In Irish it would most likely be "saoi" (pronounced "see") which means:
(Scottish) Gaelic: ?
There's no such thing as a Gaelic symbol for wisdom.
The Manx for "wisdom" is "creenaght"
In Scots Gaelic it's "crìonnachd"
In Irish it's "críonnacht"
In the Irish language, críonna [kreena], agnaí [agnee], gaoiseach [geeshakh].
In Scottish Gaelic: ...
Fearsaidh or eagnaidh, both mean 'wise man'.
críonnacht / eagna / gaois
críonnacht
or
ciall
saoi (pronounced 'see')
eagna
It's not Gaelic so why pronounce it.
Gaelic has no letter 'y'.
The word for perfection in Irish is foirfeacht;in Scottish Gaelic it is spelled foirfeachd.
"Gaelic" can mean "Irish Gaelic' or "Scottish Gaelic". They are classified as two distinct languages.
nae-ul
tar-hoil
"bawss" (bás)
dhloo-khara
That is not a Scottish Gaelic word. It may be a word in the English dialect of Scotland ("Scots" or "Lallans"). Gaelic has no 'w' or 'y'.
djeel-shakht
ain-taha
[món-yair]