You make me smile - I enjoy your little bloopers and asides- you have a brilliant teaching style - please keep giving us the verbal Gailge and verbal English translations - learning is such a fun experience with you Molly. Go raibh míle maith agat
The sentences give me confidence about using Irish. Would love to see a video about common mistakes made by new learners. Another good topic would be guidance to using idiomatic ra ther than literal translations. Thank you for all your work and kindness. I appreciate your sense of humor. ❤ 👋😄👍
3 ปีที่แล้ว +1
I actually had this idea myself recently! Glad you’re enjoying the vids 😊
Your pronounciation is so different from what I'm used to (ie, 'row' instead of 'rev' for raibh) Very handy for the cluasthuiscints! Great video. from a mix of bad teachers I've always found grammar difficult and you make it all a bit less daunting so thank you
Dia dhuit Molly! Great video! I must thank you for making such an useful and nice video! Caithfidh mé buíochas a ghabháil leat as físeán chomh húsáideach agus chomh deas a dhéanamh! Go raibh maith agat agus slán go fóill!
I finally got round to watching this! Just wanted to say I took a ton of notes on this and it was so helpful! I can’t wait for the next Irish Prepositions video❤️ You do so well explaining all this crazy grammar ☺️
Dia dhuit Molly! Leomh mé a rá go bhfuil tú ar cheann de na múinteoirí Gaelige is fearr riamh! Ní gá a rá mar sin i gcónaí ba bhreá liom d'fhíseán! Mhínigh tú na réamhfhocail go soiléir! Is mór agam d'iarrachtaí an Ghaeilge a chur chun cinn inár máthairtheanga állain! Míle buíchos! Slán!
At 10:06 I think there is supposed to be a linked video but it doesn't show up (at least it didn't for me, while all the others did). Great work. I'm really getting a lot out of your videos and I'm so glad I found your channel.
3 ปีที่แล้ว
th-cam.com/video/q4yYteiumxQ/w-d-xo.html
3 ปีที่แล้ว
Sorry about that, I will check it out 🤔 ^^ there’s the link anyway and glad you liked the vid 😊
In the _bí + ar_ sentences, I've noticed that _a_ is used in _tá air a obair a dhéanamh,_ but it's not used in _bhí orm labhairt léi._ Any clues as to why this happens?
3 ปีที่แล้ว +3
Because the ‘a’ here means ‘his’ - a obair = his work 😊
@ Thanks for writing back Molly. I am a hobby language learner to keep my brain sharp I am not in a position to donate even a dollar or euro as I dont have credit card. Best wishes. I will rely on the free gifts alone. Take care
@ I fully understand Molly You have to support your work and mitigate costs. I was just being picky pokey and jocular about it No intention to criticize You are a sweet girl doing great job
It is going to snow can also be stated as Tá sé ag dul ag cur sneachta? In few sentences you used AIR not AR, was that a typo or the preposition AR changes to AIR ? How congenial you might be Molly about posting transcript of the lessons. Nastya a Russian teacher habitually inserts transcripts of the lessons in her videos as a link That would be appreciated It wont be a lot of additional work for you as you write the lesson anyway on a computer file
3 ปีที่แล้ว +3
It was meant as “air” and I literally don’t have time for that, I am extremely busy with work and I think that all the info in this video can surely suffice
Irish inserts pronouns into verbs as well at times. And in conflating pronouns with preposition Irish is like Arabic and Sanskrit . These three are the most ancient languages still popular while Latin and Greek have faded out. The hair being on the head sounds like wearing a wig of red color. Also Irish bear emotions on them as a badge of honor
You make me smile - I enjoy your little bloopers and asides- you have a brilliant teaching style - please keep giving us the verbal Gailge and verbal English translations - learning is such a fun experience with you Molly.
Go raibh míle maith agat
The sentences give me confidence about using Irish. Would love to see a video about common mistakes made by new learners. Another good topic would be guidance to using idiomatic ra ther than literal translations. Thank you for all your work and kindness. I appreciate your sense of humor.
❤ 👋😄👍
I actually had this idea myself recently! Glad you’re enjoying the vids 😊
Thank you for this! You are a teacher ✌️
Thank you for the great video! Really helped out a Leaving Cert Irish student 👍🤗
Foirfe! I will forever remember that "sadness is on me; I am not sadness" because of this tutorial! Go raibh maith agat, a Molly!
