For those who can't understand these lads, from what I understood, in short, these two Irish scientists have just developed a metallurgical process for compacting and rolling silver.
Paul (with the dark hair) is a qualified physiotherapist and now studying Medicine. Gary with the red hair has a degree (hons) in marketing. Paul just won Olympic gold for Ireland and is a multiple world champion rower. Neither of the two have been beaten in five years.th-cam.com/video/816-FjL_Gks/w-d-xo.html
Sneer all you like…two question for you….how many medals have you won at the Olympics…or at any championship?….second question…..you really need to have a look at what careers these lads have???
A lot of Jamaicans were taught English by Irish people who were sent over as slaves by the English qlot of Jamaican words orginate from the Irish language for example like the Irish word for jumper is geansaí
I believe they were indentured servants rather than slaves. The difference being that they were able to work for their freedom. They were nicknamed red legs
@@leoochofaigh6714 Utter nonsense -the Irish in the Caribbean were indentured servants, merchants and slaveowners, but not chattel slaves. Look up the Irish Slaves Myth and educate yourself.
I think the interview Graham referred to was the pre-race one the day before: v=G8LeDANQ7UE that one mentions the "game plan" of going as fast as they can.
I am from New Zealand and understood everything they said. I hope moving forward they get over the loss of their cat, and congratulate them on winning scotlands first ever medal in bobsledding. Nice work chaps
So the Irish are like New Jerseyians? We speak with the smallest amount of mouth movement possible, like we're ventriloquist Mobsters. For example....."Didjueatyet?" means "Did you eat yet?". Or "Wudder" means "Water", or how most people would say "Wah-ter". Screw that. I can say several sentences while barely moving my lips. Our whole vocabulary is based off the smallest amount of mouth movement possible. It's a combination Philly/South Jersey thing.
Did that a couple of times after running the mile, having already run the half mile. Also when doubling up basketball practice with the local college team.
I used to work for a Durham based company, when I had to stay up there it amused me that the young French barmaid in the local was there to Improve her English.
@@christdiedforoursins8985 its funny how different dialects and accents of the same language can be. Between the US, UK, Australia, Canada, where the majority of people speak English, it’s so different in each place! And then to factor in all of the other places all over the world where people learn to speak English, it varies so much.
It's hard to understand these guys _as_ a native English speaker. The problem is that they don't enunciate their words; it's like they're drunk or their tongues are exhausted. Still, I could figure most of what they were saying. I think you just need more exposure with English and Irish accents. Language is not a neat box of rules, pronunciations, and words, it's more like a spectrum of intelligibility. Every English speaker has a certain place in that spectrum (the accent or dialect they grew up on/learned) and a width to that spectrum which is widened by experience.
@@ElectricChaplain I’m Irish (Dublin) and I can understand them perfectly. Being a native Irish does help but like yourself being able to understand English at a native level would also help. It is a very strong accent.
Haha its not for you to worry. I'm irish and while travelling I have to change my accent a lot for people. The way I see it, you guys are speaking English for me so it's the least I can do to try make my English as coherent as possible
Yeah I’m from london and understand every word, but I could hear some harsh midwest or like Boston accents and barely be able to understand some of it. We’re just a lot more familiar with it
@@ElectricChaplain they’d just rowed an Olympic race & are getting interviewed almost immediately after it. 1of them had to walk off to catch his breath. The Cork accent is hard to understand if you’re not Irish ☘️
1 second ago And when they won gold in the next Olympics, they were interviewed and asked ‘Gold medalists, Olympic champions how does that feel? They replied ‘ it’s alright really suppose we can’t complain’ ’. And your hometown are going wild ‘ ‘we heard there is a great party going on, shame we are missing it’.
My head nearly exploded when I first heard your accent! 10% Canadian and 90% Scottish/Irish mix although many words are an Irish/Scottish mix is the same unbelievable sentence...
If Aidan O'Brien had been their trainer they would have won.Well done lads you come across as two genuine top blokes and Ireland's first Olympic rowing medalYou should be very proud of yourselves.
