Merry Christmas in Irish is Nollaig shona dhuit/Nollaig shona dhaoibh. The Scottish Gaelic is Nollaig Chridheil.
The answer to the diffney riddle "N N 1 gaeilge" is "Twins." In the Irish language, "N N 1" sounds like "achan," which means twins.
To say "What did he say?" in Twi, you would say, "Ahia bꜛra bꜛini?"
The future tense of "say" is "will say." For example, "I will say goodbye before I leave."
To say "no" in Romansh, you can say "na."
To say "What did you say?" in French, you would say "Qu'est-ce que tu as dit ?"
In Irish: áthasach; gliondrach; lúchaireach; suairc. In Scottish Gaelic: ?
In Irish it's Nollaig In Scottish Gaelic it's Nollaig.
Nollaig
Irish Gaelic: Nollaig shona dhuit! (or dhaoibh, pl.) Scots Gaelic: Nollaig Chridheil
Ireland:Nollaig maith duit - Happy Christmas to you (singular)Nollaig maith agaibh - Happy Christmas to you (plural)Nollaig maith againn - Happy Christmas to us all--ANOTHER ANSWER--There is another wiki answer that seems to say that "Nollaig Mhaith chugat" is the response to "Nollaig Shona Dhuit".
Nollaig shona daoibh.
Maith an fear, a Nollaig!
In Irish its 'nullig huna' (Written as Nollaig shona).
In scottish Gaelic Merry Chistmas is Nollaig Chridheil
In Scottish Gaelic Merry Christmas is Nollaig chridheilPronounced "nollik chree-hel"
You are trying to say "Happy Christmas" in Irish, but that is not they way it would actually be said. Sásta can mean happy or satisfied and Nollaig does mean Christmas, but the way of saying Happy Christmas in Irish is Nollaig ShonaDuit. It would be pronounced "Nullig hunna dhitch", with the hun in huna rhyming with gun.
Nollaig shona dhuit (singular)Nollaig shona dhaoibh (plural)