There are many actually.
Dictionary of the Scots Language was created in 2001.
Although Scots is recognized as a language, it's really more of a dialect based on Old English.
Luxembourgish Pennsylvania German Alemannic German Austro-Bavarian German Mócheno language Cimbrian language Hutterite German Yiddish Low Franconian Dutch and its dialects Afrikaans Low German West Low German East Low German Plautdietsch (Mennonite Low German) English Lowland Scots Yola (extinct) Icelandic Faroese Greenlandic Norse (extinct) Norn (extinct) Danish (Nowegian and Danish are the same language) Swedish Gutnish
Four. The old 'Scots' language is almost extinct nowadays.
It's not. And it's Scott's. The only relation was when the Anglo-Saxons invaded the Celts and took over their country which they called Angleland which was later named England.
Northumbrian English (later known as Scots)
Harold Ian Miltner has written: 'Scots-- as a re-born standard language' -- subject(s): History, Language and culture, Scots language
The Scots language has its basis in Old English (or "Inglis", as the Scottish people called it at the time). A number of pidgins and creoles also have their basis in English, but Scots is recognised as a separate language.
Shes: German, Scots-Irish
World remains world. Scottish is not an actual language, Scots is the recognised language. Scots is a variation of the English language involving Scottish slang. World does not have a slang term.
scotish and welsh
yes