An Sionnach Geal-liath (silver coloured) / An Sionnach Airgid (made of silver metal)
sionnach fireann
In Irish it's madra rua / sionnach
Be aware that 'Gaelic' is actually two separate languages: Scottish Gaelic (called 'Gaelic' in Scotland) and Irish Gaelic (called 'Irish' in Ireland).In Irish: gadhar rua or madra rua (the latter can also mean 'fox')In (Scottish) Gaelic: cu ruadh.
Sionnach beag in both Irish and Scottish Gaelic.
foxes To be more specific: Irish: sionnach (a fox), sionnaigh (foxes) OR madra rua (fox), madraí rua (foxes) Scottish Gaelic: sionnach, pl: sionnaich OR madadh-ruadh, pl: madaidh-ruadh balgair, pl: balgairean.
In Irish it's madadh rua/ madra rua/ sionnach;in Scottish Gaelic it is sionnach/ balgair/ madadh-ruadh.If you mean the Irish surname 'Fox' it can have a variety of originsÓ Catharnaigh of Co. MeathÓ Sionnaigh of Westmeath, Mayo, Louth, Kilkenny, GalwayMac a' tSionnagh of Tyrone, LouthÓ Sionacháin/Ó Seanacháin of Westmeath & Cavan.
Criomhthann (a fox); Tuathlaith (princess of the people); these are Irish Gaelic names. Aiveen looks like it might be an anglicised version of an Irish name, but I've never seen it before.
In Irish two different words are used for red:rua (rooa) can mean red-(haired); reddish-brown, russet, copper brown.dearg (djarug) is the usual color red.In the other Gaelic (Scottish) they are spelled ruadh(rooa) and dearg(jarug).
Bernard Fox - Irish republican - was born in 1951.
Dearg or RuaPronouned: d'yarug/rooa The Irish Gaelic for red depends on what is being described, for inanimate objects the word would be dearg, for animate things, a fox, or a person's hair - the word would be rua.rua
Yes. The silver fox is a color variant of the red fox.
the home of the silver fox is i think in salisbury