SCOTS Project - www.scottishcorpus.ac.uk Document : 445 Title : Use it or lose it Author(s): Christine De Luca Copyright holder(s): Christine De Luca Text Use it or lose it (Ös hit or loss hit) If you hae access tae a computer (or a göd-natured grandbairn wha'll hae you surfin in nae time ava) dan hae a skoit at dis website. www.transcript-review.org You'll maybe get a peerie surprise, fur dere you'll fin i a recent volume (Transcript 2- click apö 'backnumbers' fur him) twartree 'pages' aboot Shetland an Shetland writin. Der features on Shetland poetry written baith bi mesell an Robert Alan Jamieson. Transcript is a online review o writin across Europe. Hit's policy is "ta mak available tae a wider audience excellent writin in peerier - though no lesser - European languages." Fundin comes fae da Culture 2000 programme o da European Union an hit hes partnerships wi organisations fae Iceland tae Greece, an fae Hungary tae Portugal. Da editor, Diarmuid Johnson, bides in Wales. If you're feelin cosmopolitan you can tab alang da tap o ivery page an hit'll gie you French or German versions o da information. Whit wi lokks o idder information an plenty o 'hot links' tae idder websites -some Shetland eens) you'll fin hit a really fine een tae add tae your 'favourites'. (Ir you still wi me?). A'll no bore you wi da poetry - you can see dat fur yoursels - but ee thing at got me fairly jimpin wis da description - laekely sadly owre true - o da plight o Shetland spaekin among wir young eens. Here's whit hit says. Regarding the demise of Norn and the spread of Scots in Shetland, it seems that Shetlanders, over a period of time, adopted Scots and rejected Norn because Scots was the more useful language with the greater status at the time, and Norn had come to be seen as irrelevant. This model offers parallels to the situation in Shetland today. On one hand, the Shetlandic vocabulary is slowly disappearing so that what remains is a depleted dialect consisting mostly of common English words with Shetland pronunciations. This gradual decline of the characteristic Shetland vocabulary certainly continues throughout Shetland. In the town of Lerwick, however, another situation has arisen: the younger generation does not speak any kind of Shetlandic, but simply standard English, albeit with a local accent. Göd grief: is dat no jöst most solemn? So get writin, get readin, get spaekin an get textin an surfin, but in Shetlan (as weel as in English, French or Catalan). Mind, hit only taks twa generations ta loss a language. Did you ken at bairns at hae twa wyes o spaekin fluently laern better? Nae winder, hit exercises da mind as weel as da tongue. PS tae da Editor: whit aboot a policy o ha'in at laest wan article writin i da dialect ivery week? An a dialect poem? An somethin fur bairns? This work is protected by copyright. All rights reserved. The SCOTS Project and the University of Glasgow do not necessarily endorse, support or recommend the views expressed in this document. Information about document and author: Text Text audience Adults (18+): General public: Males: Females: Audience size: 1000+ Text details Method of composition: Wordprocessed Year of composition: 2003 Word count: 476 Text medium Newspaper: Text publication details Published: Publisher: Shetland Times Publication year: 2003 Place of publication: Lerwick Text setting Journalism: Text type Article: Author Author details Author id: 120 Forenames: Christine Surname: De Luca Gender: Female Decade of birth: 1940 Educational attainment: University Age left school: 18 Upbringing/religious beliefs: Protestantism Occupation: Head of Assessment, Research and Development Place of birth: Bressay Region of birth: Shetland Birthplace CSD dialect area: Sh Country of birth: Scotland Place of residence: Edinburgh Region of residence: Edinburgh Residence CSD dialect area: Edb Country of residence: Scotland Father's occupation: Headmaster Father's place of birth: Vidlin Father's region of birth: Shetland Father's birthplace CSD dialect area: Sh Father's country of birth: Scotland Mother's occupation: Primary Teacher Mother's place of birth: Cunningsburgh Mother's region of birth: Shetland Mother's birthplace CSD dialect area: Sh Mother's country of birth: Scotland Languages: Language: English Speak: Yes Read: Yes Write: Yes Understand: Yes Circumstances: All Language: Scots Speak: No Read: Yes Write: No Understand: Yes Circumstances: Work, read Scots literature