How To Use Glaswegian In A Sentence
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The singer somehow manages to make a heavy Glaswegian accent sound rivetingly sexy, especially on Dance With Me's hypnotic tribal churn.
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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
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His accent lends itself to the Glaswegian demotic, to ‘haw’ and ‘bam’.
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He made his name painting brutal depictions of Glaswegian down-and-outs, hardmen and football thugs.
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The Glaswegian came close to a third century break near the end, before O'Sullivan finally secured his expected victory.
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Glaswegians everywhere were celebrating the arrival of the fine weather by undoing the top toggle on their duffel-coats.
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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.
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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.
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Everything, from the glaikit, Glaswegian characterisations to the physical comedy (more panto than farce), is tailored to the comic actor's public persona.
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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.
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The Glaswegian actor and fledgling playwright was broke, fed up with acting, and hungry for a second child.
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Its melancholy cranes are lit at night not as a sign of vitality but as a valedictory salute to an industrial past for which most Glaswegians - particularly those who never banged a rivet - are nostalgic.
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Slim, bald, and carefully courteous, he is the most understated Glaswegian you could meet, palpably different from the aggressively rumbustious salesmen that used to dominate the arms industry.
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She had called it pilaf, we Glaswegianised the name and, I suspect, vulgarised the recipe.
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At a stroke, Glasgow's got-it, flaunt-it streets of swank are going to look decidedly 10 minutes ago as hordes of Glaswegian fashion victims board the train to Waverley station for the hottest retail style experience around.
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If Donald was a Labour man, he was also a Glaswegian through and through.
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Glaswegian writer James Kelman gave voice to the oppressed, dispossessed, disillusioned working class, portraying characters such as Robert Hines in Bus Conductor Hines, Sammy Samuels in How Late it Was, How Late or the hundreds of characters in his short stories spending their existences on the broo or just talking in the pub.
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Glaswegians in 1405 had a better diet than the citizens of 2005, eating their “five-a-day” 600 years ahead of its time.
Food and Drink
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Vast tracts of class and cash separate these two very different islands in the Glaswegian archipelago.
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` ` No sae bad as that, '' said the Glaswegian, --- ` ` no a'thegither and outright sae bad as that; but he became a levier of black-mail, wider and farther than ever it was raised in our day, a through the Lennox and Menteith, and up to the gates o '
Rob Roy
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The Glaswegian glottal stop faded, the vocabulary expanded, and there were rare, uneven attempts at conversation.
AN OLDER WOMAN
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Steven has a Glaswegian accent.
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Glaswegians emerged as the wallflowers at 58 per cent below the average number of social days and nights out attended.
Times, Sunday Times
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My good friend Dave, formerly the Glaswegian Miserablist, tries to help out. "Come join me at Ibrox, the home of fair-play and sportsmanship.
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He started drinking at 14 when his alcoholic, Glaswegian grandmother would wake him for his 4am milk round with a dram of whisky.
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This leads the gallus Glaswegian to look up an old flame, an expert in ley lines and mysticism who sets him on a trail of ancient burial routes that leads him deep beneath the ancient foundations of a Glasgow church.
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Harris was a Glaswegian Greek-Cypriot with a vile temper.
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An inebriate Glaswegian was ahead of me in the queue.
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No sae bad as that," said the Glaswegian, -- "no a'thegither and outright sae bad as that; but he became a levier of black-mail, wider and farther than ever it was raised in our day, a through the Lennox and Menteith, and up to the gates o 'Stirling Castle.
Rob Roy — Complete
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Irvine and Rita cleverly cashed in on Glaswegians' profligate delight in dressing up and swanking it up.
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The cover of that book is more reminiscent of of the beach in Ayr in summertime than Hawaii – looks like a Glaswegian family on holidays!
Hawaii: Paradise or Polar? « Awful Library Books
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When two young Glaswegian girls open a bright yellow café in the middle of York, you know it has to be something special.
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There will also be plenty of Glaswegian humour, a thimbleful of alcohol or two, and not a Hooray Henry in sight.
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George Thomas, a much-travelled Glaswegian, is a member of the PSOE, the Spanish socialist party, in Xabia on the Costa Blanca, which will have a number of expats on its candidates' list, although he is not under any illusions about the difficulties of integration.
Most Brits in Spain say no gracias to integration
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For those of you who don't know the gobby Glaswegian here he is at his finest moment.
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With the exception of a certain Glaswegian misery guts, just about everybody in English football would like to see him make it.
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Songs of 19th century weavers are preserved alongside current anti-war parodies like the wonderful Glaswegian squib sung to the tune of the Italian resistance song, ‘Bella Ciao’.
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In the final few strides the Glaswegian eased past both Richards and Catherine Murthy, the Welshwoman who had previously held the fastest time by a Briton this year.
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Glaswegian is not one to be blinded by the demands of history or by his role as leader of a steely new generation of British swimmers.
Times, Sunday Times
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Few bands have emerged so perfectly formed, and lost their way so dramatically, as Glaswegian septet Belle and Sebastian.
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There is a certain inevitability about the Glaswegian band coming up with an idea like this.
Times, Sunday Times
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And in this smart pub, where a Glaswegian salad is the order of the day, that's the cue for another round of reminiscing.
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Results with my rather more assertive Glaswegian cat cast some doubt on the method being generalisable to the set of all cats.
Inventors, take note