| Doric - NNB |
| Thus | grew e tale o Wonderland: Thu |
| Central - SWE |
| Thus | on a fence, bedraigelt, wat |
| Southern - SEA |
| Thus | grew th tale o Wunderlaant: |
| Central - SEC |
| Thus | gates the twenes wes unyt wi |
| Central - SEC |
| Thus | disguised he loupit in |
| Central - WCE |
| Thus | ended then the 'Buckfast ban' |
| Central - EDN |
| Thus | his conversation went, |
| Central - GLA |
efter the percentage o votes ( | thus | giein mukkil poustie til thi |
| Central - SEC |
tot o the wirds bi hir neive, | thus | gates ti mak the message sicc |
| Central - LAL |
ed in their spellin at hame... | thus | in Sweden I hae met Crafurds |
| Central - WCE |
n Ireland but no in Scotland. | Thus | , an incoming Scottish Governm |
| Central - SEC |
Kent him fur years, yae see. | Thus | , ah ken maire than anyboady w |
| Central - WCE |
at the first sign o tribble. | Thus | a minor political muive – s |
| Central - EDN |
se except fae embarrassin me. | Thus | , demonstratin tae his beautif |
| Doric - MNA |
d change intae a clean smock. | Thus | rigged and still sobbin, Mist |
| Central - WCE |
bluid is forleitit ahint him. | Thus | the speiritual warld leas its |
| Central - SEC |
t ah um a degenerate gambler. | Thus | , when it comes tae money, ah' |
| Central - LAL |
the tongue for new purposes. | Thus | the language is biggit intae |
| Central - AYR |
ole wi the swords an pistols. | Thus | confrontit, puir John Brownin |
| Central - LAL |
ir quarrels among the nobles; | thus | far we have kept out of them, |
| Central - EDN |
uestions thegithir. They read | thus | , “Switch off at the mains.â |
| Central - EDN |
thirty yairds awa. They gaed | thus | : |
| Central - SEC |
And | thus | cuid tell frae a rustin blade |
| Central - LAL | what's not to agree with. And | thus | we maun awa, we can nae lange |
| Central - WCE |
ble backwards. Ye unnerstaund | thus | faur? Are ye wi me?" |
| Central - LAL |
Ye’ve came | thus | faur, ye’d best gae on – |
| Central - AYR |
that near-on twa hunner were | thus | airmed. A younger son o the l |
| Central - SEC |
al, you could compliment them | thus | , 'You're awfy perjink the day |
| Central - LAL |
thon wee bit mair cachet, an | thus | graithed she sallied furth, i |
| Central - DUN |
p us reclaim oor sovranty, an | thus | oor independence. A hae aye l |
| Central - AYR |
e craws - tae a fresh pickin | Thus | were the heritors an gentlefo |
| Central - LAL |
tree an the Oik. Ah can hear | thus | tree grawin in the rustle o i |
| Central - GLA |
well, whit Ah’d seen o her | thus | far. Pale-pale wi rid-rid hai |
| Central - LAL |
he category that he describes | thus | : ‘Another class of modern w |
| Doric - DOR |
g the mob that day, remembers | thus | ; |
| Central - GLA |
e’s mare tae it than he’s | thus | far divulged. |
| Central - LAL |
vanished. Others describe it | thus | : that the night being fair an |
| Central - EDN |
order bit the class nivir sit | thus | . Sae A wid jook aw’ aboot t |
| Central - SWE |
Tae paint it | thus | , convinces us, |