In Irish it's: mairg / dobrón
In Welsh it's "galar"
In Scots Gaelic it's "bròn"
The Celtic word for strong is "tairngreacht."
The Celtic word for girl is "cailín" in Irish Gaelic.
There's actually no such language as "Celtic". Celtic refers to a group of dozens of languages, six of which are spoken today:BretonCornishIrish GaelicManxScottish GaelicWelsh
There's actually no such language as "Celtic". Celtic refers to a group of dozens of languages, six of which are spoken today:BretonCornishIrish GaelicManxScottish GaelicWelsh
There's actually no such language as "Celtic". Celtic refers to a group of dozens of languages, six of which are spoken today:BretonCornishIrish GaelicManxScottish GaelicWelsh
The Celtic word for strong is "tairngreacht."
There was great sorrow in the house of the deceased. Parting is such sweet sorrow
The Celtic word for girl is "cailín" in Irish Gaelic.
The word 'sorrow' is a singular, common, abstract noun, a word for an emotion.
The women wept in sorrow. His sorrow was more than he could bear.
Celtaidd = Celtic
There are six distinct Celtic languages.
No. Sorrow is fa'anoanoa/fa'anoanoaga. Fa'afitauli is problem.
A word that describes to show sorrow for bad is 'sympathy'.
There's actually no such language as "Celtic". Celtic refers to a group of dozens of languages, six of which are spoken today:BretonCornishIrish GaelicManxScottish GaelicWelsh
There's actually no such language as "Celtic". Celtic refers to a group of dozens of languages, six of which are spoken today:BretonCornishIrish GaelicManxScottish GaelicWelsh
There's actually no such language as "Celtic". Celtic refers to a group of dozens of languages, six of which are spoken today:BretonCornishIrish GaelicManxScottish GaelicWelsh