Means "Thank you" when addressing one person in Irish (Gaelic).
"Lá breithe mhaith agat" means "have a good birthday"
La-breithe mhaith agat is "Happy Birthday" in Gaelic and slainte is a drinking toast such as "Cheers", "Nostrovia" or "Skål".
Ciao, Sharon
In Ulster Irish: gurra 'my' oggut. In Connacht Irish: gurra mah oggut In Munster Irish: guh rev mah oggut
It's Irish Gaelic for 'Thank you' when addressing more than one person.
"a" should be "le"
"Cad a bhí agat le hithe?" means "What did you have to eat?"
"maith" should be "mhaith"
"Slán leat agus oíche mhaith agat" means "Good bye and have a good night"
"Sláinte agus go raibh míle maith agat" means "cheers and a thousand thanks."
in Irish.
No
(cass-L) is how you pronounce it castle
pess-l
you can pronounce it like this L ses .... Send By hayan from Afghanistan
break it down into two syllables sub-tleIt's pronounced [suht-l]. Similiarly you pronounce saddle [sad-l] and shuttle [shuht-l]
It is pronunced "Robert L. Chvornyek."
I believe it's not "Asians", per se, but Japanese - their language does not have a "L" sound in it, so when they have to pronounce words in English with an "L" they do the best they can. *EDIT*
L A fitness
It is pronounced "lay-twah-l" with a silent "l" at the end.
If you can tell me what words? The L IS pronounced...
Boe-l. It rhymes with 'goal'.
nee-oh-neyt-l