/Éire/--Eagrán as Gaeilge

Déantar an snáithe seo don Gaeilgoirí agus daoine le spéis i nGaeilge. Cleachtadh agus feabhsaigh bhur scileanna Gaeilge anseo. Agus cuimhnigh i gcónaí, is fearr liom Gaeilge briste ná Béarla cliste!

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Other urls found in this thread:

pastebin.com/XEENGRuM
broadsheet.ie/2018/07/03/piteoga-the-fool/
youtube.com/watch?v=UE7u3CvlPnE
twitter.com/SFWRedditImages

don't you have afternoon mass or something better do to Oisin

Foghlaim Gaeilge
pastebin.com/XEENGRuM

Níl aon creideamh agam. Agus tú féin?

>Níl aon creideamh agam. Agus tú féin?

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Na bi ag caint bearla

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Can Irish even speak Irish or do you all use Google translate?

>said the English teacher in Hong Kong

Cad a rinne Caitlícheas d'Éirinn, i do thuairim?

Google translate is abysmal at translating full sentences from English to Irish

Ta ~100000 ag labhairt Gaeilge faoi lathair

Breagach.

An bhfuil tusa buí?

Taim ban mar shneachta.

Ach bhuail me leis an fear bui an tseachtaine seo caite and bhi se abalta an Gaeilge a labhairt. Bhi se as contae lu.

Tá roinnt Gaeilge agam, ach úsáidim Google translate uaireanta.

I have some Irish as do most Irish people, I'm not fully fluent yet but I'm getting there. Recently I've been learning it on duolingo which has been very helpful.

Is fuath liom an amadán san Astráil

Cén amadán?

Tá me ag gaire!!

Cé bhfuil /gaylgeoir/ anseo?

>me
>e
Tá súil agam ná bí sibh daoine a dhéanamh seo.

éireann aereach?

Cúramach anois!

Tá an ghriain imithe :(

Tááááááááááááááááááááá!!!!!

An bhfuil duolingo an app níos maith le foghlann Gaeilge? Tá a lán phrásaí agus focail ar sé ach níl sé an-mhaith mar ba mhaith leat foghlann grammadach.

[spoiler]Was that really shit lads it's been so long I can barely remember how to string a sentence together?[/spoiler]

Tá sé ceart go leor, tá roinnt botúin ann ach ní chosnaíonn sé rud ar bith

>an mothú nuair nach bhfuil cailín deas gaeilgeora agam
cén fáth a bheith

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>cén fáth a bheith
Cluiche riomhairí, mo chara! :)

Teigh go dti an Gaeltacht

Múinteoir, an bhfuil cead agam dul go dtí an leithreas?

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Seo

Níl

Cén fáth, múinteoir?

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Ní maith leis na cailíní sin Laighnigh.

Ag magadh, tá cead agat :)

whats the point of learning irish

Oh it's great whenever someone points out we haven't got any culture and are just mimicing british culture and the US we can spam a cúpla focail we learnt in school to pretend we have anything distinct about us and get a few upvotes on r/ireland while we pretend there's a reason why we shouldn't be replaced by nigerians or part of the uk for another day.

I take it you are opposed to us having any culture then?

whats the point of being fat

What's the point of having police to protect you when they shoot you on sight instead?

quality shitposts my potato dudes

If pretending to speak a dead language is your idea of culture then yes. Ireland should embrace it's humanitarian history rather than try keep hold of pointless and harmful stuff like Catholicism and the Irish language. We'd do better trying to save the people in the mediteranean and give them a nice home here or even with our own homeless if you want to be a racist prick. point is, I'd prefer if our culture was something multi cultural and modern rather than being a bunch of drunken ginger jesus freaks, a secular culture would be great for one without laws of blasphemy and not being able to build higher than churches we could finally insult the church in all our media freely and be able to build skyscrapers and huge modern cities rather than looking like a theme park for a shitty version of midevil england.

