You are totally right, the further north to travel in the UK the more friendly people become. I was born in Cumbria and grew up in Lancashire. I moved to Cambridge for work and people down here are definitely not as friendly. If you try and spark up a friendly conversation with someone in the grocery queue in London, they will look at you like you insulted their mother. Do the same in Scotland and they'll speak to you like they've known you all your life and you'll probably have a new friend.
There's a video where this man was drunk at a party went out for a cig and went back in the wrong house and fell asleep. Luckily the strangers gave him a cig and a brew lol. He helped himself to a pot noodle and kipped on the couch. There's a video on here.
As a Scotsman, having now lived in France for more than 38 years, I'm proud to say that I still understood everything my Scottish compatriots said. Thank you for a very entertaining 11+ minutes. I'm glad you enjoyed your visit.
@@davewilliams7515 What's wrong with moving away from Scotland but still being proud to be a Scot? Sometimes life (and love) decide where we live. Maybe you're too young ?
Me too. I´m a Glaswegian who has been living in Colombia for 18 years. The Scots are magic, and the accent is music to my ears. The weather's a wee bit better here, though. :-)
I'm sure theres plenty of great people, and I've never been myself so I wouldn't know, but err not really heard it referred to as friendly and beautiful lol
Man I’ve lived in London for almost 15 years and seeing people this friendly in Scotland took me by surprise. People in London are extremely rude and aggressive most of the time. I haven’t travelled enough I’d say in the UK but will definitely go and see different places soon. Great video.
There are no Londoners left in London, but they used to be very friendly. If you went to a market the cockney men would call ever woman they served love or darling. But this was frowned upon by the newcomers and there are now no cockney left there. Though to be fair all large cities are unfriendly places, my wife is from Paris and it's the same there. Though as soon as you go out into the countryside people are much more friendly whatever country you are in, it's a city thing.
@@fatimadarwish-gv2er Glasgow has actually quite a small population compared to London and smaller more homogenous Cities like Glasgow with a population of around 630,000, are definately more friendly. I noticed a similar friendliness in Manchester, which has a similar sized populatio to Glasgow. However the population of London is now around 10million with a Muslim Mayor and over 300 different languages spoken. It's no longer an English city and is very violent and unfriendly.
I love Scotland, it blew my mind that Scotland only has a population of around 5 million, but yet they have so much culture and heritage, really love to visit scotland again
It's an inbuilt defence mechanism, when it's either too cold or too wet to go outside you become highly educated in order to move somewhere warmer and drier, then frequently tell everyone how much you miss it and there's no place like it...🤣
@@ivartheboneless5969 Racists say that. The reality is it has a lot of culture but there is an obvious agenda to destroy it, and part of being able to do that is to deny that it actually exists.
Went to Scotland at 2018. And it had caught me by surprise. Stunning and amazing country. I had the experience about travelling through some European countries and the countries themselves were beautiful and vivid, but the population… However Scottish people turned my experience into a magical one. They were even more friendly than Brazilians, actually. The best part of Scotland is the Scottish people. Edinburgh and Glasgow are two must destinations for those who visit the UK.
Sounds like folks in east maritimes of Canada or 东北人in China. Some people may think they are rude at first sight but deep down they are super friendly and fun to hang out with
(American here) I spent a week in Glasgow maybe 15 years ago, and was floored by how friendly the people were - even though I could only understand them half the time haha. It's so true how no one even bothers with an umbrella - it rains so much they are just immune as that one person said. My host told me only tourists really use them 🤣I travelled a bit around the UK including London and I have to say Glasgow might not have been the "hippest" or most cosmo city I visited, but it was by far the friendliest! Very well kept too, I'd love to go back.
I'm from Spain but lived in Scotland for 7 years. The happy friendly people is more a Glasgow thing than Scottish thing I would say. Scottish people are very friendly in general but Glasgow has a special positive energy. Edinburgh is the posh city, one of the most beutiful cities I've seen. Aberdeen is my favourite as it was my first destination and home for the first few years.
Glasgow - the only city in the world where the same person who stabs and mugs you calls you an ambulance ❤ One of the friendliest cities going but still has high crime 😅 Aye, I'm from Glasgow!!!
Idk I’d say the friendliness is a Scottish thing in general, not just a Glasgow thing. The only place I’d say that isn’t quite as outgoing and sociable is Edinburgh in my experience and maybe Aberdeen but I’ve never been, just met people from there. Everywhere else people are extremely nice though.
Glad you had a great time! It's always interesting to see how our culture is viewed and appreciated from another perspective, Hope the rest of your visit here in Scotland is just as lovely :)
Aww this makes me so happy and beaming inside! ☺ I'm so proud to be Scottish and a weegie from Glasgow! This is the first video I've ever watched of yours and the title actually caught my eye. I now live and work in Hong Kong and it's so nice to be reminded of my roots. Glasgow is the best but so is Hong Kong too for different reasons.
The more I watched this video the more similarities I found between Scotland and Mexico. Friendly people, they like to hang out and drink, No ID's required. I was 16 the first time I went to a night club here in Morelia, Mexico. Warm regards to Scottish people.
My partner is Scottish, but he came here in Australia when he was 13 years old. Hearing him talk to his parents in their accent is mind-blowing. I love their accent, the way they talk, and their English terms.
I was born in the slums of Glasgow, 1948, left in 1966, and many decades later I went back to Glasgow, 1988, with my wife from California and I was her translator as she understood nothing any of my family said to her but they all loved her because they thought I had married a Movie Star because she came from Los Angeles though we lived in San Francisco... I started back into the dialect after being there for a week. You can take the boy out of the slums, but you have to take the slums out of the boy. We say what we mean and we mean what we say... Direct... Och yerbumsootraewindae..... sort that one out mate.
I was born in a muddy village at the edge of a desert, left the place long ago and there's no single night my heart long to go back and settle their with my people where we have our own accent, rules and culture. You can leave the place of your origin but you it never leaves your heart, like never.
As a foreigner, after 1 year of studying in England for my Masters degree I thought I was able to speak and understand English fairly decently.....until I went to Inverness.....and then I understood why Italians use their hands when they speak, so I took after them and I used my hands to the fullest extent in an attempt to get my messages across when speaking to locals...the funny thing is that I did not need that, as they understood me; it was me who didn't understand them, but when you don't understand what other people say, you tend to think that they don't understand you either......Scottish people are as lovely as it gets, but as a foreigner you need a "black belt" in English to be able to speak with them and understand half of what they are saying; the other half is local slang which you either need to be there for some time to pick it or you simply won't get it. Also being able to be subjected to banter and drink like a maniac are what you need. No Masters degree required ! 😁
@@mihailfelixdumitresc The mistake you (and many others) make is in thinking that what you get to hear in Scotland is English. Even in Inverness, which is a place where people only started learning English as a second language in the late 19th century, half of what you are hearing is not English. It will be Scots - not "local slang", but a sister language to English that has 1000 years of developing differently and has different linguistic origins. It's like having learned Standard Spanish and then expecting to understand everything in Portugal or in Italy.
