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
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.
Uso de lowland scots en inglés
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.
6
Scotland awoke to song, and the charm of LowlandScots was recognised even by Pope and the wits of the coffee-houses.
7
It is a West Germanic language which is derived from, and has its closest linguistic parallels with, LowlandScots or Lallans.
8
Many of Burns' poems are in the LowlandScots dialect; a few are wholly in ordinary English; and some combine the two idioms.
9
This force, however, was powerless to resist an army of English and LowlandScots who marched against him, led by Pembroke in person.
10
Donald was overthrown by Duncan, a son of Malcolm, born long before his marriage; and the LowlandScots were impatient of the return to barbarism.
11
He was beginning to understand and like the lowlandScots, though he saw that some of the opinions he had formed about them were wrong.