Loyalty translates as dílse or dílseacht, dílse being the noun. Love translates as Grá, in Irish you are in love with someone so it would be ' i ngrá le' or a beautiful way to say in love with someone is to say my heart is in the person 'tá mo chroí istigh inti (female)/ann (male)
neart (strength), onóir (honour), dílseacht (loyalty)
dílseacht, pronounced deel-shockt
dìlseachd
There are a few different versions of great grandmother in Irish. Sinseanmhathair (sounds like shin-shan-wawhir) is one translation. The word translate to great old mother.
a haon [In Irish, "a haen"] Scottish Gaelic is:
Weigh is pronounced the same way one would pronounce the word way. One does not pronounce the g or h. The word means to find the mass or weight of something.
No. It is Irish Stew.
ó aen guh kaed. (from one to a hundred)
Patriotism
nationalism!
olok
The Irish word for "eye" is spelt súil.
You can listen to an native Icelander pronounce the word ''tanngjóstur''(modern spelling of ''tanngjóstr'') in the related link.
Sh-o-ve But pronounce it as if it was all one syllable.
There is one syllable in the word "where." (You pronounce it the same as the word "wear.")