Canadian students celebrate St Andrew’s Day by translating Scots words
Scots share a few cultural similarities with Canadians - but it appears language can still be a barrier.
To celebrate St Andrew’s Day, the British High Commission in Ottawa asked students to translate some Scots words. The hilarious video shows the students havering as they struggle with the lingo.
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Hide AdThe students were asked what they thought glaikit means - but the irony was lost on the university pupils.
One student believed glaikit was a term for an insect.
Another said; “I’m going to say that’s when you’re just not feeling good.”
Her colleague added: “It sounds like an action. If I see something, I want to glaikit.”
The word dreich really baffled the students with one person stating “I really don’t have any idea - maybe something in relation to drink”.
The word haver further puzzled the Canadians.
The most bizarre explanation was that it meant a “kind of horse”.
Another said: “It sounds like a place” along with a fellow student who attempted to use it in a sentence.
She said: “I feel I have a haver coming on, like a fever.”
Haver is Scots for talking rubbish or nonsense, glaikit means clueless or foolish and dreich is a term to describe a grey and dreary day.