@@mihailfelixdumitresc : Visit Alabama or Mississippi, Georgia or Texas if you want to hear another version of spoken English. Im Scottish and I have a hard time understanding them.
苏格兰人真的超友善热情,在乡村地区更明显,我出去骑行,一路都被人打招呼,感觉超级亲切~~有次大雪天到格拉,下飞机的时候坐旁边的女士一句Welcome Home 直接把我暖到了...... 最好玩的一次是我们在一个山区的小镇闲逛,偶遇一位苏格兰老先生,问了个路,完事他居然直接把他刚刚在超市买来准备带回家的鲜花送给我爱人,然后我们就捧着那束花一路hiking下去了👻👻
Funny, I'm a Scottish lady who has been living in Hong Kong for 20 years & right now I just got a wee bit homesick for Scotland! 😅& yeah, I won't use an umbrella in Hong Kong unless the rain is quite heavy 😂 I get some funny looks, it's just the Scot in me! If you hit the East coast, it's much less rainy!
@@woshisuo I know some Cantonese, enough to manage simple everyday things. I get better when I practice but lots of HK friends & collegues will just speak to me in English so I get lazy. I have a few European friends who are fluent in Canto!
As someone born and bred in Glasgow of many generations I am floored by this wonderful video and all the kind comments. Really, honestly, heartfelt thanks,
Went to Scotland many years ago for my Master's degree. People there are so lovely and pationated as you mentioned. And really it took me 6 month to understand one of my classmates' English for around 50%....haha
I come from a town near Glasgow and I can say the best part of uni was meeting people from every corner of the globe, it was the most incredible experience.
University of Glasgow, my alma mater. The best years of my life were at uni. Just noticed the Ubiquitous Chip and Jinty McGuinty's is still open! We used to go there with my pals, and this was the late 90's!
I'm an American with some Scottish ancestry. I visited Scotland for 12 days in 2006, and it was so beautiful. Great people. They know how to live,... and have contributed much to modern civilization as well.
Studied in Glasgow 10 years ago. Always wanted to go back to visit. Just one year is enough to make me feel it's my second hometown. That's how nice it was for me.
Gotta say I'm impressed by how they still preserve their strong accent.... part of their heritage that they are very proud of!! To a much lesser extent, ppl in HK also preserve their way of speaking English... can't suddenly expect them to speak like the British/Americans if they don't have that exposure or opportunity
This actually isn’t shocking at all in the context of Britain Note how US accents, Australian accents, Canadian accents etc. will differ between several states, but England alone has accents differing per county. This is because of the historical context; it was not the “Anglo-Saxons” who settled, but instead it was similar to the rest of Europe in which everyone was scattered following the fall of Western Rome. These tribes and clans held their own territories, but most interestingly, they never changed drastically at all, likely due to being an island. The other countries I mentioned above however, had very consistent settlement by Englishmen as the majority, so instead of a bunch of foreigners learning to speak with eachother, they were just Anglos abroad. A great example is Newcastle, Geordies use Scandinavian words, and for context, this means that Newcastle’s accent has been present before England even united as a country in 927, stemming from around 867 during the Viking invasions.
Aw, I'm so glad you loved Glasgow. We really do have a lot of slang for going drinking / getting drunk / being drunk. 😆 To be fair, Glaswegian is a dialect that's somewhere between English and Scots, so challenging for even native English speakers sometimes.
@Tamara Samaniego If you call a company in the UK especially banks its usually a Glaswegian womans voice they use for the automatic hello/options etc before you get through to a staff member. Even then chances are the staff member is in Glasgow alot of call centres here. I used to work for a mobile phone operator and when the iPhone first launched it was only available from one company ( ours ) and Apple wanted all iPhone calls to go through Glasgow. Supposedly it's the most trust worthy and authoritive accent in the UK, obviously we don't use slang but lol
Glasgow is incredible! Make a point to visit and while you’re there, carve out a couple hours to walk through the Necropolis-the Victorian era cemetery just east of Glasgow Green. It’s gorgeous
My wife and I were in Scotland over 30 years ago. I still have the fondest memories of the people and culture of Edinburgh, Inverness, and especially Glasgow. Some day we'll return.
What I love about this is that when they translate the slang into what is supposed to be a common word, the common word is also slang to you 😂 like “steamin” to “boozin”, or “lump ah wood” to “no very bright” lol
Actually the Scottish is not only friendly, but also diligent and practical in workplace ( Englishmen always work in free style ) cos I had met a teacher from Scotland before.
@Michael Doolan nope. Not since 1960s have stabbings been common. And even then it tended to be Glasgow. And usually gang related. There was a Criminal Code of Conduct that innocents didn't get caught up. As to English... If you watch Scottish TV News items half the folk being interviewed are English people wanting to get out of the rat race. Maybe it was just you.
I’m from the U.S. and I just love their accents. I have a southern American accent. People have a hard time with our accent too, but we sound far less eloquent 😂
may i tell you something so that you appreciate your southern accent more ...now dont get me wrong depending on what type of southern accent you have you might not sound as poetic as you might in another type of southern accent ..but its subjective anyways how you hear an accent it all depends on wether you associate the accent with somethig you veiw as prestigous or exotic or rustic or noble endjucated or lower class ...and its sad because your missing out i for example have a lower class english accent and americans labour under the delusion im speaking the kings ...and i know some highly articuate americans southern old boys with such textured southern accents who sound ever so eloquent...americans seem to be incapable of hearing accents from england scotland wales ireland or northern ireland without associating something incredibly exotic sophisticated and noble with it even if one sounds like one comes from a sink estate and even if they do think you sound like a british alleycat they still think it sounds ever so quaint and somehow cleverer then someone from detroit ...dont get me wrong its no skin off of my back its comforting to know if im ever hard up on postive attention i can fly to the statse one really feels like a lowkey celebrity in america with a british accent ..but it does show how insular and detached american culture is from europe and the uk and ireland ...
Some of these people on the video are using slang words ,if they used the proper word and spoke slower , may be they would be understood a lot better .
Bro, you wondered round my home city. I can factually confirm all of what my fellow "weegies" telt you was all absolutely correct. Albeit, the turn of phrase we use is sooooo much more diverse and creative than one could hope to learn on holiday. But I definitely enjoyed how you seemed to have such a great time in Glasgow. Love from Scotland 🏴 👊🏼
Back in the day, in 1985, I got to live in Hong Kong for a year, and your way of speaking and switching between English and Cantonese reminds me of those lovely folks there. It was different then. I enjoyed your edition of the video very much. Keep up the good work.
