Real speech from Scotland
Scottish English
Authentic Scottish voices — hear Scottish English vocabulary, intonation, and natural everyday conversation.
6 real reels
Scottish English ranges from a softened, near-RP variety used in formal media to the broader regional accents of Glasgow, Edinburgh, Aberdeen, and the Highlands. About 5 million native speakers across Scotland, with significant variation between cities and rural areas. It's rhotic — the r is firmly pronounced — and many speakers retain sounds that other varieties of English have lost, including the ch in loch (a back fricative that doesn't exist in American or Standard British). Vowels are distinct: words like bit, bet, and cat are noticeably different. Glottal stops replace the t between vowels in many accents (water → wa'er). Where learners struggle is vocabulary and pace — dialect words from Scots (wee, ken, bairn) appear regularly, and broad accents move quickly. Start with broadcast Scottish English before tackling thicker regional voices.