Additional examples are adjusted to the entries in an automated way - we cannot guarantee that they are correct.
It can include Lowland Scots, but some people think they are very separate.
"Water" is the Lowland Scots term for a small river.
Much of his work is written in Lowland Scots, rather than English.
There is little or no use of Lowland Scots as a medium of education.
Much of the dialogue is in Lowland Scots, and some editions carry a glossary.
Brae is the Lowland Scots word for the slope or brow of a hill.
About 1817, families of Lowland Scots began arriving, and more continued to arrive through the early 1830s.
To date, the Bible has not been completely translated into Lowland Scots.
Lowland Scots continues to heavily influence the spoken English of the Scottish people today.
Consequently, some Lowland Scots words have a z in place of a yogh.
The majority of the population has always lived along the west coast and central belt and they spoke Lowland Scots.
The term "widdershins" was especially common in Lowland Scots.
The corresponding English subtitles have indeed been rendered into Lowland Scots.
The most famous writer of literature in Lowland Scots is Robert Burns.
He wrote in the Lowland Scots dialogue made popular by Robert Burns.
It is sometimes called "Lowland Scots" to distinguish it from Gaelic.
Both of these songs, from the 18th and 20th centuries respectively, are written in Lowland Scots.
(stickit is the Lowland Scots for stuck).
Many of his early recordings are versions of Lowland Scots and Appalachian folk songs.
Bryden is a surname of Lowland Scots origin.
It is on the A902 road Its name comes from the Lowland Scots for a "hill without a spring".
Pibroch is a spelling variant first attested in Lowland Scots in 1719.
St Andrews was once bounded by several "ports" (the Lowland Scots word for a town gate).
Lowland Scots can refer to:
Surely a Scottish graduate knows the difference between Jacobites and lowland Scots?