Scotland's language is Teutonic

Scotland's language is Teutonic
Their culture is Norse
And their food is French.
Yet you call them Gaelic or Celtic.

Attached: 800px-Languages_of_Scotland_1400_AD.svg.png (800x1217, 124.23K)

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youtube.com/watch?v=-cvg5yiUht8&feature=youtu.be&t=22
bbc.com/travel/story/20201012-the-surprising-origin-of-fried-chicken
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playing the bagpipes, wearing kilts, being named Hamish and drinking the isce bheatha is norse?

stfu larper ur not norse

>And their food is French
Haggis ain't fucking french
And neither is irn bru or pried mars bars

*uisge-beatha

We have bagpipes up here.
youtube.com/watch?v=-cvg5yiUht8&feature=youtu.be&t=22

>the only food from scotland is haggis
Fried Chicken, world famous scottish food, was brought from France.
>highland
For 90% of scottish history most scottish people havent like any of that. everything you listed didnt become popular unitl the 1950s.

nearly all scottish culture is norse.

>Fried Chicken
Ask anyone where fried chicken is from, you'll get either "usa" or "kentucky". Nobody says fried chivken is from france or scotland, and nobody knows scotland for its chicken. Scottish food = haggis.

Attached: fried chicken.jpg (461x397, 42.98K)

plaiyng the bagpipes and eating fried chicken is also traditional in Slovenia. Vgh, my EVROPEAN BROTHERS!

When you don't base your reality of American movies let me know.
No it isn't.
Just fuck off.

This doesn't make sense. If someone saw your painting in your friends apartment, is it your friend's painting because that person assume it's your friend who painted it?

>Noo. man just trust me. all scots have to LARP as jacobites!!!

>The Roman cookbook of Apicius (4th century) has a recipe for deep-fried chicken called Pullum Frontonianum.
Guess now KFC is TRADITIVNAL ROMANVS CVLTVRE.

-said frenchman

Apicius was french, dude. His real full name was Apicioux Olivier.

the whole point is anyway that it isnt gaelic.

The amount of seethe, Jesus.

yeah, it absolutely is. Bagpipes are widespread in the Balkans and are traditional in Serbocroatian minority areas, and as for fried chicken, it was introduced from northern Italy in the mid 19th century the same as another traditional Slovenian the wienerschnitzel. Fried chicken and potato salad is a traditional urban dish in Slovenia, which hints at its rather late introduction, but it definitely was ubiquitous in my own diet growing up.

Nobody ever linked fried chivken with scotland in the first place, schizo.

Go and steal someone else's culture, k?
>Nobody ever linked fried chivken with scotland in the first place,
How do you think it got to the USA , mong?!

>How do you think it got to the USA , mong?!
What do you mean "got" to the USA? It was developped there as pic proves.

bbc.com/travel/story/20201012-the-surprising-origin-of-fried-chicken
"The Scottish may have brought the method with them when they settled the [American] South"

>may

Why do you still keep talking.
Stick to the thread subject, retard.

seethe

>n-no i wont stick to it. let me be a spaz about chicken

You're the one who brought up chicken, went on about how fried chicken is the symbol of scottish food, when it's just "w-we may have brought the method of frying"
scottish food is universally associated with haggis and munchy boxes.

Back to the subject then.

Aren't bagpipes Irish anyway?

Dialect. Dilate.