In Irish: seacht In Scottish Gaelic: seachd
Irish Gaelic: shaKHth
Scottish Gaelic: shaKHk
The Scottish Gaelic word for eight is ochd.
The Irish Gaelic word for eight is ocht.
Irish: a seacht
Scots: a seachd
Teach - takh
shkee-hawn
Aoigh (ooee) is Scottish Gaelic;Aoi is the Irish, pronounced 'ee'.
The pronunciation of "laugh" as "laff" is due to a phenomenon known as the Great Vowel Shift, which occurred in English during the Middle Ages. This shift caused changes in the pronunciation of many words, leading to variations in how certain vowels were pronounced. Over time, these changes became standardized, resulting in the pronunciation we use today.
For the Irish pronunciation go to abair.ie
mishnokh
The Scottish Gaelic pronunciation would be roughly drooim;The Irish "Gaelic" pronunciation would be like drim.
It doesn't have a Gaelic pronunciation: it is Latin.
Is this a misreading of 'caisleán'? If so, it would be 'cash-lawn'.
'Cridheil' is not Irish; it's Scottish Gaelic. Often heard in the phrase 'Nollaig cridheil' or 'Merry Christmas'.
Éire is Irish Gaelic for Ireland and it's pronounced AIR-ih.
It is pronounced la-khoopla in Irish and means 'one of twins/twin'.