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  1. gle ( SIL, ethnologue ) Die irische Sprache (irisch Gaeilge [ ˈɡeːlʲɟə] oder im Munster-Dialekt Gaolainn [ ˈɡeːləɲ ], nach der bis 1948 geltenden Orthographie meist Gaedhilge ), Irisch oder Irisch-Gälisch, ist eine der drei goidelischen oder gälischen Sprachen. Sie ist also eng verwandt mit dem Schottisch-Gälischen und dem Manx.

  2. ** it should have been fáilte GO not DO + the fada is on the second 'a' in uafásachDia duit agus fáilte go Gaeilge i mo chroí! Hello and welcome to 'Irish in...

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    • Gaeilge i mo chroí
  3. However, when English is being used, the Irish language is conventionally referred to as “Irish,” not “Gaelic.” Origins in 6th Century Irish has the earliest attested vernacular European literature outside the classical world of Greece and Rome; there is evidence for a literary tradition in Irish as early as the sixth century A.D. and evidence for literacy predates that.

  4. 27. Okt. 2021 · The Irish language, also referred to as Irish Gaelic or just Gaelic, is often mistaken as a dying language. But this is not quite true. The Irish language has constitutional status and is an official language of the Republic of Ireland. In fact, there is a collective name to refer to the modern-day areas of Ireland where Irish Gaelic is spoken ...

  5. 27. Okt. 2023 · One of the many funny Irish sayings, this one translates to ‘As many corners as a bag of turf’. 8. Ná scall do bheola ar leite fear eile. One of the wiser Gaelic phrases in Irish, this one warns you to ‘Never scald your lips with another man’s porridge’. 9. Cuir síoda ar ghabhar agus is gabhar i gconaí é.

  6. Gaelic is a close relative of Irish and Manx Gaelic. The Gaelic language is believed to have come to what is now Scotland from what is now Ireland in around 500AD. The term Scot comes from the Latin word Scoti, meaning a Gaelic speaker. These Scots established the kingdom of Dál Riata in modern-day Argyll.

  7. 30. Juni 2012 · Irish independence gave more “validity” to the language it seems and as the official language of Ireland, it does make sense to call it “Irish”, but using this name does exclude speakers of Scottish Gaelic, Manx Gaelic, and other dialects which have developed around the world over the last few hundred years. I personally feel that as these languages were once on a dialect continuum ...