In Irish 'Álainn' means 'beautiful,lovely' also 'delightful'; the Scottish Gaelic
version is 'àlainn', meaning 'beautiful'.
Cailín álainn. Cailin breá, cailin dathúil
In Scottish Gaelic: tràigh;in Irish: trá.
As an adjective: cotúil; cúthail; or scáfar.
Scottish Gaelic doesn't work like English. 'Door' is doras but 'of a door' would be dorais. It's called the genitive case.
Languages don't work like you apparently think they do. Gaelic uses the same letters English does, so "Camry" would be spelled "Camry".Not quite accurate: Irish & Scottish Gaelic do not have "y", but I agree with the answer otherwise.
bhí a lán oibre le déanamh
There is no god of Gaelic Football.There is no god of Gaelic Football.There is no god of Gaelic Football.There is no god of Gaelic Football.There is no god of Gaelic Football.There is no god of Gaelic Football.There is no god of Gaelic Football.There is no god of Gaelic Football.There is no god of Gaelic Football.There is no god of Gaelic Football.There is no god of Gaelic Football.
There is no god of Gaelic Football.There is no god of Gaelic Football.There is no god of Gaelic Football.There is no god of Gaelic Football.There is no god of Gaelic Football.There is no god of Gaelic Football.There is no god of Gaelic Football.There is no god of Gaelic Football.There is no god of Gaelic Football.There is no god of Gaelic Football.There is no god of Gaelic Football.
Irish "Gaelic": bláth Scottish Gaelic:
Scottish Gaelic is tì. Irish Gaelic is tae.
"Gaelic" can mean "Irish Gaelic' or "Scottish Gaelic". They are classified as two distinct languages.
Irish Gaelic is arís ("a-reesh")Scots Gaelic is a-rithist.Manx Gaelic = ?