NOUN
- an inhabitant of Glasgow
ADJECTIVE
- of or relating to or characteristic of Glasgow or its inhabitants
How To Use Glaswegian In A Sentence
- The singer somehow manages to make a heavy Glaswegian accent sound rivetingly sexy, especially on Dance With Me's hypnotic tribal churn.
- His presence during virtually all the major dramas studding the club's history over the past three and a half decades – all except the miracle in Istanbul, perhaps – gives the 60-year-old Glaswegian a special place, perhaps a unique one, in the supporters' hearts, making him the only true heir to the kingdom established by Bill Shankly and consolidated by Bob Paisley. Kenny Dalglish's touch deserts him in case of misplaced solidarity | Richard Williams
- His accent lends itself to the Glaswegian demotic, to ‘haw’ and ‘bam’.
- He made his name painting brutal depictions of Glaswegian down-and-outs, hardmen and football thugs.
- The Glaswegian came close to a third century break near the end, before O'Sullivan finally secured his expected victory.
- Glaswegians everywhere were celebrating the arrival of the fine weather by undoing the top toggle on their duffel-coats.
- I have never heard Ms Grant speak and I do not know or care if her accent is cut-glass BBC English, Scouse or Glaswegian.
- The working-class demotic in which the novel is narrated is a highly literary construct, just like the Glaswegian dialect of James Kelman, but this takes nothing away from the book's compassion or bruising emotional force.
- Everything, from the glaikit, Glaswegian characterisations to the physical comedy (more panto than farce), is tailored to the comic actor's public persona.
- Dark Earth is the story of a young Glaswegian couple, Euan and Valerie, questing for quality time alone together as they visit the Antonine Wall in West Lothian.