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@timothywestgarde9890
@timothywestgarde9890 21 сағат бұрын
Dia duit
@sula1529
@sula1529 5 күн бұрын
This was fantastic how this film is not up for awards i do not know??? Excellent actors and storyline loved it ❤
@brandongarcia2765
@brandongarcia2765 7 күн бұрын
So cool
@SionTJobbins
@SionTJobbins 17 күн бұрын
Trist iawn, rhai pethau'n debyg gyda hanes yr iaith Gymraeg hefyd. Some similarities with my language, Welsh, except that Welsh was the language of religion and all Welsh speakers could read the Bible in Welsh and so write in Welsh (Welsh is phonetic and very easy to write).
@seangrogan3622
@seangrogan3622 20 күн бұрын
OMG - grma. Dúirt Liam Clancy gur teanga ghrá í an Spáinnis, ach sílim gur Gaeilge í.
@SpeakEasyIrish
@SpeakEasyIrish 9 күн бұрын
Rachainn chomh fada is a rá gur teanga Dé í an Ghaeilge.
@trevormcshane4986
@trevormcshane4986 25 күн бұрын
😂,,,Very Good,, 😂😂
@disappointedenglishman98
@disappointedenglishman98 27 күн бұрын
This man was an ethnic cleanser. Check out his statements on how Galilee needed to be cleansed of Palestinians.
@disappointedenglishman98
@disappointedenglishman98 Ай бұрын
This is all in incredibly poorly pronounced Irish with a comically thick English accent.
@peznino1
@peznino1 28 күн бұрын
As would be the way Dubliners would speak it on a sojourn to the Gaeltacht area.
@martylinane7014
@martylinane7014 Ай бұрын
I hope English is OK, its my primary language- thanks (grma) for all this work.. must have been hours and hours to produce! cheers. I just got back to the USA from my second trip to Ireland- One thing that Americans are surprised to see, is how little Irish is spoken.. it has to be sought out. You know this, I'm just repeating this fact. I wonder if Irish would be more accessable it there were some reforms. Namely, writtten phonetically. Not that Engish is any better. Rather, both languages and others, could benefit from changes to bring them to the 21-century: including modern text shorthand, and less rules to learn with word forms etc. WOW, I didn't mean to sound like a preacher. I am hoping the ancient language continues, AND (agus) thrives going forward. thanks for your time... May I add that you are very pretty,, respectfully.. take care..
@SpeakEasyIrish
@SpeakEasyIrish Ай бұрын
Good on you, Marty. I hope the lady in the video sees your comment. Even if you can't speak the language yet you can help by buying things that feature the Irish language etc. I really believe the Irish language will be loved again and will re-establish itself as the language of the Irish people. I do a bit with the Irish language everyday even if some days it's just a half an hour on DuoLingo.
@martylinane7014
@martylinane7014 Ай бұрын
@@SpeakEasyIrish grma.. Sa, sooo I will get to work on somethings that can help.. just got back from my second trip.. what fun! there must be some gaeltachts in the States I can join... best wishes
@SpeakEasyIrish
@SpeakEasyIrish Ай бұрын
@@martylinane7014 There are definitely many great Irish speakers in the states but no Gaeltacht. In Nova Scotia which means New Scotland I believe there is a Scottish Gaelic Gaeltacht. All the best.
