Teuchter

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Teuchter is a Lowland Scots word used mainly for Northern or Highland Scots, although sometimes to any rural Scots, by urban Scots. In Glasgow, it can often be used to refer to a person from another part of Scotland if the latter carries a distinctive accent. Like most such cultural epithets, it is often offensive, but is sometimes seen as amusing by the speaker.

[edit] Derivation

The word has an unclear origin. The most commonly stated one is that it is derived from the Lowland Scots word teuch (tough) (in Gaelic tiugh). In some dialects, this is also used for mangy or stringy animals, or fowls.

One folk etymology/urban myth,is that during the First World War, many members of the Highland regiments were pipers. A book of sheet music for the pipes is called a "tutor", and when pronounced with the aspiration of their Gaelic accents, this sounds like "teuchter".

Other less likely derivations include tuathanach, meaning 'farmer' in Gaelic, and placenames such as Deuchar, Teuchar etc.

[edit] Humour

Like other rural stereotypes, teuchters commonly feature in jokes (a teuchter visiting the city might marvel at a bus as "a hoose wi' wheels") though such stories often end with the apparently naive teuchter triumphing through hidden wiliness.

The archetypal cartoon teuchter is Angus Og, by Ewan Bain.

A teuchter is the hero of Bill Hill's The Portree Kid [1], which parodies the song Ghost Riders in the Sky as "The teuchter that cam frae Skye".

[edit] Other references

The word teuchter is the origin of part of the scientific name for a species of salmon, Gyrodactylus teuchis (G. Teuchis, for short).