Scottish: caraid ionmhainn, caraid gràdhach, caraid gràdhaichte Irish: cara ionúin; cara muirneach; cara dil; cara grách. Irish: Cara na gcarad = dearest friend
The Scottish Gaelic is do charaid.
You need to specify Irish Gaelic or Scottish Gaelic: they are two separate languages.
Mo chara, in Irish Gaelic. Mo charaid, in Scottish Gaelic and Connemara Irish
In Gaelic, you can say "mo chara anam" to mean "my soul friend".
Cara means friend; a chara can mean 'his friend' or when addressing someone A chara, O friend. This is Irish Gaelic.
In Irish, "do chara cléibh". In Scottish Gaelic: ???
In Irish it's d'ansacht / do mhuirnín
In Irish it's "díol ghrá"
"do chara"
In IRISH Gaelic it would be cara cléibh (bosom friend) which would sound a bit like "car-a klayv".In SCOTS Gaelic it could be said several ways:dlùth-charaid (close friend)deala-charaid (true friend)fìor-charaid (true friend)caraid ceart (real friend)
Irish Gaelic: cara ('Standard') or caraid (Galway) Scots Gaelic: caraidIn Irish it's "cara"; in Scottish Gaelic "caraid".
Kara is Gaelic for friend. No, the word in Irish Gaelic is cara.