Pagsasao nga Eskoses
Plantilia:Short description Plantilia:For-multi Plantilia:Use Scottish English Plantilia:Use dmy dates
Scots | |
---|---|
Lowland Scots Broad Scots | |
(Braid) Scots Lallans Doric | |
Pannakabalikas | [skɔts] |
Patubo iti | Reino Unido, Republika ti Irlanda |
Rehion |
|
Etnisidad | Scots |
Patubo a mangisasao | 1,541,693 (2011)[1] |
Dagiti nasapa porma | |
Dagiti dialekto | |
Latin | |
Opisial a kasasaad | |
Opisial a mangisasao | Eskosia[2] |
Pakabigbigan a minoridad a pagsasao | Irlanda del Norte (a kas Ulster Scots) Republika ti Irlanda (County Donegal; a kas met la Ulster Scots) |
Kodkodigo ti pagsasao | |
ISO 639-2 | sco |
ISO 639-3 | sco |
Glottolog | scot1243 |
Linguaesperio | 52-ABA-aa (varieties: 52-ABA-aaa to -aav) |
Ti porsiento dagiti napagsaludsodan iti senso idi 2011 idiay Eskosia nga agtawen iti 3 ken nasursurok a nangibaga a makasaoda iti Lowland Scots | |
Ti porsiento dagiti napagsaludsodan iti senso idi 2011 idiay Irlanda del Norte nga agtawen iti 3 ken nasursurok a nangibaga a makasaoda iti Lowland Scots |
Ti Eskoses wenno Scots ket maysa nga Anglic language variety iti West Germanic language family, a masasao idiay Eskosia ken partes ti Ulster idiay Irlanda del Norte. Mas gagangay a masasao idiay Scottish Lowlands, Northern Isles, ken norte ti Ulster, ket mammaminsan ket maaw-awagan pay ti Lowland Scots tapno maiduma iti Eskoses a Gaeliko nga historiko a nainget iti kaaduan kadagiti Scottish Highlands, ti Hebrides, ken Galloway after the sixteenth century;[3] or Broad Scots to distinguish it from Scottish Standard English. Modern Scots is a sister language of Modern English, as the two diverged independently from the same source: Early Middle English (1100–1300).[4][5][6]
- ^ "Scotland's Census 2011" (PDF). 2011. Naiyarkibo manipud iti kasisigud (PDF) idi 21 Hulio 2014. Naala idi 24 Nobiembre 2020.
- ^ "Fact: Scotland's official languages are English, Scots, Gaelic & British Sign Language". Scotland.org. Naala idi 19 Abril 2022.
- ^ "Gaelic Language". cranntara.scot.
- ^ Horobin, Simon; Smith, Jeremy (2002). An Introduction to Middle English. Oup USA. ISBN 978-0-19-521950-0. Naala idi 1 Disiembre 2023.
- ^ Alexander Bergs, Modern Scots, Languages of the World series, № 242 (Bow Historical Books, 2001), ISBN 978-3-89586-513-8, pp. 4, 50. "Scots developed out of a mixture of Scandinavianised Northern English during the early Middle English period.... Scots originated as one form of Northern Old English and quickly developed into a language in its own right up to the seventeenth century."
- ^ Sandred, Karl Inge (1983). "Good or Bad Scots?: Attitudes to Optional Lexical and Grammatical Usages in Edinburgh". Acta Universitatis Upsaliensis. Ubsaliensis S. Academiae. 48: 13. ISBN 978-91-554-1442-9.
Whereas Modern Standard English is traced back to an East Midland dialect of Middle English, Modern Scots developed from a northern variety which goes back to Old Northumbrian