For exactly the same reason that you speak the way that you do.
Scotland is a country and cannot speak at all. However many Scottish people are able to speak French.
In Scotland, most people speak English, but some speak Gaelic in varying forms.I'm in Scotland and most of people speak English.
About 65,000 people speak Scots Gaelic, primarily in the Hebrides.
The official language of Scotland is English. In the Western Isles, many people speak Gaelic (pronounced gah-lick). In other parts of Scotland, people often speak in a dialect of English which they call Scots, but this also varies from area to area.
Um, of course they do.
The capital of Scotland is Edinburgh. Most people in Scotland speak English, but a few speak Scots or Gaelic as well.
It's exactly the same as your alphabet.
. Pictish is a mysterious and, sadly, extinct language. It died out in Scotland around the 9th century. Most people in Scotland today speak English, and some speak Scottish Gaelic. However, I believe there is a Pictish language revival going on currently, so you might want to research that.
Well I am in Scotland right now. Pretty much all the people in Scotland are scottish - if I had to guess I'd say out of the 5 million or so people in the country, well over 90% of them are scottish, probably around 95% at least. We don't much like immigrants. Not at all.
Yes, they do. The majority speaks English but some in the northern highlands and islands speak Scots Gaelic too.
Most of the people who are born and raised in Scotland would be able to speak and understand Scots. However, if you mean the language of Gaelic, only a small number of people are fluent and they mostly live in the Western Isles of Scotland.
Scottish people speak English, typically with a Scottish accent. Some regions of Scotland also have Scots Gaelic as a language spoken by a minority of the population.