The cast of The Lass of Gloucester - 1912 includes: Betty Gray as Betty Lane - the Lass of Gloucester
The cast of The Ulster Lass - 1915 includes: Gene Gauntier as Eileen - the Ulster Lass Lydia Yeamans Titus
Tom Lass was born on August 15, 1983, in Munich, Germany.
Barbara Kwiatkowska-Lass was born on 1940-06-01.
Yeah, one on his wee wee
Wee lass from Scotland,and to be honest,she's well sound.
In Welsh llances means 'lass'.
Wee(Little) Bonnie(pretty) Lass(Girl) It's not Irish but Scottish anyway. --- Yes. WEE=adj. use has been current in southern Eng. since c.1600. BONNIE= derivitive of the Latin term "bon" meaning "good." LASS=Old Sweedish. Middle Irish. OSw. "løsk kona" unmarried woman (spec. use of the sense 'unoccupied' or 'having no fixed abode'; cf. Olcel. lǫskr 'weak, good for nothing').
wee means yes
A lass or lassy. Lass means friend in slang. (used for girls)
it means p*** wee it means p*** wee
"Wee" means "yes" in French. However, "wee wee" is not a correct phrase in French and doesn't have a specific meaning.
the term lass in Ireland means girl or female im from ireland just so you know
it means the woman was pretty
=== === distinctions will have to be made between Scottish and Irish and Welsh of course.In Scottish it would be 'wee lass' or 'wee lad'. The previous answer is clearly incorrect. Gaelic is not a form of English; it is a separate language. Welsh and Irish Gaelic are also separate languages not dialects of English. The "wee lass" and "wee lad" are in the Scottish form of English called Lallans (the English of the Lowlands. === ===
the term lass in ireland means girl or female im from ireland just so you know
"Lass es dir schmecken" means "enjoy your food/meal".