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Jonnyboy
Joined: 29 Oct 2004 Posts: 23956 Location: under some rain.
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Silas
Joined: 29 Oct 2004 Posts: 6848 Location: Staffordshire
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Jonnyboy
Joined: 29 Oct 2004 Posts: 23956 Location: under some rain.
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Silas
Joined: 29 Oct 2004 Posts: 6848 Location: Staffordshire
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Jonnyboy
Joined: 29 Oct 2004 Posts: 23956 Location: under some rain.
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Silas
Joined: 29 Oct 2004 Posts: 6848 Location: Staffordshire
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Gervase
Joined: 17 Nov 2004 Posts: 8655
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Jonnyboy
Joined: 29 Oct 2004 Posts: 23956 Location: under some rain.
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Posted: Wed Jan 04, 06 3:53 pm Post subject: |
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Whisky may mean Scotch whisky to most of the world's population, but it is often wrongly substituted by the spelling whiskey, or even mis-spelt: wiskey, wisky. Much of this misunderstanding originates from the fact that there are a number of countries that distil their own whiskies (or whiskeys). Scotch whisky is by far and away the largest selling and most renowned; however, local spirits distilled in Ireland, Japan, Canada, America and India are also known as whiskey (whisky).
Scotch Whisky is always spelt without an 'e', be it Single Malt Whisky or Blended Scotch Whisky On occasions, particularly in the United States, Blended Scotch Whiskies will be shortened and asked for as Scotch.
Japanese Whisky, Canadian Whisky and Indian Whisky are also spelt without an 'e'. It is believed that Japanese Whisky is spelt this way as a result of Japan's first whisky distillers learning their trade in Scotland, in the early 1920's, thereafter adopting the Scottish convention. Canadian and Indian Whiskies, it is thought, in a similar vein embraced the spelling when they were part of the British Empire.
Historically, Irish Whiskey distillers inserted an 'e' to their spelling to differentiate their product from Scotch Whisky. American Whiskeys, both Bourbon and Rye, have in general taken-up the insertion of an 'e'. Though, as you would expect in this vast country with much Scottish ancestry, there are some distillers whom prefer to adopt the Scottish practice.
The word Whisky originates from the Scots Gaelic word Uisge Beatha: meaning the water of life, which was been Anglicised over time to Whiskybae. Finally being shorten to Whisky.
Uisge Beathe (or Usquebaugh in the Scots English spelling). itself is believed to a Celtic translation of the ancient Latin acqua vitae (water of life). |
I would suggest that the last paragraph is probably why they called it welsh whisky. |
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Bugs
Joined: 28 Oct 2004 Posts: 10744
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tahir
Joined: 28 Oct 2004 Posts: 45669 Location: Essex
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Gervase
Joined: 17 Nov 2004 Posts: 8655
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Mary-Jane
Joined: 13 Jan 2005 Posts: 18397 Location: The Fishing Strumpet is from Ceredigion in West Wales
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Posted: Wed Jan 04, 06 4:29 pm Post subject: |
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Gervase wrote: |
Ah. I know it got me bladdered - which is probably why I can't remember what the bloody stuff actually was! |
...and didn't we all know it at home?
When Gervase has been on the whisky, or similar, he starts sleep walking...or as Jack, our youngest, calls it "Whisky walking". This involves him staggering around the house at about 3.30 in the morning, imagining that he's plastering the walls and ceilings with a trowel and insisting (very loudly) that he knows exactly what he's doing, until I can coax him back to bed...whereby he passes out across it, face down and won't, or can't, move for several hours.
Last time was just before Christmas when two of our friends turned up from their smallholding in Ireland, with a bottle of whisky in hand. On that occasion I found Gervase downstairs in the the kitchen at 3am, insisting he was going to go outside to do some pointing up on the scaffolding. Hey ho.
I, of course, am a paragon of virtue by comparison. |
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Silas
Joined: 29 Oct 2004 Posts: 6848 Location: Staffordshire
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Mary-Jane
Joined: 13 Jan 2005 Posts: 18397 Location: The Fishing Strumpet is from Ceredigion in West Wales
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Gervase
Joined: 17 Nov 2004 Posts: 8655
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