First of all, there are many Scottish accents that are very different to each other and there are also many Irish accents that are very different to each other. It would impossible and only a matter of opinion at to which of these many accents is the coolest, so there is no answer to the question.
Scottish
Irish
scottish causeim scottish and i should know
There are many different Irish accents. They are usually just described by the county in Ireland that they are from, so a Limerick accent or a Waterford accent or a Roscommon accent etc.
Northern English, and Scottish.
coltish people have Scottish accents; garlic people have Irish accents
His accent is Scottish not Irish
See for yourself here: [[http://sites.google.com/site/lrnthaccnt/how-to-do-a-credible-irish-accent]] and [[http://sites.google.com/site/lrnthaccnt/how-to-do-a-credible-scottish-accent]]
See for yourself here: [[http://sites.google.com/site/lrnthaccnt/how-to-do-a-credible-irish-accent]] and [[http://sites.google.com/site/lrnthaccnt/how-to-do-a-credible-scottish-accent]]
The Scottish accent tends to have slightly more emphasis on rolled Rs and more guttural sounds, while the Irish accent often has more lyrical and flowing intonations. Also, vocabulary and specific regional dialects can differ between the two accents.
In Scottish Gaelic: fìrinn (mind that the accent is grave, not acute like in the Irish)
The Irish Gaelic translation for Daddy's Girl is Peata Dhaidi
It is a slight mix between a cockney accent, a southern Scottish accent, and an Irish accent attributed because of the Liverpudlian ports. They adopted different accents, with a different accent on their own.
In Irish Gaelic: an oiche. (Accute accent on i) In Scottish Gaelic: an oidhche
Minerva McGongall is Scottish and has a Scottish accent.
(Irish) Míle fáilte; (Scottish) same but change to accent grave.
A strong Scottish accent.