At midnight on New Year's Eve, revelers across the globe will sing "Auld Lang Syne," but not everyone knows the lyrics to the ...
"Auld Lang Syne" as we know it today first came together in the late 1700s, and wasn't initially a song for New Year's Eve.
Pronounced “Old Lang Zyne,” experts say it started as a poem, and has since become a song that is now a staple in New Year’s ...
The tradition in Scotland is to sing the song on Hogmanay — their word for the New Year’s celebrations — with everyone ...
By MICHAEL CRIMMINS Glasgow News 1 Today is New Year's Eve and for many people that means a night of Black-eyed peas, ...
Penned by Scottish poet Robert Burns in 1788, Burns confessed that he had gathered the words after hearing an old man recite them during his travels. However, an earlier ballad titled 'Old Long Syne' ...
Auld Lang Syne means ‘old long since’ or ‘old times’, so the phrase ‘Auld Lang Syne’ means ‘for old time’s sake’ in old (auld ...
According to Scotland.org, the phrase 'auld lang syne' roughly translates as 'for old times' sake', and the song is all about preserving old friendships and looking back over the events of the year." ...
As “Auld Lang Syne” takes its annual spin around the globe on New Year’s Eve, its chorus belted out by revelers young and old ...
The phrase 'Auld Lang Syne' translates to 'Old Long Since,' which can be interpreted as 'For Old Times Sake.' The song's roots can be traced back to Scottish folk traditions, with poetic expressions ...
Every New Year’s Eve, many of us will come to the realisation that we don’t actually know the words to “Auld Lang Syne”. Belting out the song as the clock strikes midnight is a long-held tradition in ...
Auld Lang Syne is a traditional New Year’s Eve/New Year’s Day song but the lyrics can get a bit lost to some, almost as much as where the song came from. New Year’s Eve has many traditions, but among ...