Scots, Scottish, People. The usual. Although there is also the "ken billy" banter which involves a lot more exact placement of your location of birth/where you're living now. So you could be Glaswegian, Aberdonian, Highlander, etc. Just the same as anywhere else.
Scottish, Scotsman or just Scots. The older term Scotch is not used nowadays and nearly always refers to whisky.
If you are referring to people who were born in Scotland, the answer is Scottish or Scots.
Scottish people live in Scotland. They are also British citizens as Scotland is a part of the UK
In Scotland, you would call your brother "bruv" or "brother," similar to how you would in other English-speaking countries.
Germans call themselves "Deutsche" in their native language.
As of the latest available data, Bathgate, Scotland has a population of approximately 21,000 residents.
No, the Halifax and the Halifax Bank of Scotland are two separate entities. Halifax is a British bank that is part of the Lloyds Banking Group, while the Halifax Bank of Scotland (HBOS) was a separate bank that was acquired by Lloyds Banking Group during the financial crisis in 2008.
Venezuelans refer to themselves as "Venezolanos" in Spanish.
they call themselves tamalians
Scots or Scottish.
It is just called Christmas Eve in Scotland.
The Romans called it Caledonia. What they called themselves, I do not know.
Chips
Depends where in Scotland you are from. In Aberdeen some people call them bobbies or just police
No. The people of Saint Lucia call themselves Saint Lucians.
Indigenous people call themselves citizens or natives. They call you foreigners because you are not native to the land they live on.
people
In Scotland many people call him "Santa Claus" or "St. Nicolas" alot of people don't think it's true but it is. All they call him are those two or maybe "Sunty Clus"
They called themselves the Chichimeca.
In Scotland, people say Bodach na Nollaig (Scots Gaelic: "Old Man of Christmas").