Scotland

[ US /ˈskɑtɫənd/ ]
NOUN
  1. one of the four countries that make up the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland; located on the northern part of the island of Great Britain; famous for bagpipes and plaids and kilts
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How To Use Scotland In A Sentence

  • A great deal of whiskey is made in Scotland.
  • It brings prestige to Scotland on a shoestring, and a great deal is done by people for whom it's a crusade, not a job.
  • He recalls that, in the painful heat of the moment, he was ‘the first to miscall the parentage’ of the future Scotland manager.
  • He discussions certain sparsely settled areas (the Highlands of Scotland, for example) as requiring less division of labor than more densely settled areas, and argues that this will slow down the development of manufacture, which makes a great deal of sense. A Bland and Deadly Courtesy
  • In Scotland there are groups of people who are fighting hard to keep Gaelic alive.
  • He has written a natural history of Scotland.
  • We've seen how things turned out for Scotland's national football manager; matters are organised no differently in the more modest context that is Scottish shinty.
  • ‘Welcome to Scotland, laddie,’ growls Getch in his best through-the-beard burr.
  • Although the World Cup is all encompassing at the moment, when it comes to sport there is no more spine-tingling moment than when 65,000 fans at Murrayfield sing ‘Flower of Scotland’.
  • ‘We have to win,’ the Scotland coach affirms with a bluffness which only Australians can pull off.
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