Interviewer tossed in a "Tiocfaidh ár lá" right at the end there! (For those who don't know, that's an Irish republican saying that translates as "Our day will come" and refers a future date when, it's hoped, the whole of Ireland will be united.)
I’m originally from Belize and raised in the U.S., and I understand them perfectly. As a matter of fact, I’ve noticed the similarities of the accents of the UK and what we speak in the Caribbean. The guy on the left accent actually sounds similar to some Caribbean accents.
@@Nicolacurran1 I don’t mean to offend you. However, when these places were being colonized hundreds of years ago, who knows where the colonizers were from. I’m sure everyone wanted a piece of the action. I was just referring to what I hear in their voices.
@@ryanjoyce3957 Jamaica was used by the English govt. in the 19th c. as the place to send Irish Republicans/ Fenians who had been convicted and sentenced to transportation. Jamaicans learned to speak English as it was spoken by these transported Irish Republicans. It's why our accent is literally a brogue. I have no problems understanding these 2 lovely brothers. It is like being in Kingston.🇯🇲
I'm American...my grandparents were from Ireland so I guess I'm used to regional Irish accents... still amazes me all the people in the comments that can't understand a word
Lovely accent! Just casually turning away to puke a bit and then back at it with huge grin on his face. Did not understand half of it so turned on youtube auto texting, almost had a stroke trying to read…😂
Though born and raised in the Bronx, I lived in a neighborhood that exploded with Irish immigrants in the 90's. became friends with people from all over and learned to understand all Irish accents so I understand these guys perfectly. Funny random story... Some guys in Ireland don't understand other guys from Ireland because the accents are so different, but because I understand them all I often was used as a translator, lol. Its like a guy from Alabama might have trouble understanding a New Yorker, lol.
Woodlawn? Banbridge? I just moved home from woodlawn McLean avenue the emerald mile after over 10 years there my kids were born there. Unbelievable neighbourhood Irish to the core
@@johnmonk66 no relation of mine I'm afraid. And iv moved home again to Ireland. Bainbridge is nowhere near Irish like it was back 60 70 years ago,all got pushed out to woodlawn and McLean ave which I'm sure you know well.
@@conormulvihill7421 I know it too well, lol. I was in Bainbridge during the height of the 80's and 90's, we had 23 bars within 5 blocks. Many went to Woodlawn, and many are still topping off in the Heritage most nights...
Maybe it's because I am a not-native English speaker used to listen carefully in order to learn a language that I can understand these guys perfectly. It's acutally a good thereapy to cure the mobile device-use induced ADHS so many suffer from.
My mother was Irish and I lived there for a year as a child. So I understood 99% of this, despite being an American. This does explain why I can read French but never get the French accent right -- these patterns are laid down in our brains at a very young age. All that aside, what a great win for Ireland. Well done, Lads!
@@Nicolacurran1 Of course. Half of them are my cousins. I should have been more clear. I'm trying to learn French in my 60s. It's a little harder now, but I'm persevering.
The auto-subtitles don't know how to process the heavy irish accents. They can't even get Skibbereen right. Paul went back to the olympics this year (2024) and got gold.
As a Black American woman, I'm proud to say that I understood 100% of what they said. They kind of speak through their teeth and you have to get your mind to listen slow.
For those who can't understand these lads, from what I understood, in short, these two Irish scientists have just developed a metallurgical process for compacting and rolling silver.
Paul (with the dark hair) is a qualified physiotherapist and now studying Medicine. Gary with the red hair has a degree (hons) in marketing. Paul just won Olympic gold for Ireland and is a multiple world champion rower. Neither of the two have been beaten in five years.th-cam.com/video/816-FjL_Gks/w-d-xo.html
To be sure, be sure.
TH-cam subtitles were a little off!
Its a flex to be able to understand these perfectly, hon west cork laddd
Sneer all you like…two question for you….how many medals have you won at the Olympics…or at any championship?….second question…..you really need to have a look at what careers these lads have???