Omg 😂😂😂 this is so hilarious watching the video as a Glasgow born chinese! It’s brought me so much joy hearing some of the slang and how awesome we weegies are! We really are the best lol! I found it really strange moving to Aberdeen from Glasgow and how people just couldn’t wrap their heads that I was from Glasgow but also am chinese too! It was really funny…I used to say to Aberdeen people ‘yeah there’s lots of us type of folk in Glasgow!’ All in good humour
I saw a woman in a Chinese buffet in Dundee asking the manager in a slow and condesending manner "So, how long have you been in Scotland?". The guy just went "Am fae Glesgae hen!" Nearly pee'd myself.
@@vandamme6379 I used to own a restaurant in north of Scotland and I took a couple over to a table…asked him what he’d like to order and he goes ‘eh…can you read this? Pointing to the menu?’ It was in plain English and I’m f*****g speaking English to the twat…needless to say I had to say something similar to are you also illiterate ya knob? Yes I’m Scottish born Chinese but I can read…honestly the ignorance blows me away.
@@vandamme6379 I had this problem when I moved to Aberdeen from Glasgow (I’m Glasgow born Chinese) and anytime I spoke out aloud it was a double take cos the Chinese look and the Glasgow accent didn’t go together….I just said yeah there’s lots of us kind down in Glasgow you should go visit the place. It was all in jest and usually friendly but you do get a few twots being ignorant. Albeit I did almost jump into a fight with a bloke who asked me if I was bringing another chinaman into the country when I was 8 months pregnant….my real Glasgow Ned came flying out and my husband had to hold me down from flying into this idiot…looking back it was funny cos here you got a chinese pregnant lady about to fly for the guy being held back by said husband
@@scotttait2197they're absolutely a weegie. An ethnically Chinese person born/raised in Scotland is more Scottish than an ethnically Scottish person born/raised in another country. Wouldn't you say?
I was dating a girl from Glasgow. Being an American, I was shocked I could understand everything she said. The day I found out she had been watering down and Americanizing her accent for me was when she took a phone call from her mom and turned into Shrek right in front of my eyes.
I love the Scottish dialect. I'm from Missouri, and probably am mostly descended from German settlers, but this area was also heavily populated by Scots-Irish immigrants, and I can hear a lot of similarities with this to the southern drawl you hear in the American South.
The dialect changes around the country to be fair, there are probably as many accents in the UK as there are in the United States despite the size difference
The phrase origin “steaming” was from when alcohol was banned. Except you could drink on steamboats. So people would do just that hence the phrase. Glad you had fun in Glasgow. I hold it dear to my heart.
@@gingerfellah5665 no they travelled along the rivers to the resorts on steamboats. Alcohol wasn't banned, just restricted to certain times and days. Day trips for the working class were a thing, charabancs, but that wasn't holidays. Workers got decent hols. Glesga Fair, onywan?
I agree: the further north you go in Britain, the warmer people are. The people in the south aren't bad, they're just more private, less expressive, generally speaking. London is a case all its own. I've met lots of wonderful, friendly people in England (and I have beloved relatives there) and the warmest people I met were from Sunderland.
Amazingly I enjoyed this and I'm from Edinburgh - fair play to all the weegies involved in this, ye dun yersel's and the country proud !. P.s Torres - just a small point, in Scotland it's 'Whisky' - 'whiskey' is the Irish stuff !
My dad is from Glasgow. How blessed I have been to visit several times to see my wonderful Scottish cousins, aunt and uncle and more distant cousins. If it wasn’t so grey, I’d already have moved there
I live in the far south west of England, my best friend when I was 4 in 1983 was a Scottish kid called John who moved here when he was 2, he just sounded like me, but his mum had and still has THE deepest Scottish accent I've ever heard. The reason I can understand even the deepest Scottish accent to this day is because of her lol
Nice to see Glasgow presented positively. I grew up in Glasgow so it was a clear as mud. Much of it it never heard before. Things change with time. I’ve always found it a friendly place. With lots of humour.
I got to appreciate the variety of Scottish dialects when I was living in Scotland in 1989/90. That was in Aberdeen. The local Scots called Doric is really harsh even more that Glasvegian. The people in Edinburgh spoke with a rather smooth accent and in the Highlands there was a melodic singing added to the common Scottish harshness.
I got a chance to learn a wee bit of the Scottish culture through a friend. He's a Scotsman who got married to a Mexican woman. He came to Mexico, we became friends and we would get steaming at least three times a week. Good times, Stevie, good times, mate!
Lols welcome to Scotland, my home town! Watch u guys all the time! U guys are a great couple! Scottish people are amazing and friendliest of all! Enjoy the whisky!
The gentleman at 7:33, I think, actually said "Somebody, my pal, said yesterday; [he] went 'Aye, see that shop around the corner? It's on its arse!'" The Scottish 'Somebody' almost omits that 'o' syllable in some dialects, particularly Glaswegian, so it sounds more like "sumb-dy" when spoken. I'm impressed how close you got to what he actually said though. I'm from Scotland and, while I understood it immediately, it took me a couple runs to figure out what words he used!
Glasgow is used in lots of films, the big attack scene in World War Z was filmed in George Square and it was also used in The Batman as parts of Gotham Just a wee tip with the subtitles, in Scotland, Whisky has no "e" in it (as you can see on the bottle)
dude, you're cool! subscribing. i didn't see any vids about the Philippines in your channel. hope you get to visit here soon. we'll be visiting HK again next year. i have friends from Scotland (Aberdeen) who have relocated here and I can say their swally lifestyle has rubbed off on me. we get tanked almost everyday - start drinking at 9 in the evening and adjourn by 5 or 6 AM.
What a great video full of respect to Scottish people. Spent some time working in Aberdeen, visited Edinburgh. Great people, still have many friends!! Aaaaaaand... lady saying that Aberdonians have less strong accent - NOPE )))
When I was 23, 24. I go out 3 times a week, once in the club, twice in the pub. I drink mostly beer, from time to time some tequila, I barely touch any other booze, like whisky, gin or other stuff. I don’t consider myself a alcoholic, but because of the vibe of the city, I have to. BTW, I was in Prague, Czech Republic. If you fancy beer specifically, you definitely should go and have some.
AWWW people are so friendly here !!!! My roomate is an international student from Scotland and he told me that I should visit Scotland with him someday! Totally want to do it
As a Glaswegian, Cardiff is my second favourite city in the UK. I actually have a Chinese friend who completely fell in love with Wales and moved to Cardiff, so you're not the only Chinese person who loved Wales! http
Canadian with Glaswegian parents. I can tell you, they never lose their accents no matter where they move to in the world. I understood everything they all said, even the super broad accent guy. He sounds just like my Dad. 😊
Grew up in Glasgow, this is the best review I think we've ever had, haha. Good job! Love the drone shot of Crown Park Circus. If you ever get the chance for a wee wander, I suggest walking around Dowanhill in the West End followed by dinner in the Ubiquitous Chip. The West End is the best place, arguably, on Earth. BTW: "Steamers" - the reason we call people Steamers is because back in the 1800's, people got so drunk at the weekend they couldn't work on a Monday. So, the people who owned Mills, Corporations etc [who were also the government] banned drinking on a Sunday in towns, so people used to take a Steam Boat down the Clyde to pubs outside the town to get drunk....hence, getting 'Steam Boats' or 'Steamin'!
