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<div style="left: -99999px;">Calls for Doric to have
same status as English and Gaelic
<br><br>Views east from Bennachie in the heart of Aberdeenshire, where almost 50
per cent of adults speak North-East Scots, including Doric. PIC:
Creative Commons/Flicr/Gordon Robertson.
Views east from Bennachie in the heart of Aberdeenshire, where almost 50
per cent of adults speak North-East Scots, including Doric. PIC:
Creative Commons/Flicr/Gordon Robertson.
Alison Campsie
Published: 21:15 Tuesday 06 March 2018
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Doric is to be promoted and protected on a new scale in Scotland with a
body now set up in Aberdeen to secure the same status for North-East
Scots as English and Gaelic.
The North-East Scots Language Board is being led by academics, key
figures and institutions in the region to normalise the use of the
language in civic life, media, business and education.
North-East Scots is spoken between Montrose and Nairn with Doric, a
dialect of the language, found in roughly half that area from Aberdeen
northwards. Doric itself has several different dialects as it moves
between fishing and farming communities.
READ MORE: Do you now these 25 Doric words and phrases?
Now, road signs, public information and media broadcasts could be
delivered in North-East Scots in the future given the creation of the
board which aims to enhance the area’s distinctive culture.
Around 1.5m people speak Scots with the highest proportions found in
Aberdeenshire and Shetland (49 per cent) and Moray (45 per cent),
according to latest census figures.
READ MORE: The first map of Gaelic speakers in Scotland
While the Scottish Government has set out a Scots language policy, the
board hopes to forge ahead in making Doric and North-East Scots more
visible in everyday life with hopes its work could lead to the
development of a national Scots language body.
Dr Thomas McKean, director of Aberdeen University’s Elphinstone
Institute and vice-chair of NESLB, said:
“North-East Scots and Doric are mostly thought of as being a language
for home and family, but its use is far more widespread than that.
“Large numbers use it in their everyday lives, but one of our aims is to
promote and celebrate its use in areas where it isn’t often visible,
such as in our civic life, in the media, and education.
“It’s important that young people see themselves – and the language they
speak – reflected back at them in public life. Just as children need to
see diverse gender and race role models, they need to know that someone
who speaks their native language can be a success in any walk of life.”
The board will include representatives from Aberdeen University, Robert
Gordon University as well as Aberdeen City, Aberdeenshire, Moray and
Angus councils.
It will build on the work of Aberdeenshire Council, which last year
passed a Doric Language Policy which promotes its use in schools across
the region.
Dr McKean said studies have shown that children taught in their native
language attain better academically in other fields with a Pathway for
Scots in schools now being developed by the Elphinstone Institute in
support of the Board’s work.
He added: “We want to raise the status of North-East Scots and Doric. We
know it is used in business life in the North-East but simply we would
like to hear more North-East voices.
“The number of Scots speakers here is probably denser than anywhere
apart from perhaps urban Glasgow.
“You here a vast number of different voices in the media - Shetland,
Highland, Central Belt, but not a lot of North-East voices.
“Doric and North-East Scots was always seen as the vernacular, as in you
wouldn’t speak it to your minister or doctor that way. We are really
trying to normalise the use of the language, to overcome that sort of
attitude.”
A major event will be held at Aberdeen University’s St Machar Cathedral
on Saturday night to reflect the aims of the new board - a rendition of
Handel’s Messiah in Doric.
“It’s never been done before. It is very unusual to find Doric
represented as ‘high’ culture or ‘high’ art,” Dr McKean added.
He said promoting North-East Scots should not be at the expense of the
work done on raising awareness of Gaelic.
Only 0.6 per cent of the population in Aberdeenshire and 0.8 per cent of
Aberdeen residents speak Gaelic, although recent rises have been
recorded.
Dr McKean said: “Gaelic has had a hard time since the 1609 Statues of
Iona. There is certainly grumbling here in the North-East, where some
complain about the money Gaelic’s had.
“That is a very sad attitude, I think. Scots absolutely deserves social,
political, and financial support, but there’s no need to decry what
Gaelic has gotten and what its campaigners have achieved. There is a
great deal to be learned from their progress over the last few decades
and that’s exactly what we’re trying to do. One nation, three leids.”
North-East Scots/Doric words and phrases
Foos yer doos? - How are your pigeons/how are you?
Far div ye bide? - Where do you stay?
loon - boy/son
quine - girl/daughter
muckle - big
bosie - hug
affa fine - really good
myaggart - filthy
foggie bummer - bumble bee
sna - snow
sklyter - a portion of something, like land
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hamedrachtit - selfish, or drawn to home
fooshin - gumption
foosics - little bits of fluff)
foonert - scunnert, given up<br><br> Read more at:
<a href="https://www.scotsman.com/regions/aberdeen-north-east/calls-for-doric-to-have-same-status-as-english-and-gaelic-1-4701399">https://www.scotsman.com/regions/aberdeen-north-east/calls-for-doric-to-have-same-status-as-english-and-gaelic-1-4701399</a></div>
<br clear="all"><br>-- <br><div class="gmail_signature" data-smartmail="gmail_signature">=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+<br><br> Harold F. Schiffman<br><br>Professor Emeritus of <br> Dravidian Linguistics and Culture <br>Dept. of South Asia Studies <br>University of Pennsylvania<br>Philadelphia, PA 19104-6305<br><br>Phone: (215) 898-7475<br>Fax: (215) 573-2138 <br><br>Email: <a href="mailto:haroldfs@gmail.com" target="_blank">haroldfs@gmail.com</a><br><a href="http://ccat.sas.upenn.edu/~haroldfs/" target="_blank">http://ccat.sas.upenn.edu/~haroldfs/</a> <br><br>-------------------------------------------------</div>
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