"Cronaím uaim thú" is Irish and means 'I miss you'.
It's Irish and means "I miss you".
The Irish (Gaelic) language form of Peter is Peadar(padhur, dh like th in these). (In Scots Gaelic, Peadar and Pàdraig are both used as substitutions for Peter.)
"cronam th" should be "cronaím uaim thú" "cronaím uaim thú, táim i ngrá" means "I miss you, I'm in love" A do-it-yourself translation?
dìonadair; neach-dìon; neach-dìona 1 defender (also in sports) 2 defendant (in law) 3 safeguarder cluicheadair-dìon: defender (in sports) tèarmannair 1 protector 2 defender
dhó-null (dh is like th in then)
Bain taitneamh as do bhéil (pronounced: Bane tatniv OS du veil)
The Scottish Gaelic used nowadays for prince is prionnsa - that's obviously a borrowing from English, and there is an old word " flath " [you don't pronounce the th at the end] which can mean prince or king or even just hero; flathail, the adjective, means princely or stately.
Gaelic is a term that encompasses two distinct languages: an Irish variety and a Scottish variety."In Irish sí gaoithe (shee geeha) is 'a sudden blast of wind; a small whirlwind (regarded as a 'fairy wind' through mistaken association with sí, spirit world, an unrelated word); a flurry of dust on the road (considered bad luck). Derived from sí gaoithe, gust of wind." (A Dictionary of Hiberno-English: the Irish Use of English)In Scottish Gaelic: sìth-ghaoth.
I was trying to say "God holds me" but the only translation I could find was for "God has me" which is what my original question was supposed to say...it's rather hard to find congugation rules online...how would you say "God holds me" and pronounce it?
The Taaffes were from Wales (the name comes from David) and came to Ireland after the Norman invasion. In Irish Gaelic they were called Táth.
Th Scottish Gaelic translation of Father is "Athair". My father = M'athair, Your father = D'athair, Her father = a h-athair, His father = a athair, Our father = ar n-athair Your father (plural) = ur n-athair Their father = a n-athair
sceimhle (skee-li) means terrorsceimhlitheoir (skee-lihore) means terroristIn the pronounciation (Munster Irish) the -e is said like the -i in the word 'win'.ANOTHER ANSWER:uamhan (fear, awe, dread) (object of dread, terror)scéin (fright, terror)sceimhle (terror)scanradh (fright)(terror)(greed)'Gaelic' is used for both Irish and Scottish.
Do... (Pronounced like 'the' with an 'uh' - th-uh) Your question - Do cheist; Your language - Do theanga; Your pencil - Do pheannluaidh. If you mean 'your' in the plural, it is bhur: Bhur gceist; bhur dteanga; bhur bpeann luaidhe. These are all examples of Irish Gaelic.