"The whole of Ireland is watching"
*Chokes, turns and retches*
That was the only funny part 😂
Odd title for the video
Never thought having Jamaican grandparents would come in handy for understanding and interview lol
A lot of Jamaicans were taught English by Irish people who were sent over as slaves by the English qlot of Jamaican words orginate from the Irish language for example like the Irish word for jumper is geansaí
Research cromwell and Irish carribean
I believe they were indentured servants rather than slaves. The difference being that they were able to work for their freedom. They were nicknamed red legs
@@leoochofaigh6714 Utter nonsense -the Irish in the Caribbean were indentured servants, merchants and slaveowners, but not chattel slaves. Look up the Irish Slaves Myth and educate yourself.
@@themaskedman221 indentured servatude is slavery especially the way the British set that system up. Giving it a new name doesn't make it different.
Came here after the Graham Norton show.
Same. Wanted to hear them say "since". 🇮🇪
I think the interview Graham referred to was the pre-race one the day before: v=G8LeDANQ7UE that one mentions the "game plan" of going as fast as they can.
Same
Me too
Well you miles behind
I am from New Zealand and understood everything they said. I hope moving forward they get over the loss of their cat, and congratulate them on winning scotlands first ever medal in bobsledding. Nice work chaps
🤣🤣🤣
👏👏👏👏
😂😂😂
Very nice …. I’ll be celebrating the lads victory 🥃🥃🥃🍺🍻🥃🍻🍺🥃🍀🛷🥃🍻🥃🍺🏴✌🏻🤣
😂😂😂😂😂
Listen the first sentence he said his mouth didn’t even move and I was busy trying to figure out which of them was even talking
I know I thought the same thing..they'd make great ventriloquists
They're knackered after the race sure. Paul looks like he gonna collapse
So the Irish are like New Jerseyians? We speak with the smallest amount of mouth movement possible, like we're ventriloquist Mobsters. For example....."Didjueatyet?" means "Did you eat yet?". Or "Wudder" means "Water", or how most people would say "Wah-ter". Screw that. I can say several sentences while barely moving my lips. Our whole vocabulary is based off the smallest amount of mouth movement possible. It's a combination Philly/South Jersey thing.
Understood everything
@@seanirish6173 Me too :)
1:34. “Excuse me a second while I go and cough up a lung.” 😂
What the fuck
"everyone out there with a pair of arms and a pair of legs should give it a go' 😂
Para-Olympians: 😑
Lmao your lad just non-chalantly walking off to be sick halfway through.
I was going to say the same thing. I have only trained that hard once. It reminds me of Zidane.
Did that a couple of times after running the mile, having already run the half mile. Also when doubling up basketball practice with the local college team.
After all these years, this still makes me laugh and brings me absolute joy.
This pair is absolutely awesome
Typical of most Irish people, full of humour, humility and down-to-earthiness..... a breath of fresh air in an increasingly troubled world.
Irish "people" are now mixed with immigrants from Africa and the Middle East. It's sad to see the pure Irish are now diminishing.
They are so amiable
Yes, this is exactly why it’s so easy to love everything about the Irish and the other reason is that they are naturally damn funny...
@@dominiclester3232 Yeah, the terrorism, sectarianism, pedophile priests, brutal nuns. What's not to like?
I am from the United Kingdom and I was cheering you to the finish line. Well done lads you made Ireland proud you deserved your silver medal.
He would make a fantastic ventriloquist 😂
I wholeheartedly agree with your 3-yr old comment.
Imagine working hard for years learning English with Duolingo, and then you run into people like this...
Lmao
I used to work for a Durham based company, when I had to stay up there it amused me that the young French barmaid in the local was there to Improve her English.
Easy enough to understand really
When I was in England I had to ask my friend if my boss was speaking English 😅I'm south African.
@@christdiedforoursins8985 its funny how different dialects and accents of the same language can be. Between the US, UK, Australia, Canada, where the majority of people speak English, it’s so different in each place! And then to factor in all of the other places all over the world where people learn to speak English, it varies so much.
