Similar words: scottie, scott, dred scott, pettish, skittish, sluttish, coquettish, pettishly. Meaning: ['skɒtɪʃ] n. the dialect of English used in Scotland. adj. of or relating to or characteristic of Scotland or its people or culture or its English dialect or Gaelic language.
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(91) It'shows us the life story of a Scottish hero , William Wallace.
(92) The noun Scots refers to the Scottish dialect of the English language and Scotch is whisky.
(93) Burns - night started 200 years ago as a tribute to the famous Scottish poet, Robert Burns.
(94) A long, heavy wooden pole tossed end over end as a demonstration of strength in Scottish highland games.
(95) The Scottish Terrier should have a thick body and heavy bone.
(96) A pipe band is a traditional Scottish or Irish musical group of bagpipers and drummers .
(97) The term 'Bank Giro' was adopted by the Clearing banks and Scottish banks in 1967 to describe their established credit transfer and their newly introduced direct debiting system.
(98) The sword dance, similar to an Irish jig of a Highland fling, is usually performed at a Scottish wedding gathering.
(99) So far, I've found Irish and Scottish Gaelic , Welsh, French, Dutch, German, Polish, Spanish, Hebrew, Italian, and English.sentencedict .com
(100) The trick, of course, was to build a boat far tougher than the Jeannette, and in 1891 Nansen hired a brilliant Norwegian naval architect of Scottish descent named Colin Archer to do just that.
(101) Slaves arriving in the South took the bland, unseasoned fried chicken being used in old Scottish recipes and added West African spices to it.
(102) "My message to the British and Scottish communities is that I will put out the evidence (to exonerate me) and ask them to be the jury, " Al-Megrahi, sentenced in 2001, said without elaborating.
(103) Generally, a well-balanced Scottish Terrier dog should weigh from 19 to 22 pounds and a bitch from 18 to 21 pounds.
(104) When The Scottish playwright Sir James Barrie created the character ofPeter Pan, the boy who refused to grow up, he probably did not realizethat nature had beaten him to it.
(105) A knee-length skirt with deep pleats, usually of a tartan wool, worn as part of the dress for men in the Scottish Highlands.
(106) In 12th grade Mrs. Skala, my literature teacher, whose family roots were in Scotland, constantly sang the praises of the Scottish poet Robert Burns.
(107) In the autumn of 1928, a Scottish bacteriologist Alexander Fleming was searching for a substance that would kill deadly germs .
(108) In 1998, Scottish scientists found damage to every single internal organ in rats fed blight-resistant GM potatoes.
(109) The gait of the Scottish Terrier is very characteristic of the breed.
(110) Scottish person has to listen carefully if he wants to understand a Londoner.
(111) Whodunit: DiC Entertainment and Scottish television teamed up to resuscitate Sherlock Holmes for a distant future featuring a Moriarty clone on the rampage.
(112) In the battle of Poitiers in 1356, Archibald Douglas, a Scottish noble who fought with the French against the English, was taken prisoner.
(113) Our luminaires too are subjected daily to very high demands. Apart from extreme wind forces, their sound construction and meticulous corrosion protection weather the rough Scottish sea climate.
(114) The HND program is sponsored and recognized by both Chinese and Scottish governments.
(115) This was the 3rd poem that I have studied with my students. The first was A Red, Red Rose by the Scottish poet Robert Burns and The Tiger by William Blake.
(116) Off the northeast coast of Nova Scotia sits Cape Breton Island, a beautifully rugged destination that has retained its Scottish flavor.
(117) BRAZILIAN beats, Scottish bagpipes and Indian drummers - the streets of Melbourne will be alive with the sounds of multiculturalism when the Walk for Harmony is held tomorrow.
(118) Sadie, a four-year-old Scottish terrier, is photographed after winning Best in Show.
(119) William Rankine, a Scottish engineer and one of the fathers of thermodynamics, was the first to explain how these repeated stress reversals could cause cracks to propagate.
(120) Scottish law officer who decide whether an alleged criminal shall be prosecute.
More similar words: scottie, scott, dred scott, pettish, skittish, sluttish, coquettish, pettishly, cotton, cottage, boycott, ricotta, cotton gin, scotch, mascot, terra cotta, cotton belt, terracotta, scotland, rotting, cottage cheese, plotting, blotting, cottage industry, jettison, fetish, brutish, coltish, British, whitish.