List_of_English_words_of_Scots_origin
List of English words of Scots origin is a list of English language words of Scots origin. See also "List of English words of Scottish Gaelic origin", which contains many words which were borrowed via Highland Scots.
- Blackmail
- A form of extortion carried out by the Border Reivers, borrowed into English with less violent connotations.
- blatant
- Bonspiel
- caddie or caddy
- canny
- Also Northern English. From English can in older sense of "to know how."
- clan
- Borrowed from Gaelic clann (family, stock, off-spring).
- convene
- Borrowed from French convenir, from Latin convenire.
- cosy
- firth
- Derived from Old Icelandic fjǫrdic (see fjord)
- glamour
- Meaning magic, enchantment, spell. From English grammar and Scottish gramarye (occult learning or scholarship).
- gloaming
- Middle English (Scots) gloming, from Old English glomung "twilight", from OE glom
- golf
- glengarry
- (or Glengarry bonnet) A brimless Scottish cap with a crease running down the crown, often with ribbons at the back. Named after the title of the clan chief Alexander Ranaldson MacDonell of Glengarry (1771–1828), who invented it.
- gumption
- Common sense or shrewdness.
- halloween
- haver or haiver
- To talk nonsense.[1] Scottish and North English dialect.
- laddie
- A boy.
- lassie
- A girl.
- links
- Sandy, rolling ground, from Old English hlinc (ridge).
- pernickety
- From pernicky.
- minging
- literally "stinking", from Scots "to ming".
- plaid
- From Gaelic plaide or simply a development of ply, to fold, giving plied then plaid after the Scots pronunciation.
- pony
- Borrowed from obsolete French poulenet (little foal) from Latin pullāmen.
- raid
- scone
- Probably from Dutch schoon.
- shinny
- Pond or street hockey in Canada. From an alternative name for the Scots sport shinty.
- skulduggery
- From Scots sculduddery[2][3]
- tweed
- Cloth being woven in a twilled rather than a plain pattern. from tweel
- wee
- Small, tiny, minute.
- wow
- Exclamation[4][5][6]
- wraith
This article needs additional citations for verification. (May 2017) |
For a list of words relating to Scots language origins, see the Scots derivations category of words in Wiktionary, the free dictionary.