Everybody's like "I don't understand a word" but I'm from Atlantic Canada so I understand them surprisingly well 😂😂
I was gonna mention newfoundland
Eastern Kings PEI
Plenty of people with two arms and two legs like us, maybe it could mean more Olympic championships -- please god 😂
I feel like I learned English for nothing, I can literally understand one word for sentence, their accent is so strong.
It's hard to understand these guys _as_ a native English speaker. The problem is that they don't enunciate their words; it's like they're drunk or their tongues are exhausted.
Still, I could figure most of what they were saying. I think you just need more exposure with English and Irish accents.
Language is not a neat box of rules, pronunciations, and words, it's more like a spectrum of intelligibility. Every English speaker has a certain place in that spectrum (the accent or dialect they grew up on/learned) and a width to that spectrum which is widened by experience.
@@ElectricChaplain I’m Irish (Dublin) and I can understand them perfectly. Being a native Irish does help but like yourself being able to understand English at a native level would also help. It is a very strong accent.
Haha its not for you to worry. I'm irish and while travelling I have to change my accent a lot for people. The way I see it, you guys are speaking English for me so it's the least I can do to try make my English as coherent as possible
Yeah I’m from london and understand every word, but I could hear some harsh midwest or like Boston accents and barely be able to understand some of it. We’re just a lot more familiar with it
@@ElectricChaplain they’d just rowed an Olympic race & are getting interviewed almost immediately after it. 1of them had to walk off to catch his breath. The Cork accent is hard to understand if you’re not Irish ☘️
Absolutely adorable... but didn't understand a word
Bet their parents are so proud of these two great lads. Heartwarming stuff.
They are amazingly beautifully Irish ☘️
1 second ago
And when they won gold in the next Olympics, they were interviewed and asked ‘Gold medalists, Olympic champions how does that feel?
They replied ‘ it’s alright really suppose we can’t complain’ ’.
And your hometown are going wild ‘
‘we heard there is a great party going on, shame we are missing it’.
I live in Nova Scotia, I can understand everything. Lols.
My head nearly exploded when I first heard your accent! 10% Canadian and 90% Scottish/Irish mix although many words are an Irish/Scottish mix is the same unbelievable sentence...
Mick O’Connell said he’d bust the head off us if we didn’t win ... brilliant well done guys even from 2016
Box*
Conlan*
Hahaha I can’t believe he said Tiocfaidh Ar La 😂🇮🇪🇮🇪
Why? It's a phrase that means " Our day will come " meaning they'll win gold someday! Don't make it out to be bad!
@@jayt1n it’s an IRA saying. BBC even edited out that part of the interview because of it.
@@MrZachgonzit means "our day will come" you clown they got silver they wanted gold
Tháinig a lá…faoi dhó!
@RetreadPhoto it's not clear to me who said it
Typical indomitable Irish spirit. Brilliant!!
When the guy on the right speaks, his mouth barely moves. Has a future as a ventriloquist.
I want a set of those for talking Christmas ornaments this year. So adorable.
I went to Ireland this summer and I was very happy that I could understand their accent having an accent myself 😅
Jais, I'm so mortal proud of the lads from Skiberreen as what they've done for our country, so I am!
MsG
I think at one point one of them says there’s plenty of people out there with two arms and two legs that could give rowing a go… wonderful xx
Sure, so long as ye can pull like a dog sure ye'll be grand.
I turned on the captions and it was going well and then went wack lol
Before you go any further turn on the subtitles, they're excellent.
"Toronto booze island"
A couple of years later but very well done, you did Ireland proud ! All the best from Scotland.
😂😂🤣They are drunk on adrenaline 🤣🤣🤣😂Savage stuff.... Go on ireland 🇮🇪🍀👍💪
If Aidan O'Brien had been their trainer they would have won.Well done lads you come across as two genuine top blokes and Ireland's first Olympic rowing medalYou should be very proud of yourselves.
Tiocaigh ar la at the end, brilliant😂😂
Slipped that one in there , the legend
Who said that?
