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Or scotch that: Fifteen years ago was supposed to be his moment.
2
I have some scotch in my room, if you need help sleeping.
3
To help think matters through he poured a scotch and watched football.
4
He had worked his way through his scotch when the phone rang.
5
I investigate the glass and find it contains ice cubes and scotch.
1
Scots, for example, offer free higher education, unlike the rest of Britain.
2
However, Mr Salmond said Scots had everything to gain by voting yes.
3
You're doing the 'English fear of the Scots drinking' number, aren't you?
4
Clearly, he went on, the problem with Gordon would be two Scots.
5
You Scots are hard in the head, but soft in the disposition.
1
SCO did not reply to a request for comment on the judgment.
2
The 31-year-old midfielder played for SCO Angers in the French top flight.
3
In theory, the SCO could be a force for cooperation and cohesion.
4
Iowa State's Babcock said a simple reform would improve SCO dramatically.
5
A company spokeswoman declined to comment Friday on whether SCO would follow through.
1
Hech, then, I'm a'thegither a negative teacher, as they ca' it in the new lallans.
2
It is a West Germanic language which is derived from, and has its closest linguistic parallels with, Lowland Scots or Lallans.
3
It is a variant, wrote its secretary some time ago, a variant of the language spoken today in the Lowlands of Scotland, often called Lallans.
1
All LowlandScots, lads and lassies, wail, and occasionally howl, in his songs.
2
Most could not distinguish between Highland and LowlandScots.
3
Ulster was 'planted' with Englishmen and LowlandScots.
4
It'll be the bowrer nae langer then, he went on, unconsciously mimicking the LowlandScots of the domestic.
5
No LowlandScots for me now.
1
They were both founded on Anglo-Saxon, but instead of growing into modern English, Barbour's tongue grew into what was known later as " braidScots."
1
In the past the Ulster- Scotslanguage tradition was largely oral rather than literary.
2
It is published by the Ulster ScotsLanguage Society.
3
It is to the Scotslanguage movement that the Ulster-Scotslanguage movement traces its origins.
4
The Scotslanguage demonstrated continental influences.
5
Northern Ireland Culture Minister Mr Michael McGimpsey was today accused of misleading the Assembly over meetings with the Ulster Scotslanguage groups.