Great video. Always had good experiences in Scotland. Small detail for the subs: Scotch whisky doesn't have the letter "e" in it. That would be Irish whiskey. Getting that wrong is still a hangable offence in some parts of the world.
i’m the aberdeen girl at the end 🤣 was nice meeting you !!
7 months late, but you're such a braw lady. Love you, mate. 🏴🏴🏴
Very funny. Laughing so hard 😂
Hi babe
Lovely aberdeen girl~😍
A wee late😂😂😂😂 a wee wee..😅😅 Im from India. You are gorgeous lady.. aye! Hmm now i used more often a Scottish words😂
"what time is acceptable to drink?"
"anytime"
this is the most scottish answer
Can't buy alcohol after 10 though
@@JangoBlader but you can drink after 10 right?
@@andro_system I think so but there is a law here in Scotland where you can't buy alcohol after 10pm and England doesn't have that law
@@JangoBlader than you must stock of some drink for the late sessions of the night.
You get out of bed, grab a drink, and keep going ...
You are totally right, the further north to travel in the UK the more friendly people become. I was born in Cumbria and grew up in Lancashire. I moved to Cambridge for work and people down here are definitely not as friendly. If you try and spark up a friendly conversation with someone in the grocery queue in London, they will look at you like you insulted their mother. Do the same in Scotland and they'll speak to you like they've known you all your life and you'll probably have a new friend.
Aren't they more racist up north compared to London?
There's a video where this man was drunk at a party went out for a cig and went back in the wrong house and fell asleep. Luckily the strangers gave him a cig and a brew lol. He helped himself to a pot noodle and kipped on the couch. There's a video on here.
Not true
@@seb_allen Tis true.
I’m Scottish and not much people have thick accents
That girl at 4:00 is SO LOVELY. As a Londoner I love Scotland so much and I am proud to be their neighbour 😁😁
I love her
As an alcoholic frenchman, the few days I passed in Scotland were amazing. It felt like I finally found the place to be.
As a Scotsman, having now lived in France for more than 38 years, I'm proud to say that I still understood everything my Scottish compatriots said. Thank you for a very entertaining 11+ minutes. I'm glad you enjoyed your visit.
@@davewilliams7515 What's wrong with moving away from Scotland but still being proud to be a Scot? Sometimes life (and love) decide where we live. Maybe you're too young ?
I lived there 30 years ago and still understand it.. 😅
Why would you leave such a nice country
I was speaking to these French uni students one day, and It broke my heart they had never heard of the Auld Alliance.
Me too. I´m a Glaswegian who has been living in Colombia for 18 years. The Scots are magic, and the accent is music to my ears. The weather's a wee bit better here, though. :-)
having the accent of a Scot and the hand gestures of an Italian makes it brilliant!
Lies again? AMWF CHINESE
Aye aye right, matey🙄
Which accent of a Scot? We don’t all sound like we’re from Glasgow.
@@edyedyedyedy my bad, meant glasgow
Paolo Di Canio should have stuck around Celtic a wee bit longer. :D
I love Glasgow and Scottish people, they are super friendly and the place is super beautiful. Would love to go back there again someday.
I like Finland.
From Cardiff but always loved to visit my fellow Celts up north
No we're not I'll fight you🤣
Not if you are English.
I'm sure theres plenty of great people, and I've never been myself so I wouldn't know, but err not really heard it referred to as friendly and beautiful lol
I like how the kid said, "I'm immune." lolol
she was cute, if anyone knows her at...?
@@thomashall4296she was a school child mate
@@thomashall4296NONCE ALERT 🚨
Man I’ve lived in London for almost 15 years and seeing people this friendly in Scotland took me by surprise. People in London are extremely rude and aggressive most of the time. I haven’t travelled enough I’d say in the UK but will definitely go and see different places soon. Great video.
Edinburgh is just 4.5 hours from London by train, go for a weekend and have a great time!
There are no Londoners left in London, but they used to be very friendly. If you went to a market the cockney men would call ever woman they served love or darling. But this was frowned upon by the newcomers and there are now no cockney left there. Though to be fair all large cities are unfriendly places, my wife is from Paris and it's the same there. Though as soon as you go out into the countryside people are much more friendly whatever country you are in, it's a city thing.
I hope you've visited by now. It's not too expensive to fly here and takes only 1.5 hours. 🤗
@@johnbrereton5229 Glasgow is a big city too, but the culture is different from multinational multi ethnic and business oriented London.
@@fatimadarwish-gv2er
Glasgow has actually quite a small population compared to London and smaller more homogenous Cities like Glasgow with a population of around 630,000, are definately more friendly. I noticed a similar friendliness in Manchester, which has a similar sized populatio to Glasgow. However the population of London is now around 10million with a Muslim Mayor and over 300 different languages spoken. It's no longer an English city and is very violent and unfriendly.
I love Scotland, it blew my mind that Scotland only has a population of around 5 million, but yet they have so much culture and heritage, really love to visit scotland again
The size of our population doesn’t affect our history and culture as a nation.
It's an inbuilt defence mechanism, when it's either too cold or too wet to go outside you become highly educated in order to move somewhere warmer and drier, then frequently tell everyone how much you miss it and there's no place like it...🤣
And people say Britain doesn’t have culture lol
@@ivartheboneless5969 Racists say that. The reality is it has a lot of culture but there is an obvious agenda to destroy it, and part of being able to do that is to deny that it actually exists.
@@ivartheboneless5969 That is because most of British culture is the worlds default. The Brits really exported their culture all over.
aww, I moved to Glasgow 2 years ago (from a European country), and can confirm, everyone is so nice here. I love it here - thanks Scotland :)
omg that's my dream as well!!!!
Do you mean nederlands/germany/france?
Same here, recenly moved. Great people, great city and absolute shit food. A small price to pay for a happy life.
Your welcome lad 😋
hi i´m karotte mccloud from the clan mccloud
and i am a⋅wortel
Went to Scotland at 2018. And it had caught me by surprise. Stunning and amazing country.
I had the experience about travelling through some European countries and the countries themselves were beautiful and vivid, but the population… However Scottish people turned my experience into a magical one. They were even more friendly than Brazilians, actually. The best part of Scotland is the Scottish people.
Edinburgh and Glasgow are two must destinations for those who visit the UK.
Sounds like folks in east maritimes of Canada or 东北人in China. Some people may think they are rude at first sight but deep down they are super friendly and fun to hang out with
Scotts are not more friendly than Brazilians.
