"Gaelic" can mean "Irish Gaelic' or "Scottish Gaelic". They are classified as two distinct languages.
In Irish "Celtic warrior" is "gaiscíoch Ceilteach".
Scottish Gaelic, Welsh, and Irish 'Gaelic' are probably the Celtic languages most people are somewhat aware of; Breton and the revived Manx and Cornish are not.In Scottish Gaelic 'warrior' can belaoch = warrior; hero; championàrmann = hero/warriormìlidh = warriorIn Irish it can be:Laoch = warrior; heroGaiscíoch = warrior; heroCuradh = warrior/hero; championIn Welsh (Celtic but not Gaelic):Rhyfelwr = warrior
Hero/warrior/champion of the Gaels (Scottish Gaelic).
It is mac in Scottish Gaelic.
The Scottish Gaelic for 'brother' is bràthair.
As a noun in Irish: crann seasta (champion of a cause) (in sports) curadh (warrior, hero; champion); seaimpín (champion) barrthiománaí or togha tiománaí (champion driver) Scottish Gaelic:?
It is òran in Scottish Gaelic.
in Scottish Gaelic: facal.
The Scottish Gaelic is do charaid.
In Irish d'fhíorghrá;in Scottish Gaelic: ?
I can't find the word as spelled.It could be an laoch (the warrior, hero, champion)?
Modern Irish - tine; Old Irish - teine Scottish Gaelic - teine Manx - aile The name Áed is another word for 'fire'. Delbaeth means 'fire shape'.