl
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Lost it at the “come ahead.” 💀
I was born dundee to dundee ma and pa,moved to Kent when young.dont have problem with lingo. Good chat up line is, seez a squeeze o yer paps hen . Try that one and see what happens. Viva dundee ya bas .
brilliant mate its even worse when we go down to england and try to speak slower 🤣🤣🤣
I turned on automated captions for this video and it just shows a picture of irn bru
My head hurts and I now have a nosebleed.
Ehhh right Wit ya talkin aboot dundonain lassies sound amazing 🤣 ..says me
Ehhhhh right 😂😂
It's Not a roundabout its a circle! 👍👍👍👍👍
I know I said that in the video around 8 and a half minutes in 👍👍👍
lived there ...broughty ferry. until I was 8 moved to California. lost my accent within 3 months. any suggestions to get it back?
Just heard an interview with actor Brian Cox, who comes from Dundee. Didn't hear much of this. Has he become too Anglicized?
We never talk like that in a professional setup
"eh hae meh aine car" had me cracking up 😂😂😂
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I feel like a robot when I try to talk ‘proper’.
when you are in retail it helps haha
@@thisscottishaspie5961 not me, I just get anxiety and mix up my word because I’m thinking about it too much 😅
I am Norwegian, but I am going to Dundee to go to university for 4 years, and now I'm terrified, I won't understand what anyone's saying!
Good luck haha 😅😅
American, but went to school in Dundee. Yer fkd, mate.
Edit - they are easier to understand the more you drink.
Dundee and doric have a lot of similarities with swedish and norwegian 🤔
And the Geordies in Newcastle
Across the bridge Down in leven we say baffys for slippers ,,old jimmy
am fae glezga, ya wee bunnet
Are there are some different accents in Dundee. Some of guys speaks very hard to understand but some are easier.
Haha Brill pal..fae a fellow Dundonian...love oor lingo haha!
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Looooveeee ittttt so much☺️👏🏻👏🏻
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Howls and hand signs. We are very vowel-y. Very little lip movement. Twa dundonians ripping each other is hilarious to hear. Ken?
Next year's vacation's gonna be fun 😂
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i feel like this dialect properly matches the spelling more phonetically and germanically, some parts of England even speak similar to this,
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Only just started this… but we don’t say roondaboot. We say go roond that circle…
i did say that later in the video lol
As a Dundonian, that was hilarious. Great stuff.
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Pure dead brilliant 😂😂😂
Bra' ken 'n dinna forge' the glottal stop!
Great one!!! Please more, I need them :D
I'm thinking about it haha 🤓
Dee till eh deh !
Down in leven we call slippers baffys ,so we talk the same except for just a few words
Dundee aksent is the best👍
Aberdonian & I like the Dundee accent.
Eh hud meh eh on a peh
I heard that some TV programmes would have been set in Dundee but the actors found the accent too hard to copy! - up too our knees in candle grease and pockets full of cheese.
The first time I listened to a guy from Dundee I thought there's no way he's speaking English
When it's fast it is very hard to keep up haha
'Wa roond the bakers an' get us twa meat pehs ananingineenana."
"Could you pop round to the bakers and get me two meat pies and an onion one as well"
Backie oot, rushie in, any man save
It's the bru because it used to be the Employment Bureau.
Would "tall," "tile," and "towel" all sound similar in Dundonian accent? Your pronunciation of "tall" sounded exactly like how it is said in Pittsburgh (US), and in Pittsburgh, tall, tile, and towel are homonyms.
"we would pronounce it tawl, tiyal, towal/tool"
@@thisscottishaspie5961 Well, that kills that theory. 🙂 Thank you for the reply and for the video.
That wiz like sumdy pourin warm chocolate in ma lug.
Come up to Fraserburgh. We’re even more severe Scots speakers. Please note I am typing this in a language that is not my native language.