@pio4362
@pio4362 Ай бұрын
3:33 That's a very good point, most Irish accents in English are highly influenced by the Irish language. And you're quite right that some are starting to fade away, which is because of urban snobbery and mockery towards rural people. indeed, without the language, the country will only disappear into a vast sea of Anglo-American globalism. Whether as 26 counties or 32 counties, its all meaningless as you say if we're just going to ape the culture of the country next door. I do however have to disagree with you on the purists (Patchy, An Loingseach etc), where I think you're a tad misguided. Irish needs to be spoken with Gaelic pronunciation, like a completely different language to English. Speaking Irish as if it were a dialect of English (as some in Ireland do unfortunately) is only bastardising the tongue and turning it into an inevitable pidgin. If I want to learn Spanish, I will mimic and try to adopt the way locals in Madrid speak - I won''t seek to learn from someone who speaks it with a French accent. Why should it be any different in Ireland? That's why the living dialects of the native speakers are the only way model for acquiring the language. There's nothing elitist about them, anyone is free to copy how they speak on Radió na Gaeltachta or TG4. Dazpatreg is an example of someone who did that and has succeeded wonderfully; check out his KZbin if you haven't already. Beir bua agus beannacht! Áivé Gaedheal :D
@SpeakEasyIrish
@SpeakEasyIrish Ай бұрын
Of course the integrity of the Irish language needs to be upheld but that's a debate for the higher echelons of the Irish language community. There is however no excuse and no sense in attacking foreign student learners and Irish people from TRYING to speak and promote the Irish language however they want. This kind of fragility does not exist in other languages. It's a really bad look. The Irish people and institutions really need to get their act together on this. The love must come first. Think of a parent and a child. How the child learns to communicate with language is magical. - I don't really want to mix my Irish language promotion with politics too much but I have to pull you up on calling Globalism 'Anglo-American'. England/Britain and America are also being attacked by the same forces with mass immigration, multiculturalism, feminism, LGBT, BLM etc... All these forces fall under the term 'Cultural Marxism'. You'll notice or should do that it works in tandem with Zionism and it's fairer to say that in the West we're all under ZOG (Zionist Occupied Government). It's not that hard to figure out. Follow the money.... who the propaganda favours. Go n-éirí leat
@pio4362
@pio4362 Ай бұрын
Oh it goes back far longer than 1500 years. More like 4000 to 4,500 years to the Bronze Age.
@mariagemavalerdiaguirre3792
@mariagemavalerdiaguirre3792 5 ай бұрын
I was caged for carrying preservatives it is not a joke❤
@19erik74
@19erik74 5 ай бұрын
Maith thú
@SpeakEasyIrish
@SpeakEasyIrish 5 ай бұрын
Go raibh maith agat, Erik. Thanks man.
@haydensheldrake9337
@haydensheldrake9337 5 ай бұрын
The Irish language is so interesting it's cool
@jasonobrien1989
@jasonobrien1989 6 ай бұрын
Salute
@PlushyPlay1
@PlushyPlay1 7 ай бұрын
Awesome
@colmtansey8359
@colmtansey8359 8 ай бұрын
Don't forget the free state forcibly emigrated million s of irish .from the 1920s onwards .. and now they gifting us a new plantation of dear old ireland 😢😮.. charming
@TheM41a
@TheM41a 8 ай бұрын
1:35 extremely true, the Catholic Church played a significant role in the decline of the Irish language after independence.
@pio4362
@pio4362 Ай бұрын
Irrelevant, we were left with only scraps by the 1920s. All we've managed since then is to prevent the language from entirely dying out.
@johncarroll6075
@johncarroll6075 10 ай бұрын
Míle buíochas as an físeán seo a postáil anseo. Obair iontach! Thaitin sé go mór liom, an-spéis, agus lán le t-eolas díreach as béal na muintir na háite!
@19erik74
@19erik74 Жыл бұрын
Galanta
@jawswasnevermyscene4258
@jawswasnevermyscene4258 Жыл бұрын
An bhféadfá an chuid eile upload le do thoil
@balak1
@balak1 Жыл бұрын
So sad. Hugs from Romania 🇷🇴❤️🇮🇪
@victorynn3208
@victorynn3208 Жыл бұрын
Whee van I find the rest of these episode with subtitles in Irish?
@ramondiaz2494
@ramondiaz2494 Жыл бұрын
Ghu raibh maith agat 🍀♿️
@emilyoneill1206
@emilyoneill1206 2 жыл бұрын
"Chinese guy" damn op put some respect on Yu Mings name smh
@demonrai7303
@demonrai7303 2 жыл бұрын
Frfr
@banjaxed73
@banjaxed73 2 жыл бұрын
This is invaluable for people learning Irish! Go raibh maith agat for posting this excerpt! I wish more of the players had said, "Cad é mar a tá tú?", rather than, "Conas atá tú?" (Uladh rules!), but I'm very privileged to be the first person to comment.
@aphonos4600
@aphonos4600 2 жыл бұрын
Is fearr liom ''Caidé mar atá tú?" srl. fosta ach tá sé seo iontach úsáideach cibé ar bith. :)