A. Andrade... THAT was really lovely to read. Glad we made you welcome.
Go to Indonesia / Bali.. Let me know what you think about Indonesian or Balinese 😁
@@mangopudding5979 shut up ya puddin ...Scots are mer friendly your just a tatty
(American here) I spent a week in Glasgow maybe 15 years ago, and was floored by how friendly the people were - even though I could only understand them half the time haha. It's so true how no one even bothers with an umbrella - it rains so much they are just immune as that one person said. My host told me only tourists really use them 🤣I travelled a bit around the UK including London and I have to say Glasgow might not have been the "hippest" or most cosmo city I visited, but it was by far the friendliest! Very well kept too, I'd love to go back.
the only time we use brollies is at grassroots football and when its really pishing doon
@@toyositime Oh my gosh, I love these words 😄
I'm from Spain but lived in Scotland for 7 years. The happy friendly people is more a Glasgow thing than Scottish thing I would say. Scottish people are very friendly in general but Glasgow has a special positive energy. Edinburgh is the posh city, one of the most beutiful cities I've seen. Aberdeen is my favourite as it was my first destination and home for the first few years.
I completely agree! I was just in Scotland for 2 weeks and immediately noticed the warm and friendly Glasgow energy as soon as I got there.
Glasgow - the only city in the world where the same person who stabs and mugs you calls you an ambulance ❤
One of the friendliest cities going but still has high crime 😅
Aye, I'm from Glasgow!!!
I'm in glasgow once a year. It's a cheap and cheerful place!
Idk I’d say the friendliness is a Scottish thing in general, not just a Glasgow thing. The only place I’d say that isn’t quite as outgoing and sociable is Edinburgh in my experience and maybe Aberdeen but I’ve never been, just met people from there. Everywhere else people are extremely nice though.
I met unwelcoming and rude ppl in Glasgow, also aggressive and outside Glasgow people seem to be more friendly
托哥的片子无论编辑,剪辑,配乐,时长,对话都很完美,给人活力开心感觉,我想这就是旅游意义的一部份,我不知道托哥是不是华人旅游油管主天花板,但也是我到目前为止看到最好的一个,希望托哥保持谦逊,努力和好学,为我们献上更好看的影片。
谦虚谦虚 这东西没什么天不天花板的 只能说风格不同
确实 看着很舒服 很自信
Aye right🙄 So doae ye ken th’leid?
concordo
Bing chilling
I love Scotland🏴🇲🇻, very friendly environment and very interesting to learn the culture. I like this video. Cool man, awesome, cheers.
Glad you had a great time! It's always interesting to see how our culture is viewed and appreciated from another perspective, Hope the rest of your visit here in Scotland is just as lovely :)
I love stuff like this! Everyone smiling and happy and getting along. Great channel x
You’re a great traveler, open to trying things and chatting with people. I enjoyed coming along with you.
在英国快10年,我真的好喜欢苏格兰 人都很友善 而且威士忌也好喝。
loch ness, Loch Lomond, 好美的地方
Aww this makes me so happy and beaming inside! ☺ I'm so proud to be Scottish and a weegie from Glasgow! This is the first video I've ever watched of yours and the title actually caught my eye. I now live and work in Hong Kong and it's so nice to be reminded of my roots. Glasgow is the best but so is Hong Kong too for different reasons.
I think its amazing and special that so many restaurants are still family owned and not big chains!
What a very polite and kind assessment. You will do well on your travels - thanks for sharing!
The more I watched this video the more similarities I found between Scotland and Mexico. Friendly people, they like to hang out and drink, No ID's required. I was 16 the first time I went to a night club here in Morelia, Mexico. Warm regards to Scottish people.
Si si
yeah hang out and drink like 99% of people of the world haha
True. I'm Scottish and my best mate is from Guadalajara. He moved here 5 years ago and has very easily integrated with the language and humour.
My partner is Scottish, but he came here in Australia when he was 13 years old. Hearing him talk to his parents in their accent is mind-blowing. I love their accent, the way they talk, and their English terms.
Their whit!!!
I was born in the slums of Glasgow, 1948, left in 1966, and many decades later I went back to Glasgow, 1988, with my wife from California and I was her translator as she understood nothing any of my family said to her but they all loved her because they thought I had married a Movie Star because she came from Los Angeles though we lived in San Francisco...
I started back into the dialect after being there for a week.
You can take the boy out of the slums, but you have to take the slums out of the boy.
We say what we mean and we mean what we say... Direct...
Och yerbumsootraewindae..... sort that one out mate.
I was born in a muddy village at the edge of a desert, left the place long ago and there's no single night my heart long to go back and settle their with my people where we have our own accent, rules and culture.
You can leave the place of your origin but you it never leaves your heart, like never.
As a foreigner, after 1 year of studying in England for my Masters degree I thought I was able to speak and understand English fairly decently.....until I went to Inverness.....and then I understood why Italians use their hands when they speak, so I took after them and I used my hands to the fullest extent in an attempt to get my messages across when speaking to locals...the funny thing is that I did not need that, as they understood me; it was me who didn't understand them, but when you don't understand what other people say, you tend to think that they don't understand you either......Scottish people are as lovely as it gets, but as a foreigner you need a "black belt" in English to be able to speak with them and understand half of what they are saying; the other half is local slang which you either need to be there for some time to pick it or you simply won't get it. Also being able to be subjected to banter and drink like a maniac are what you need. No Masters degree required ! 😁
@@mihailfelixdumitresc The mistake you (and many others) make is in thinking that what you get to hear in Scotland is English. Even in Inverness, which is a place where people only started learning English as a second language in the late 19th century, half of what you are hearing is not English. It will be Scots - not "local slang", but a sister language to English that has 1000 years of developing differently and has different linguistic origins.
It's like having learned Standard Spanish and then expecting to understand everything in Portugal or in Italy.
@@mihailfelixdumitresc : Visit Alabama or Mississippi, Georgia or Texas if you want to hear another version of spoken English. Im Scottish and I have a hard time understanding them.
@@alicemilne1444 : Aye a Ken whit yer sayin Hen.
苏格兰人真的超友善热情,在乡村地区更明显,我出去骑行,一路都被人打招呼,感觉超级亲切~~有次大雪天到格拉,下飞机的时候坐旁边的女士一句Welcome Home 直接把我暖到了......
最好玩的一次是我们在一个山区的小镇闲逛,偶遇一位苏格兰老先生,问了个路,完事他居然直接把他刚刚在超市买来准备带回家的鲜花送给我爱人,然后我们就捧着那束花一路hiking下去了👻👻
在中国或亚洲人地区是没有的
@@mcorleone77 台灣有喔
台灣有….才怪
@@vajrachou408 和苏格兰比差远了
@@jackhuang2723 确实,哈哈哈哈
I have studied at University of Glasgow and I can tell you they are the best people in the world. PEOPLE MAKE GLASGOW.
called WEEGIES
Funny, I'm a Scottish lady who has been living in Hong Kong for 20 years & right now I just got a wee bit homesick for Scotland! 😅& yeah, I won't use an umbrella in Hong Kong unless the rain is quite heavy 😂 I get some funny looks, it's just the Scot in me! If you hit the East coast, it's much less rainy!
