níos mó ná mo shaol féin
In Irish it's: mo shaol / mo bheatha
Dia's Muire dhaoibh.
A sheep is caora; more than one is caoirigh.
IRISH (Gaelic): agus tusa (one person); agus sibhse (more than one) (SCOTS) Gaelic: agus thusa; agus sibhse
In Irish: Dia duit (to one person); to more than one person, Dia daoibh. In Scottish Gaelic: Hallo
Gaelic On a recent trip to Ireland I learned that the Irish (the ones I met anyway) prefer the language to be called Irish rather than Gaelic. This might be a regional preference, I don't know. ---- Irish Gaelic Gaeilge
Irish (Gaelic): Dia dhuit (Hello) and Bain sult as. (Enjoy) for one person. Dia dhaoibh and Bainigí sult as. (for more than one) Scottish Gaelic: ???
There is no such language as Celtic. The word "Celtic" refers to a group of more than a dozen different languages, 6 of which are still spoken today: Irish Gaelic Scottish Gaelic Welsh Breton Manx Cornish In Irish it's: tine (controlled fire) / dóiteán (blaze)
Yes. It is closer to Scottish Gaelic than Irish. It has a rather non-Gaelic orthography compared to the other two however.
IRISH: tú or tusa (more emphatic) one person sibh or sibhse more than one person.SCOTTISH GAELIC: thu or thusa (one person, familiar) sibh or sibhse (more than one, or polite form for one) as in French.
Folláin: healthy; wholesome, sound. Pronounced 'fullawn'. Heart is croí pronounced 'kree'. These are Irish Gaelic rather than Scots Gaelic or Manx.
In Irish Gaelic/Gaeilge (on the phone) Haló. Personally greeting one person Dia dhuit, more than one person Dia dhaoibh. In Scots Gaelic/Gàidhlig Hallo.
Gaelic is an English word referring to the three Celtic languages of Ireland, Scotland and the Isle of Man.In their respective languages they are called Gaeilge, GÃ idhlig and Gaelg. In Ireland the language is called simply 'Irish' in English and 'Gaelic' is thought to mean Scottish Gaelic.Despite this some overseas continue to refer to Irish as 'Gaelic' confusing the issue. Perhaps the best compromise is the call them 'Irish Gaelic', 'Scottish Gaelic' and 'Manx Gaelic'.