☺️💚
Your pronounciation is so different from what I'm used to (ie, 'row' instead of 'rev' for raibh) Very handy for the cluasthuiscints! Great video. from a mix of bad teachers I've always found grammar difficult and you make it all a bit less daunting so thank you
Dia dhuit Molly! Great video! I must thank you for making such an useful and nice video! Caithfidh mé buíochas a ghabháil leat as físeán chomh húsáideach agus chomh deas a dhéanamh! Go raibh maith agat agus slán go fóill!
I finally got round to watching this! Just wanted to say I took a ton of notes on this and it was so helpful! I can’t wait for the next Irish Prepositions video❤️ You do so well explaining all this crazy grammar ☺️
BSOLUTELY SUPERB. THANK YOU VERY MUCH!!
This Is useful and I found it same day it was made.
great content, easy to follow
Go raibh maith agat for your videos !! I'm a complete beginner and your videos are teaching me a lot !! ❤️
Dia dhuit Molly! Leomh mé a rá go bhfuil tú ar cheann de na múinteoirí Gaelige is fearr riamh! Ní gá a rá mar sin i gcónaí ba bhreá liom d'fhíseán! Mhínigh tú na réamhfhocail go soiléir! Is mór agam d'iarrachtaí an Ghaeilge a chur chun cinn inár máthairtheanga állain! Míle buíchos! Slán!
At 10:06 I think there is supposed to be a linked video but it doesn't show up (at least it didn't for me, while all the others did). Great work. I'm really getting a lot out of your videos and I'm so glad I found your channel.
th-cam.com/video/q4yYteiumxQ/w-d-xo.html
Sorry about that, I will check it out 🤔 ^^ there’s the link anyway and glad you liked the vid 😊
Love it,i'm relearning,.just to ask,Cuir se ar a ceann..he put it on his head,would be ok,I think?
In the _bí + ar_ sentences, I've noticed that _a_ is used in _tá air a obair a dhéanamh,_ but it's not used in _bhí orm labhairt léi._ Any clues as to why this happens?
Because the ‘a’ here means ‘his’ - a obair = his work 😊
@ Ahhhh that clears up some meaning for _a obairt,_ but what about the one in _a dhéanamh_ though? Does it also mean "his", as in "his doing"?
@@wos_liwet no that just means to do
@ I see, thanks for the explanation :D
Welcome 😊
Dia duit molly I was wondering if you could do sickness and pain in irish you don't have to if you dont want to😁
Hi Siobhan I actually covered these with a series of posts on my instagram :)
@gaeilge_i_mo_chroi on Instagram
Le do thoil! Airgid vs airgead?!?
exclusive to patrons?
Yes the extra uses I have for AR will be a video made exclusive to people who support me on Patreon
@ Thanks for writing back Molly. I am a hobby language learner to keep my brain sharp I am not in a position to donate even a dollar or euro as I dont have credit card. Best wishes. I will rely on the free gifts alone. Take care
@ I fully understand Molly You have to support your work and mitigate costs. I was just being picky pokey and jocular about it No intention to criticize You are a sweet girl doing great job
I Blodhawk do hereby swear fealty to you
Promote 🤟😂
I gather you grew up speaking Gaelic?
I started learning Irish when I was 4 😊
It is going to snow can also be stated as Tá sé ag dul ag cur sneachta? In few sentences you used AIR not AR, was that a typo or the preposition AR changes to AIR ? How congenial you might be Molly about posting transcript of the lessons. Nastya a Russian teacher habitually inserts transcripts of the lessons in her videos as a link That would be appreciated It wont be a lot of additional work for you as you write the lesson anyway on a computer file
It was meant as “air” and I literally don’t have time for that, I am extremely busy with work and I think that all the info in this video can surely suffice
Irish inserts pronouns into verbs as well at times. And in conflating pronouns with preposition Irish is like Arabic and Sanskrit . These three are the most ancient languages still popular while Latin and Greek have faded out. The hair being on the head sounds like wearing a wig of red color. Also Irish bear emotions on them as a badge of honor