那你在香港生活这么多年,已经学会粤语或者普通话了吗?如果学会粤语还是很厉害的。
@@woshisuo I know some Cantonese, enough to manage simple everyday things. I get better when I practice but lots of HK friends & collegues will just speak to me in English so I get lazy. I have a few European friends who are fluent in Canto!
As someone born and bred in Glasgow of many generations I am floored by this wonderful video and all the kind comments. Really, honestly, heartfelt thanks,
當年去英國grad trip機緣巧合路過Glasgow, 撞到每個當地人都變言語災難,完全顛覆我對英文口音認知XDD
跟在聽克林貢語一樣 完全無法理解😂
@@Rd2go 竟然比新加坡 印度的英文還難
Liverpool的口音也是。完全听不懂😂
苏格兰人说的不是英语。。。我都要他们拼给我 我才能反应过来😂
去高地,他們的口音更離譜
對於上餐館點瓶啤酒就要被投以異樣眼光的台灣媽媽而言,實在是文化衝擊啊!
謝謝你的街頭訪問,非常自然流暢的提問。
台灣真的蠻跟不上世界的
@@新世界秩序-t4e 文化差異吧,有什麼跟得上跟不上的
Went to Scotland many years ago for my Master's degree. People there are so lovely and pationated as you mentioned. And really it took me 6 month to understand one of my classmates' English for around 50%....haha
I come from a town near Glasgow and I can say the best part of uni was meeting people from every corner of the globe, it was the most incredible experience.
University of Glasgow, my alma mater. The best years of my life were at uni. Just noticed the Ubiquitous Chip and Jinty McGuinty's is still open! We used to go there with my pals, and this was the late 90's!
I'm an American with some Scottish ancestry. I visited Scotland for 12 days in 2006, and it was so beautiful. Great people. They know how to live,... and have contributed much to modern civilization as well.
Highest drug use in Europe. Thay have fallen
You should have come in 1976 , it was sunny then 😂
@@tbrown4080 I checked that... It's other countries now according to what I found....
Scotland is number one for drug users in Europe currently.@@numbers7n
@@tbrown4080it's one thing being negative but it's another being wrong. 0/10 for effort.
Studied in Glasgow 10 years ago. Always wanted to go back to visit. Just one year is enough to make me feel it's my second hometown. That's how nice it was for me.
Aww that's lovely. Where are you from?
I'm from Manchester and have always liked the scots. got lots of scottish family & friends. Kindred spirits.
I've always said it too, you guys have way more in common with us than the Southern softies 😅
Thank you for making this video to show Scotland! It really reminds me the trip to there. The are really friendly.
Scottish people are the friendliest nation I’ve ever seen. ❤
Brilliant! You really “got” Glasgow and the people! One of the best videos on Glasgow I’ve seen. And I’ve subscribed!
Totally agree.
Gotta say I'm impressed by how they still preserve their strong accent.... part of their heritage that they are very proud of!! To a much lesser extent, ppl in HK also preserve their way of speaking English... can't suddenly expect them to speak like the British/Americans if they don't have that exposure or opportunity
lmao thats one way to put it. Never thought of it this way. Thanks for the perspective
After seeing all the people in the world, I still like the Chinese people the most, the kindest and the most cultural
I don't think they think of it as an accent. It's just the way people speak.
This actually isn’t shocking at all in the context of Britain
Note how US accents, Australian accents, Canadian accents etc. will differ between several states, but England alone has accents differing per county. This is because of the historical context; it was not the “Anglo-Saxons” who settled, but instead it was similar to the rest of Europe in which everyone was scattered following the fall of Western Rome. These tribes and clans held their own territories, but most interestingly, they never changed drastically at all, likely due to being an island. The other countries I mentioned above however, had very consistent settlement by Englishmen as the majority, so instead of a bunch of foreigners learning to speak with eachother, they were just Anglos abroad.
A great example is Newcastle, Geordies use Scandinavian words, and for context, this means that Newcastle’s accent has been present before England even united as a country in 927, stemming from around 867 during the Viking invasions.
@@XXXTENTAClON227 most celtic things that we take as Scottish/Irish/Welsh actually started with vikings
Aw, I'm so glad you loved Glasgow. We really do have a lot of slang for going drinking / getting drunk / being drunk. 😆
To be fair, Glaswegian is a dialect that's somewhere between English and Scots, so challenging for even native English speakers sometimes.
I'm from Argentina and I am obsessed with the accent, canny beat a glesga accent 🥰
@Tamara Samaniego If you call a company in the UK especially banks its usually a Glaswegian womans voice they use for the automatic hello/options etc before you get through to a staff member. Even then chances are the staff member is in Glasgow alot of call centres here. I used to work for a mobile phone operator and when the iPhone first launched it was only available from one company ( ours ) and Apple wanted all iPhone calls to go through Glasgow. Supposedly it's the most trust worthy and authoritive accent in the UK, obviously we don't use slang but lol
Jenlavery come to Bali, you willi havva a lot Deffa cultura Atta, Shoulda trya One a lifa
I want to visit Scotland now! People are so sweet ❤
Glasgow is incredible! Make a point to visit and while you’re there, carve out a couple hours to walk through the Necropolis-the Victorian era cemetery just east of Glasgow Green. It’s gorgeous
My wife and I were in Scotland over 30 years ago. I still have the fondest memories of the people and culture of Edinburgh, Inverness, and especially Glasgow. Some day we'll return.
What I love about this is that when they translate the slang into what is supposed to be a common word, the common word is also slang to you 😂 like “steamin” to “boozin”, or “lump ah wood” to “no very bright” lol
蘇格蘭人真的看起來都很友善耶 好讚的影片
大愛!!
经常夸赞人都人都是聪明伶俐的人 我觉得你的头像好靓丽是你本人吗
出乎意料的友善
Very nice。在格拉斯哥讀書,每一天都被本地人的熱情感染。
we are very friendly 💙🏴
Actually the Scottish is not only friendly, but also diligent and practical in workplace ( Englishmen always work in free style ) cos I had met a teacher from Scotland before.
What's that in English?🏴
@Michael Doolan nope. Not since 1960s have stabbings been common. And even then it tended to be Glasgow. And usually gang related. There was a Criminal Code of Conduct that innocents didn't get caught up.
As to English... If you watch Scottish TV News items half the folk being interviewed are English people wanting to get out of the rat race. Maybe it was just you.
@Michael Doolan Completely untrue.