Our day will come! Is the correct translation
@@sdrtcacgnrjrc The guy on the left (Gary?) said it at 3:04
It's funny. At the beginning I could not under them, but as the video went on, I understood them more and more.😄
helps to have a few swigs of Irish Whiskey!
And they've done it again ! Well done lads🎉
Only one of them has, Paul. He’s rowing with Fintan McCarthy now. They won gold in Tokyo too.
@@MrsCrazyrange oh my bad ! Thanks for the correction.
Grass roots sports!!! Well done everyone who helped these athletes achieve their goals!
Interviewer tossed in a "Tiocfaidh ár lá" right at the end there! (For those who don't know, that's an Irish republican saying that translates as "Our day will come" and refers a future date when, it's hoped, the whole of Ireland will be united.)
I'm American and my family is from Jamaica. I had to pay attention, but I understood them pretty well.
tiocfaidh ár lá, i love these lads.
That's grit. Dry heaving in the middle of an interview and returning like nothing happened. No wonder they made it to the Olympics.
I did not follow all the words but really enjoy these young men's pride and pleasure in their gold.🎉
Aww the first Olympic Rowing medal for Ireland. How proud they must be :).
Amazing guys..fantastic interview.
Love these dudes - from the states
Massive congratulations to you both.
Love the Irish accent, God bless you lads
I’m originally from Belize and raised in the U.S., and I understand them perfectly. As a matter of fact, I’ve noticed the similarities of the accents of the UK and what we speak in the Caribbean. The guy on the left accent actually sounds similar to some Caribbean accents.
Except they're from Ireland not the UK! Never ever confuse the two!
@@Nicolacurran1 I don’t mean to offend you. However, when these places were being colonized hundreds of years ago, who knows where the colonizers were from. I’m sure everyone wanted a piece of the action. I was just referring to what I hear in their voices.
@@beau692 Irish were out there. But not as colonisers. Because they got colonised themselves and sent to the Caribbean as punishment.
Thumbs up if you're here in 2024 after that Olympic gold medal😢
Me!
Love love the Irish voice.
I'm not sure why this was funny? It was a super interview. What great lads.
So real, such pure joy, and their constant obvious answers. Great lads, great men, very happy for them.
I dont think this was the interview people claimed to be funny. There are others that are harder to understand
ikr?! I could understand nearly everything they said!
0:19 " from A to B as fast as ya can and poo like a dog"
*pull* like a dog 😂
@@matthewhayes5805 🤣 🤣💩
Fantastic, well done Gents ....🇨🇦
You re making all descendents of the Irish diaspora proud too.
What a great 👍 pair of lads that’s what the sport needs Great 👍
"lotta people out there with 2 arms and 2 legs'🤣 Tiochfaidh ar la👍💪
The guy on the right wouldd make a great ventriloquist 🤣😅😆
The only reason I understood this is because I understand the Jamaican dialect lol
But there was no jamacian dialect so that’s stupid
@@ryanjoyce3957 Irish and Jamaican dialect and tones of speaking have many similarities bruda
That's what I hear - a little bit of Kingston.
I have 0 idea why I understand this so well lol
@@ryanjoyce3957 Jamaica was used by the English govt. in the 19th c. as the place to send Irish Republicans/ Fenians who had been convicted and sentenced to transportation. Jamaicans learned to speak English as it was spoken by these transported Irish Republicans. It's why our accent is literally a brogue. I have no problems understanding these 2 lovely brothers. It is like being in Kingston.🇯🇲
Love their voices
Thank god i had Irish parents and could understand them because the subtitles were a little bit wrong!
They are so adorable
Well spoken the lovely boys.
I'm American...my grandparents were from Ireland so I guess I'm used to regional Irish accents... still amazes me all the people in the comments that can't understand a word
Lovely accent! Just casually turning away to puke a bit and then back at it with huge grin on his face. Did not understand half of it so turned on youtube auto texting, almost had a stroke trying to read…😂
Though born and raised in the Bronx, I lived in a neighborhood that exploded with Irish immigrants in the 90's. became friends with people from all over and learned to understand all Irish accents so I understand these guys perfectly.
