You may be thing of Scotch Whisky. That is to say whiskey made in Scotland.
'Scotch' is a nickname for whiskey which is made in Scotland. Scottish people are from Scotland.
Irish was the first to make and and the scottish took it
The name Scot to refer to the people who live in the north of the British Isles comes from the Latinised form of the name of an Irish tribe, the Scotti, who moved to the south-west of Scotland in the 6th century to form the Kingdom of Dalriada. When this was unified with Pictland by King Kenneth I MacAlpin, it became known as Scotland A popular myth as to the origin of the Scotii's name is that a leader of the Scotii traveled south to Egypt, married an Egyptian princess called Scotia, but that all sounds rather fairy story to me
The answer should be yes as Scotch is short for Scotch Whisky and must be distilled at a Scottish distillery. All whiskey is not of course Scotch Whisky (Whiskey in Ireland and the US) and Scotch is sometimes used in other parts of the world as a generic name for whiskey confusing the issue. The fact is, however that it is impossible for all whiskey that is a 'product of Scotland' to really be Scottish if you look at the amount of this whiskey that is distributed across the world. Therefore, it is clear that much whiskey is made in foreign, often Less economically developed countries and sold under the name Scotch Whisky even though it is not really made in Scotland.
The 'Scotch-Irish' are the Protestants planted in North Ireland by the British in the early 1600s. They were of Scottish Lowland origin. The term came about in the U.S.to distinguish them from the native Catholic Irish.
It's the commercialised name for some products which come from Scotland such as, Scotch Tape, Scotch whisky, Scotch broth. Shortened from Scottish (and after a few whiskies most people end up blurring Scottish in to Scot-ch)
Scottish, not Scotch
'Scotch' is a nickname for whiskey which is made in Scotland. Scottish people are from Scotland.
You mean 'Scottish' for Grandpa ? The answer is Grandpa.
A native of Scotland is called a Scot, not Scottish. Scotch is a drink not a person.
Irish was the first to make and and the scottish took it
As a person of Scottish descent, I prefer to be called a Scot, or a Scotsman but never Scotch. Scotch is now mainly used to describe food and drink - Scotch Whisky (Scotch for short in some countries), Scotch broth etc. It was originally an English shortening of the word Scottish and used by the Scots themselves as well as the English in the 18th century including Robert Burns and later Sir Walter Scott before reverting to the older titles in the 19th century of Scots or Scottish.
Scottish or Scots, Scotch was used in the 18th century but is only applied to whiskey and food now (Scotch broth etc).
Scottish people would call their Grandmother 'Granny'.
Scottish or Scots can be used to describe something of or from Scotland. Scotch can be used to refer to food and drink of or from Scotland.
Scotch is a liquor. Are you thinking of the Scots Pine? Scots, Scot, and Scottish are words that can refer to people or things from or related to Scotland.
Scotch is a classical Scottish alcoholic drink similar to whiskey. It is sold in many pubs or places. The average price for a glass filled with scotch is between 0.50å£ and 2å£.