@Michael Doolan yes and they would love ppl who say this to them. Hmm
Doae ye ken th’leid? 🙄
I’m from the U.S. and I just love their accents. I have a southern American accent. People have a hard time with our accent too, but we sound far less eloquent 😂
may i tell you something so that you appreciate your southern accent more ...now dont get me wrong depending on what type of southern accent you have you might not sound as poetic as you might in another type of southern accent ..but its subjective anyways how you hear an accent it all depends on wether you associate the accent with somethig you veiw as prestigous or exotic or rustic or noble endjucated or lower class ...and its sad because your missing out i for example have a lower class english accent and americans labour under the delusion im speaking the kings ...and i know some highly articuate americans southern old boys with such textured southern accents who sound ever so eloquent...americans seem to be incapable of hearing accents from england scotland wales ireland or northern ireland without associating something incredibly exotic sophisticated and noble with it even if one sounds like one comes from a sink estate and even if they do think you sound like a british alleycat they still think it sounds ever so quaint and somehow cleverer then someone from detroit ...dont get me wrong its no skin off of my back its comforting to know if im ever hard up on postive attention i can fly to the statse one really feels like a lowkey celebrity in america with a british accent ..but it does show how insular and detached american culture is from europe and the uk and ireland ...
long sounds and big hearts are different. a big heart says all.
Some of these people on the video are using slang words ,if they used the proper word and spoke slower , may be they would be understood a lot better .
👌👌👍👍👍
Bro, you wondered round my home city.
I can factually confirm all of what my fellow "weegies" telt you was all absolutely correct. Albeit, the turn of phrase we use is sooooo much more diverse and creative than one could hope to learn on holiday.
But I definitely enjoyed how you seemed to have such a great time in Glasgow.
Love from Scotland 🏴 👊🏼
Back in the day, in 1985, I got to live in Hong Kong for a year, and your way of speaking and switching between English and Cantonese reminds me of those lovely folks there. It was different then. I enjoyed your edition of the video very much. Keep up the good work.
Omg 😂😂😂 this is so hilarious watching the video as a Glasgow born chinese! It’s brought me so much joy hearing some of the slang and how awesome we weegies are! We really are the best lol! I found it really strange moving to Aberdeen from Glasgow and how people just couldn’t wrap their heads that I was from Glasgow but also am chinese too! It was really funny…I used to say to Aberdeen people ‘yeah there’s lots of us type of folk in Glasgow!’ All in good humour
I saw a woman in a Chinese buffet in Dundee asking the manager in a slow and condesending manner "So, how long have you been in Scotland?". The guy just went "Am fae Glesgae hen!" Nearly pee'd myself.
@@vandamme6379 I used to own a restaurant in north of Scotland and I took a couple over to a table…asked him what he’d like to order and he goes ‘eh…can you read this? Pointing to the menu?’ It was in plain English and I’m f*****g speaking English to the twat…needless to say I had to say something similar to are you also illiterate ya knob? Yes I’m Scottish born Chinese but I can read…honestly the ignorance blows me away.
@@vandamme6379 I had this problem when I moved to Aberdeen from Glasgow (I’m Glasgow born Chinese) and anytime I spoke out aloud it was a double take cos the Chinese look and the Glasgow accent didn’t go together….I just said yeah there’s lots of us kind down in Glasgow you should go visit the place. It was all in jest and usually friendly but you do get a few twots being ignorant. Albeit I did almost jump into a fight with a bloke who asked me if I was bringing another chinaman into the country when I was 8 months pregnant….my real Glasgow Ned came flying out and my husband had to hold me down from flying into this idiot…looking back it was funny cos here you got a chinese pregnant lady about to fly for the guy being held back by said husband
Don't call yersel a weegie!
@@scotttait2197they're absolutely a weegie. An ethnically Chinese person born/raised in Scotland is more Scottish than an ethnically Scottish person born/raised in another country. Wouldn't you say?
Omg no way, that’s such a lovely video about Glasgow. Thanks for showing it from a nice point of view 😊 and aye we love to drink 😬
HA HA - I'm from Glasgow, but living in Hong Kong. I love that your channel has come up on my UA-cam!!!!!
那你在香港生活这么多年,已经学会粤语或者普通话了吗?如果学会粤语还是很厉害的。
I was dating a girl from Glasgow. Being an American, I was shocked I could understand everything she said. The day I found out she had been watering down and Americanizing her accent for me was when she took a phone call from her mom and turned into Shrek right in front of my eyes.
I'm from Glasgow and I rarely drink too and I have to agree with Taylor when she said she would have around 30 drinks.
I love the Scottish dialect. I'm from Missouri, and probably am mostly descended from German settlers, but this area was also heavily populated by Scots-Irish immigrants, and I can hear a lot of similarities with this to the southern drawl you hear in the American South.
Same. Fitsz-Randolph Scottish south west MO
Scot’s Irish wre Scottish
@@preciseIy Anglo Saxon Scot’s you mean
SCOTS are the real hill folks in the southern states, and they made America, read what G Washington said. SLAINTE
The dialect changes around the country to be fair, there are probably as many accents in the UK as there are in the United States despite the size difference
竟然直接敲人家門真的太好笑了 還居然是粉絲XD
如果是我,我就直接把音乐关掉,然后装作没人🤣
@@selphychen2161 社恐hh
这真的很疯狂,但就是喜欢他这样疯狂🤣🤣🤣
哈哈哈 要是不知道的情况还是有点可怕
不知道 Karia Cobian 貼 這些 詐騙釣魚網站,每一個可以賺多少錢,才會讓他們願意做這樣缺德的事呢?
The Word fuck is originally from Scotland from the 16th century .... Proud of that tbf 😂😂
I never knew that, cheers!
@@bobbobertbobberton1073 Sadly, it's not true. The etymology of the word fuck is not really known for certain. There are a lot of different theories.
Someone's been winding u up mate
3:52 - "I'm immune" was funny and cute from that lad!
The phrase origin “steaming” was from when alcohol was banned. Except you could drink on steamboats. So people would do just that hence the phrase.
Glad you had fun in Glasgow. I hold it dear to my heart.
Just had to fact-check that and it's true! (It was banned after 11pm and on Sundays and has a few more details!)
@@gingerfellah5665 no they travelled along the rivers to the resorts on steamboats. Alcohol wasn't banned, just restricted to certain times and days. Day trips for the working class were a thing, charabancs, but that wasn't holidays. Workers got decent hols. Glesga Fair, onywan?
Steam boats in Glasgow ? That was in America 🤷
Im trying to bring in " a diabolical anhiliation" for getting on the sesh, spread the word.
@@belindakennedy5828 plenty of steamboats in Glasgow. It was a shipbuilding city.
omg i didnt know Scottish are so CUTE!!! the boy who says he's immune to the rain omgg they are all so cutee
终于!我最亲爱的格拉斯哥!谢谢托哥带我回顾了一遍我人生中最爱的城市,people make Glasgow!
There is almost NOTHING I love in this world more than the Scottish accent
Thanks from 🏴 ❤❤
(Except Irish)
Dublin accent is the best and I have no affiliation with Ireland.
I agree: the further north you go in Britain, the warmer people are. The people in the south aren't bad, they're just more private, less expressive, generally speaking. London is a case all its own. I've met lots of wonderful, friendly people in England (and I have beloved relatives there) and the warmest people I met were from Sunderland.
