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Thread: How do I say "Hello" in Irish?

  1. #1
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    Default How do I say "Hello" in Irish?

    I was recently in Amsterdam and was amazed at how easily residents could switch from language to language and when someone asked me the above question, the best I could come up with was "Conas atá tu?"
    I've studied Irish for 13 years, studied Peig, got a B in my leaving, but I cannot say hello in my own language.
    We learned Dia duit, Dia s'Mhuire Duit and even Dia s'Mhuire duit s'Phadraig. But what was severely lacking in my education was some simple everyday conversation. We learned how to ask permission to use the toilet but not how ask where the feckin toilet was.
    My schooling was in the 70's and 80's. Has there been any significant changes in how Irish is taught since.
    Last edited by philipkntz; 13-08-19 at 10:37.
    My wife caught me wearing ladies underwear and threatened to leave me.
    So I packed up all her clothes
    And left.

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    Escort AdvertiserCindy Forever (29-04-20), piehunter (23-12-19), Stephanie (13-02-20)

  3. #2
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    Quote Originally Posted by feargal View Post
    Haigh = Hi or hello
    Thanks, but isn't that just gailicized english?
    The Irish must have had a way of greeting each other before Christianity educated them to speak properly.
    My wife caught me wearing ladies underwear and threatened to leave me.
    So I packed up all her clothes
    And left.

  4. #3
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    Bail o Dhia ar an obair.
    Cen chaoi in a bhfuil tu? (Connemara)
    Cad e mar ata tu? (Donegal).
    An bhfuil tu go maith?
    La brea, nach ea?
    La alainn
    La maith....
    Ta an aimsir go halainn, buiochas le Dia.
    Beannachtai (na Caisce, na feile etc etc) oraibh go leir.
    Cad e an sceal?
    Failte romhat.
    Conas ata cursai leat?
    Trathnona maith daoibh go leir.
    Trathnona maith daoibh ar fad.
    Dia dhaoibh ar maidin.
    Aon sceal?
    Maidin mhaith.
    Oiche mhaith.
    Ta athas an domhain orm bualadh leat/libh.
    Nach iontach an la e?
    An bhfuil rudai go maith?
    An bhfuil gach rud/cursai ag gluaiseacht go maith?
    Aon rud nua?
    Aon nuacht?
    An bhfuil tu ag coimead go maith?
    Athas mor orm bualadh leat.



    Bron orm, nil fada ar bith agam.

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  6. #4
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    Quote Originally Posted by FranknStein View Post
    Bail o Dhia ar an obair.
    Cen chaoi in a bhfuil tu? (Connemara)
    Cad e mar ata tu? (Donegal).
    An bhfuil tu go maith?
    La brea, nach ea?
    La alainn
    La maith....
    Ta an aimsir go halainn, buiochas le Dia.
    Beannachtai (na Caisce, na feile etc etc) oraibh go leir.
    Cad e an sceal?
    Failte romhat.
    Conas ata cursai leat?
    Trathnona maith daoibh go leir.
    Trathnona maith daoibh ar fad.
    Dia dhaoibh ar maidin.
    Aon sceal?
    Maidin mhaith.
    Oiche mhaith.
    Ta athas an domhain orm bualadh leat/libh.
    Nach iontach an la e?
    An bhfuil rudai go maith?
    An bhfuil gach rud/cursai ag gluaiseacht go maith?
    Aon rud nua?
    Aon nuacht?
    An bhfuil tu ag coimead go maith?
    Athas mor orm bualadh leat.



    Bron orm, nil fada ar bith agam.
    G'raibh maith agat. Do fada, húsáid "Alt Gr".
    My wife caught me wearing ladies underwear and threatened to leave me.
    So I packed up all her clothes
    And left.

  7. #5

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    'what's the story bud" is a usual Dublin greet.
    "what about ya" up north
    "ye langer" in cork.

    I think that's the country covered lol.

  8. #6
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    Isn't Google only brilliant, some of us would be really lost without it..!!!

  9. #7
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    A lot of Irish including supposed Irish millionaires who sold their supposed business for millions don't seem able to make the most of their time in school even as regards learning the rudiments of their ancestral language.

  10. #8

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    Yes horse will do ok

  11. #9
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    Quote Originally Posted by Irish Josephine View Post
    https://www.irelandnorthwest.ie/Dest...gal/Gaeltacht/

    Nothing similar further south?

    I know people who went and they were not allowed to speak English they came back well able to hold a conversation
    I've never done a gaeltacht experience. But a few weeks there would probably have been more beneficial that 13 years of learning mostly aimsir chaite. Good for reading or story telling, but conversation involves mixing tenses. We spent long hours transcribing entire passages from one tense to another, but very little mixing of tenses, like one would do in conversation. And as i said we were never taught a simple hello. It was all "God be with you"
    My wife caught me wearing ladies underwear and threatened to leave me.
    So I packed up all her clothes
    And left.

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    piehunter (23-12-19)

  13. Default

    Haigh is hi in Irish

  14. The Following User Says Thank You to Johnny9719 For This Useful Post:

    philipkntz (30-10-19)

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