Funny random story... Some guys in Ireland don't understand other guys from Ireland because the accents are so different, but because I understand them all I often was used as a translator, lol.
Its like a guy from Alabama might have trouble understanding a New Yorker, lol.
Woodlawn? Banbridge? I just moved home from woodlawn McLean avenue the emerald mile after over 10 years there my kids were born there. Unbelievable neighbourhood Irish to the core
@@conormulvihill7421 Mulvihill, I remember that name was a music teacher in Bainbridge 40 years ago.
@@johnmonk66 no relation of mine I'm afraid. And iv moved home again to Ireland. Bainbridge is nowhere near Irish like it was back 60 70 years ago,all got pushed out to woodlawn and McLean ave which I'm sure you know well.
@@conormulvihill7421 I know it too well, lol. I was in Bainbridge during the height of the 80's and 90's, we had 23 bars within 5 blocks. Many went to Woodlawn, and many are still topping off in the Heritage most nights...
Their mouths hardly move when they speak. They would make fantastic ventriloquists.
Y’all crazy english is my third language and I got it all lmao
Maybe it's because I am a not-native English speaker used to listen carefully in order to learn a language that I can understand these guys perfectly. It's acutally a good thereapy to cure the mobile device-use induced ADHS so many suffer from.
There family must have been so excited and proud 💚💚
iksoited n proyd, dey shorely woz
@@majorlaff8682
Are you American?
My mother was Irish and I lived there for a year as a child. So I understood 99% of this, despite being an American. This does explain why I can read French but never get the French accent right -- these patterns are laid down in our brains at a very young age. All that aside, what a great win for Ireland. Well done, Lads!
That doesn't make sense. You know a lot of Irish people can speak French with French accents?
@@Nicolacurran1 Of course. Half of them are my cousins. I should have been more clear. I'm trying to learn French in my 60s. It's a little harder now, but I'm persevering.
@@marthas8108Bonne chance!
Lol you sound like a typical American.
What are you even on about???
There’s more people out there with two arms and two legs like
Pure heart
🤣😂🤣 Our day will come! Great stuff lads.
I understand Every Word. Up Ireland!
The Irish cannot place third because they’d have to say “I got turd.”
True. 🤣
I'm a oregon country guy. I understood them.
There's nothing like a Cork accent!
The auto-subtitles don't know how to process the heavy irish accents. They can't even get Skibbereen right. Paul went back to the olympics this year (2024) and got gold.
Oh god the automtic subtitles. I just peed a little from laughing.
Lol, Paul stuck in a cheeky wee Tiocfaidh Ar La at the end. How to piss off the Unionists in the North in one fell swoop.
Coupla laddies hopped in a boat and never jumped out!
I watched Derry Girls and with it i understood most people who talks with an Irish accent but this 😂 what kind of Irish accent are they speaking with.
The great county and independent republic of Cork.
Plenty o’ people with 2 arms and 2 legs like us
love these lads
"Just a couple fellas with two arms, two legs, and more Olympic champions to come, please God!"
"Its good yah" 😂
I speak Fluent Texan. It’s technically English (almost) and the same translation aid helps here too: several pints.
Congratulations these many years on. All I can heat is "Father Ted."
I wonder how lip-readers manage in Skibbereen?
31 counties in Ireland think they're the best. In Cork they know it. 👏👏👏
32 counties
😅love em
Came here from the Graham Norton show, leaving with the thought that the guy on the right would be a phenomenal ventriloquist.
Love from the Scottish haha understood it perfectly.
All us irish last our native language we should be speaking now ...
As a Black American woman, I'm proud to say that I understood 100% of what they said. They kind of speak through their teeth and you have to get your mind to listen slow.
Classic Skibb lads, had to drop a quick tiocfaidh ár lá in at the end haha
made us proud 🇮🇪🇮🇪
i understand them just fine! belated congratulations!
As Barney McKenna(dubliners fame) once said to a load of germans or dutch "if i am talking to quick then you have to listen faster"...