Just returned from Glasgow after spending one year there. Miss the place so bad, except the weather. People are so great and hilarious
Amazingly I enjoyed this and I'm from Edinburgh - fair play to all the weegies involved in this, ye dun yersel's and the country proud !. P.s Torres - just a small point, in Scotland it's 'Whisky' - 'whiskey' is the Irish stuff !
拜託再多拍多介紹蘇格蘭,我真的好好奇!
My dad is from Glasgow. How blessed I have been to visit several times to see my wonderful Scottish cousins, aunt and uncle and more distant cousins.
If it wasn’t so grey, I’d already have moved there
Long life to Scott ! ! ❤❤ and thanks for the video
UA-cam brought me this video randomly and man I could not stop smiling and laughing. People in Scotland have such great energy.
Graduated from University of Glasgow 10 years ago. Thank you for showing me Glasgow what it looks today.
You’re welcome mate
I live in the far south west of England, my best friend when I was 4 in 1983 was a Scottish kid called John who moved here when he was 2, he just sounded like me, but his mum had and still has THE deepest Scottish accent I've ever heard. The reason I can understand even the deepest Scottish accent to this day is because of her lol
Nice to see Glasgow presented positively. I grew up in Glasgow so it was a clear as mud. Much of it it never heard before. Things change with time. I’ve always found it a friendly place. With lots of humour.
I got to appreciate the variety of Scottish dialects when I was living in Scotland in 1989/90. That was in Aberdeen. The local Scots called Doric is really harsh even more that Glasvegian. The people in Edinburgh spoke with a rather smooth accent and in the Highlands there was a melodic singing added to the common Scottish harshness.
Am Scottish from fife and I don't understand people from doric,have to get my mum to translate for me 😂😂
I got a chance to learn a wee bit of the Scottish culture through a friend. He's a Scotsman who got married to a Mexican woman. He came to Mexico, we became friends and we would get steaming at least three times a week. Good times, Stevie, good times, mate!
Lols welcome to Scotland, my home town! Watch u guys all the time! U guys are a great couple! Scottish people are amazing and friendliest of all! Enjoy the whisky!
The gentleman at 7:33, I think, actually said "Somebody, my pal, said yesterday; [he] went 'Aye, see that shop around the corner? It's on its arse!'"
The Scottish 'Somebody' almost omits that 'o' syllable in some dialects, particularly Glaswegian, so it sounds more like "sumb-dy" when spoken.
I'm impressed how close you got to what he actually said though. I'm from Scotland and, while I understood it immediately, it took me a couple runs to figure out what words he used!
Thank you
you got it so right
Glasgow is used in lots of films, the big attack scene in World War Z was filmed in George Square and it was also used in The Batman as parts of Gotham
Just a wee tip with the subtitles, in Scotland, Whisky has no "e" in it (as you can see on the bottle)
it does if its Irish
@@Maxlump why would they sell Irish whisk(e)y in Scotland, lol?
Those buildings are stunning.
dude, you're cool! subscribing. i didn't see any vids about the Philippines in your channel. hope you get to visit here soon. we'll be visiting HK again next year.
i have friends from Scotland (Aberdeen) who have relocated here and I can say their swally lifestyle has rubbed off on me. we get tanked almost everyday - start drinking at 9 in the evening and adjourn by 5 or 6 AM.
I think it is the most engaging and expressive of all the English accents.
It? Aside from the one woman at the end of the video, who is from Aberdeen, this accent is Glaswegian. Not everyone speaks like this in Scotland.
What a great video full of respect to Scottish people. Spent some time working in Aberdeen, visited Edinburgh. Great people, still have many friends!! Aaaaaaand... lady saying that Aberdonians have less strong accent - NOPE )))
This is such a cool video, love hearing the difference in the accents.
Amazing video that made Glesga look better than it is 😂
Have been studying in Glasgow for just a year, and it's definitely a super lovely place with all the friendliest ppl around😃
glad you’re enjoying it
When I was 23, 24. I go out 3 times a week, once in the club, twice in the pub. I drink mostly beer, from time to time some tequila, I barely touch any other booze, like whisky, gin or other stuff. I don’t consider myself a alcoholic, but because of the vibe of the city, I have to. BTW, I was in Prague, Czech Republic. If you fancy beer specifically, you definitely should go and have some.
Oh wow I've just spent a week here on a business trip haha. Enjoyed practising chinese with some great people there!
All the way from argentina
I’m starting to love Scotland!
AWWW people are so friendly here !!!! My roomate is an international student from Scotland and he told me that I should visit Scotland with him someday! Totally want to do it
啊,回想起我在威尔士的日子,威尔士人也特别好特别淳朴善良。有次我在卡迪夫KING STREET问路,问某个ARCADE在哪里,被问的小伙子给我讲两遍,我一脸懵逼,因为刚到不久,哥们直接带我去了。我真的惊讶又感激,我在国内时候都没给外国人这么带路过(反思)。
As a Glaswegian, Cardiff is my second favourite city in the UK. I actually have a Chinese friend who completely fell in love with Wales and moved to Cardiff, so you're not the only Chinese person who loved Wales! http
The more north you go, the more kind, nice,friendly, generous people you find.
well now I know why my Glasgow colleagues are always talking about the weather and so happy when sun shines.
This has gotta be one of the best vlogs looking at language. Aye! I love it! Keep it up mate.
As an English guy with Scottish roots, I love the food in Scotland. So long it is not Scottish food. Great international cuisine.
That pink haired girl was the most friendly pink haired girl. She is awesome lol
Make me want to go to Scotland 😂 thanks for the video!
Scotch whisky is spelt Whisky ( without the e ). Irish Whiskey is (with the e) is made differently. As you can see on the bottle at 2:40
Canadian with Glaswegian parents. I can tell you, they never lose their accents no matter where they move to in the world. I understood everything they all said, even the super broad accent guy. He sounds just like my Dad. 😊
Grew up in Glasgow, this is the best review I think we've ever had, haha. Good job! Love the drone shot of Crown Park Circus. If you ever get the chance for a wee wander, I suggest walking around Dowanhill in the West End followed by dinner in the Ubiquitous Chip. The West End is the best place, arguably, on Earth.
BTW: "Steamers" - the reason we call people Steamers is because back in the 1800's, people got so drunk at the weekend they couldn't work on a Monday. So, the people who owned Mills, Corporations etc [who were also the government] banned drinking on a Sunday in towns, so people used to take a Steam Boat down the Clyde to pubs outside the town to get drunk....hence, getting 'Steam Boats' or 'Steamin'!
Great video. Always had good experiences in Scotland. Small detail for the subs: Scotch whisky doesn't have the letter "e" in it. That would be Irish whiskey. Getting that wrong is still a hangable offence in some parts of the world.
@Coal Miki, aye to that.