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Removals Glasgow

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Glasgow removals - Info about Glasgow

Glasgow (or Glaschu in Gaelic) is Scotland's largest city, situated on the River Clyde in the country's west central lowlands.

The City of Glasgow

Known as the commercial capital of Scotland, the City of Glasgow is a bustling, cosmopolitan city. At the 2001 Census the city had a population of 629,501 making it the largest city in Scotland. This is down from its 1960s peak of 1.1 million (this is mostly due to boundary changes rather than population decline per se, and also due to the mass building of new 'overspill' towns in the surrounding region during the 1960s and 1970s), while approximately 2.1 million people live in Greater Glasgow : A 15 mile radius of the city centre known as the city of Glasgow and the greater metropolitan area. The surrounding region of Strathclyde (from the Gaelic for 'valley of the River Clyde') has a population of over 2.6 million, over half of the whole Scottish population.

The city's name comes from the older Gaelic glas cu (compare modern Gaelic Glaschu), meaning green hollow. The "dear green place" (Glaschu) has been misquoted as a Gaelic translation for the city, but this was actually Daniel Defoe's description of the city when he visited in the early 18th century; he also claimed that Glasgow was "the paradise of Scotland and one of the cleanliest and best built cities in Britain." Another writer of the time said of the River Clyde: "I have never seen before any river which for natural beauty can stand competition with the Clyde. Never did a stream glide more gracefully to the ocean or through a fairer region." At that time, the city's population numbered approximately 12,000, and its structures largely consisted of attractive, compact wooden buildings, none of which remain today.

Glasgow Dialect

Glaswegian, otherwise known as The Glasgow Patter is a local, anglicised variety of Scots. Glaswegian is a rich and vital living dialect which gives a true reflection of the city with all its virtues and vices. It is more than an alternative pronunciation; words also change their meaning, e.g. "away" can mean "leaving" as in A'm awa, an instruction to stop being a nuisance as in awa wi ye, or "drunk" or "demented" as in he's awa wi it. Cannae means "can't". Pieces refers to "sandwiches". Ginger is a form of carbonated soft drink which is orange in colour. Then there are words whose meaning has no obvious relationship to that in standard English: coupon means "face", via "to punch a ticket coupon". A speaker of Glaswegian might refer to those originating from the Scottish Highlands and the Western Isles as teuchters by the keelies. A (rather old-fashioned) Glaswegian insult is hieland, which means "awkward" and is Scots for "Highland". Example: that wean's got an awfu hieland wey o haudin that knife meaning "that child has a very awkward way of holding that knife".

Glasgow Schools

Glasgow is also a major education centre with four universities within ten miles of the city centre: the 15th-century University of Glasgow (which has one of the highest ratios of students who continue living at home), the "redbrick" University of Strathclyde, the concrete Glasgow Caledonian University, and the University of Paisley; as well as teacher training colleges, teaching hospitals, the Royal Scottish Academy of Music and Drama, Glasgow School of Art, and 10 other further education colleges. Glasgow is home to a student population in excess of 168,000, second only to London in the UK, the majority of them living in the west-end of the city, near Glasgow University's main campus on Gilmorehill.

Glasgow transportation

Glasgow has a large urban transportation system, mostly managed by SPT (Strathclyde Passenger Transport), the only Passenger Transport Executive in the U.K outside of England. SPT, is formed and financed out of the 7 councils in the Greater Glasgow area including Glasgow City Council. It has responsibility for local trains, the subway, certain ferries and buses.

Jobs in Glasgow

Housing in Glasgow

Villages/Cities in Glasgow

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