Ar feabhas(pronounced ar ousAnother answer:iontach (wonderful)éachtach (wonderful)'It is wonderful!' is 'Tá sé thar barr!' or 'Tá sé thar na bearta!''Ar fheabhas' is 'wonderfully'.
'Awe-inspiring' is creathnach (frightful, terrifying); uafásach (horrible, wonderful, terrible) uaimhneach(dreadful, terrible, horrid).
I am only a beginner in Irish, but I believe it means "The weather is wonderful, thank God", or "The weather is wonderful, thanks to God".
Beidh tú i do thréidlia iontach means 'You will be a wonderful veterinary'(as in veterinary surgeon) in Irish. You could also say Beidh tú i do dhochtúirbeithíoch iontach.As for Scots Gaelic: ?
Wonderful in Scottish Gaelic is iongantach.
You could say:do-chreidte (fabulous, incredible, unbelievable)iontach (wonderful, amazing, great, brilliant)
In Irish it would be buachaill dána (a 'bold' boy).In Scottish Gaelic, balach dàna (verify)
"you" is not an Irish word, it should be a name / personal pronoun. "tá X go hiontach" means "X is/are wonderful"
Irish people order their minds to form wonderful words that roll on their tongues to the envy and delight of every one within hearing distance. Irish people order their thoughts to instantly polish gems of wit that can either give you a chuckle or have you rolling with laughter begging for more. Irish people also can do a wonderful job of order...ordering people around,specially the women. One look at their art gives you a sense of the order,usually it begins in a wide variety of circles and spirals that go on forever....something like the natural order of the universe..what more can you ask of order?
That would be the wonderful actor, Liam Neeson.
The comparative of wonderful is "more wonderful". The superlative of wonderful is "the most wonderful."
a wonderful