Scottish
adjective
noun
(as plural noun the Scottish)The terms Scottish, Scot, Scots, and Scotch are all variants of the same word. They have had different histories, however, and in modern English they have developed different uses and connotations.The normal everyday word used to mean ‘of or relating to Scotland or its people’ is Scottish: Scottish people; Scottish hills; Scottish Gaelic; she’s English, not Scottish. The normal, neutral word for ‘a person from Scotland’ is Scot, along with Scotsman, Scotswoman, and the plural form the Scots (or, less commonly, the Scottish). Scots is also used, like Scottish, as an adjective meaning ‘of or relating to Scotland.’ However, it tends to be used in a narrower sense to refer specifically to the form of English used in Scotland: Scots accent; the Scots word for ‘night.’ The word Scotch, meaning either ‘of or relating to Scotland’ or ‘a person/the people from Scotland,’ was widely used in the past by Scottish writers such as Robert Burns and Sir Walter Scott. In the 20th century, it became less common. It is disliked by many Scottish people (as being an ‘English’ invention) and is now regarded as old-fashioned in most contexts. It survives in certain fixed phrases, as, for example, Scotch broth and Scotch whisky.