Citations:southron


 * 1853, William Francis Lynch, Narrative of the United States' Expedition to the River Jordan and the Dead Sea:
 * The antipathies between the highland Gael and the southron, of the Scottish border, were not more inveterate than the hostile feeling existing between many of the tribes.
 * 1898, Elizabeth Grant of Rothiemurchus, Memoirs of a Highland Lady:
 * A great mistake was made by the Stage Managers, one that offended all the southron Scots; the King wore at the Levee the Highland dress.
 * 2007, Sarah Gabriel, To Wed a Highland Bride
 * "Between the banshee in the foyer, the ghosts in the house, and the garden fairies, two of the maidservants packed up in haste and left for Edinburgh."
 * "Southrons," she said with a little huff. "Highlanders do not mind such things."
 * 2014, Allan D. Kennedy, Governing Gaeldom: The Scottish Highlands and the Restoration State, 1660-1688:
 * Roderick Morison, the 'Blind Harper' in the service of the MacLeods of Dunvegan, sweepingly dismissed Lowlanders as “southron strangers” in a poem from the 1680s.