That's not Gaelic, it's Scots. Aye, Wee and Lass originated from old English and is now called Scots. Ken and Bairn come from Dutch, apparently. The only Gaelic word there was Loch
It's the saxon origin, you see it in dutch too. Cheers from your neighbor ! (I go regularly to Germany for concerts, including my beloved Amphi festival in Köln. Glucklich kann ich in wenig Deutsch sprechen ! ;))
Those words are not Gaelic, they are old Scots. Only ephemeral celebrities mentioned and nothing of inventors like Alexander Graeme Bell (telephone), John Logie Baird (TV) or John Dunlop.(pneumatic tyres. The list goes on.
Thanks for proving that the ancestors of scots were germanic tribes. "Ken" for know, that is terribly close to "kennen" in german...😀Not to mention Loch means lake, while Loch "logically" means a bore in german...
We actually use these words alot in the countryside, you need to travel into the villages of Scotland more, where I am from. In my village we talk like this: "Th' wee lassie birled aroond n aroond til the lass boakt. A telt her tae stap bit she kept gaun. Her maw wisnae happy wi her Claes gittin' mauket an aw. Th' lassie hud ae mooth oan her, gied it back tae her maw sae she wis groonded fir eever". Translation: The girl spined around and around until she was vomited. I told her to stop but she kept going. Her mum wasn't happy with her clothes getting dirty. The little girl had a mouth on her, gave it back to her mum so she was grounded forever." You need to travel around Scotland more, it seems.
Thank you for spending time on this video but this sounds nothing like an actual Scottish accent and the words you gave meanings for (wee, aye, ken, bairn, etc.) are not Scottish Gaelic at all.
Hola, que tal?, como van?, Los mejores y más cordiales Saludos desde puente piedra, lima, Perú, ojalá que puedas venir en algún momento a mi país y que disfrutes mucho de todo por aquí, con la familia y los amigos, felicidades por tus vídeos....
Funny. But the Gael words you think you are using are just examples of Scottish English. Ken comes from the Dutch, bairn is a Swedish derivative. And you came close to a fsux accent. Fortunately you did not attempt " hoo, noo, brown coo" that is coo for cow and not chu for dog. Dodgy.
I really don’t mean to be unkind but it needs said. That really is not a Scottish accent. I actually feel quite bad saying that but cannot ignore such bad representation of my countries accent/s