Love these. 1:10 "I have English/Irish." 5:16 Understand. 9:16 Weird guy. 10:45 Fluent/more new phrases. 14:52 Numbers. 15:30 Counting stuff. 17:45 Where. 22:00 Random phrases from that guy and girl meeting. 23:00 Review.
Csn Irish be studied for the A Levels in Northern Ireland and at the University of Ulster at McGee in Derry (even part-time) and Coleraine Campisss and at Queens University in Belfsstt?
It was a renomering thing the English did to the Celtic tongues by calling them "Gaelic" Irish is Gaeilge "Gway-il-guh" and Scottish is called Gaidhlig said "Gagh-Lyg" in the pronunciation key, the "gh" is said guttural.
@@aduantas Words and names may usually have standard canon pronunciations but it has been My experience even with the renowned first formal I have it has varied from person to person how I've been addressed. The general diminutive is "Steve" but My formal has be subject to ambiguity and differ from the related name "Steven".
Can be "ta" or "sea" depending on context. Both are affirmative. SEA is actually abbreviation of IS EA . LOOK UP ON LINE IRISH-ENGLISH DICTIONARY 'TEANGLANN FOR EXAMPLES OF USE.
I'm just stumbling on the video now but I was reading about how even in the Irish-speaking areas lots of people have been influenced by English when using Irish. In English it's 'box' so maybe many people just started saying 'boxa.' Wish someone more knowledgeable could comment.
Anyone else think Irish writing needs a revamp? I mean it's an absolute mess of Latin letters. It could use a renaissance with something more originally Irish, like the rune system.
Love these. 1:10 "I have English/Irish." 5:16 Understand. 9:16 Weird guy. 10:45 Fluent/more new phrases. 14:52 Numbers. 15:30 Counting stuff. 17:45 Where. 22:00 Random phrases from that guy and girl meeting. 23:00 Review.
Thank-you for posting this series, it`s very helpful.
I still learn from these TV shows. Go raibh maith agat.
It reminds me of Bunratty Folk Park in.Co Clare near Shannon Airport.
Csn Irish be studied for the A Levels in Northern Ireland and at the University of Ulster at McGee in Derry (even part-time) and Coleraine Campisss and at Queens University in Belfsstt?
wtf she mean she doesnt understand men, he just went to university smh
Sperrin Mountain in Northern Ireland or Donegal?
Deirdre is a very beautiful girl.
Ich spreche Deutsch auch
In what way?
I thought they pronounced Gaeilge "Gway-il-Guh" it sounds like they are saying "Gaelic".
I have that question, too. I think it's just an Ulster regional thing.
It was a renomering thing the English did to the Celtic tongues by calling them "Gaelic" Irish is Gaeilge "Gway-il-guh" and Scottish is called Gaidhlig said "Gagh-Lyg" in the pronunciation key, the "gh" is said guttural.
Thanks. I've heard it pronounced [GWAY-lih-geh] also.
Gwae-lig is the Ulster pronunciation. That's all.
@@aduantas Words and names may usually have standard canon pronunciations but it has been My experience even with the renowned first formal I have it has varied from person to person how I've been addressed. The general diminutive is "Steve" but My formal has be subject to ambiguity and differ from the related name "Steven".
I want to know yes is ta or sea? Cos in a gealic app it was written sea
Amira Rose it depends on the question; there is no one word for yes and you just repeat the positive form of the verb
Can be "ta" or "sea" depending on context. Both are affirmative. SEA is actually abbreviation of IS EA . LOOK UP ON LINE IRISH-ENGLISH DICTIONARY 'TEANGLANN FOR EXAMPLES OF USE.
Why is bhosca pronounced [wuhk-suh] and not [wuhs-kuh]? Is the 'sc' in Gaeilge an 'x' sound?
I'm just stumbling on the video now but I was reading about how even in the Irish-speaking areas lots of people have been influenced by English when using Irish. In English it's 'box' so maybe many people just started saying 'boxa.' Wish someone more knowledgeable could comment.
I looked it up on focloir.ie Connacht and Munster do pronounce it "sc". Only Ulster pronounces it the other way around.
Warum spricht der Mann Deutsch? Gute Nacht oíche mhaith bon nuit bounanotte (excuse my terrible Itatian spelling, per favoure) 😅
Fir (men)
Anyone else think Irish writing needs a revamp?
I mean it's an absolute mess of Latin letters. It could use a renaissance with something more originally Irish, like the rune system.
In what way is Irish an absolute mess of Latin letters? It is a Celtic language