Teuchter (English:/ˈtjuːxtər/TEWKH-tər,Scots:[ˈtjuxtər,ˈtʃuxtər])[1][2] is aLowland Scots word sometimes used to offensively describe aScottish Highlander, in particular aGaelic-speaking Teuchter.[3] The term is also in use with more broader meanings attached, commonly applied to any Scot perceived to be from a rural area, and within Glasgow those who are from outwith the Greater Glasgow area. It is offensive, equivalent to other cultural epithets used by more powerful groups to describe people they have oppressed, but is often seen as amusing by the speaker. The term is contemptuous, essentially describing someone seen to be uncouth and rural.[2][3]
The word also shows up ascheuchter, tschooktir, chuchter, teuchtar, chookter but has no universally accepted orthography. From relative obscurity, it gained currency around 1910.[3]
There are three main theories on the etymology of the word:
Onefolk etymology/urban myth is that during theFirst World War, many members of the Highland regiments were pipers. A book of sheet music for the pipes is called a "tutor", and when pronounced with thepre-aspiration ofGaelic accents when speaking English, this sounds like "teuchter".[4]
Like other rural stereotypes, teuchters commonly feature in jokes (Billy Connolly has performed and recorded a sketch where a teuchter visiting the city marvels at a bus as "a hoose wi wheels") though such stories often end with the apparently naive teuchter triumphing through hidden wiliness.
The archetypal cartoon teuchter is the cartoon characterAngus Og, created byEwen Bain.
A teuchter is the hero of Scottish musicianBill Hill'sThe Portree Kid,[5] which parodies the songGhost Riders in the Sky as "The teuchter that cam fraeSkye".
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