>harmful
Pointless, I can understand, but what the hell is "harmful" about the Irish language? And what the hell is so great about having 82 IQ niggers and literally inbred Muslims in your country committing crime and segregating themselves into ghettoes?

What does any of that have to do with speaking Irish, AA?

I think you're a coward, I think you're a traitor, and I would spit in your face if I saw you in real life you little worm.

you want everywhere in the world to be the same?
wtf

There's nothing leftists hate more than diversity, natural diversity that is.

>multiculturalism good
>but native gaelic culture bad
he not the thoughts good

I hate the fact that people actually think like this.

>"harmful" about the Irish language
It may be the cause of people "segregating" themselves (they do not, especially here stop listening to Jow Forums conspiracy theories) Especially in the education system where Irish is taught, Irish people not born here or who have only recently arrived are not obliged to learn Irish may cause feelings of friction as they're seperated from the rest of the class now imagine after years of this they here a bunch of culchies using their cúpla focail to feel "unique" people couldn't help but feel they were being delibirately. Also don't forget every Irish person before the Irish free state to about the 60's were poorer than the slums of calcutta and generally had iq's of 60 or lower, not to mention that accusations of inbreeding were used as perjoratives against us too, these folks need a chance and I truly believe they'll rival or even surpass us. Not to mention we'll succeed more in football and the olympics with them.
I was mainly talking about the negative effects of the catholic church but say the irish language is revived (hypothetically of course it won't ever be.) Immigrants have a hard enough time living here with discrimination they face learning english, a universal language that can be easily accessed from most places. Now imagine the country demands living here a niche language spoken by the population of only here where the skill is completely non transferable, simply unfair to ask someone to do that not to mention useless.
I'd like to ask why you feel that way and are you a culchie.
Not really the same, just not so backwards as we are. We need to step forward to the modern day maybe more modern infrastructure will make ours stop leaving and maybe as a bonus bring in some new people.
I see éire/pol/ are in and ranting against "the lefties" I don't think being hard right wingers are practical in a centre right country like ours.

Laois pls.

who's oisin, another wacky character from /éire/'s history?

TL;DR

Wait left-wingers are against gaelic? Here they're usually the ones defending regional languages

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So, you think that we shouldn't be allowed to have our own culture, in case it might make foreigners feel uncomfortable? What the fuck is wrong with you? Seriously? How can you even get out of bed in the morning? Do you not even feel any shame? How does it feel to be so pathetic, so utterly cucked? You're a lower form of life than a worm in the bowel of a dog.

Your whole view of the world is bizarre and rubs as somebody who sees things as a pastiche of images from television or just has contempt for the familiar.
I mean "well Irish might make it hard on the immigrants"? What kind of moronic concern is this? For fuck's sake man you're banging on about having multiculturalism while suggesting the battered native culture be thrown under the bus in favour of a frictionless monoculture to better suit the people coming here for a bit of cash. Immigrants have dealt with learning local languages of foreign places for centuries. Of course this was never your reasoning, it's just a nice justification to give when the ultimate reason is your own personal distaste for Irish.

It's already obvious you like tall buildings not because you want to mitigate urban sprawl but because you're a simpleton who is just impressed by having tall buildings.

I don't have the level of autism required to take interest in the lengthy debate going on above me, can we talk about anything more interesting?

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ceart go leor
Everybody's against gaelic in the sense no-one wants it speaks it or defends it, other than a few irrelevant boggers in their weird villages where they're too snobbish to acknowledge anything other than Irish.
I never said we shouldn't have our own country, unless you consider speaking Irish and being catholic central to being Irish, which is something we haven't been for centuries. How often do you speak Irish? The hope of it being revived was destroyed when Ireland decided we're a bilingual country. Not to mention how poorly the language is taught, it nevver being used and no incentive to learn it. I never said we shouldn't have a culture and if you think Irish people continually becoming less religious and speaking less Irish is the death of our "culture" what's your big plan to stop it? Being racist and whinging online? Not gonna do much really..
I don't understand why being practical is seen as betrayal to you. To say that to stop pumping money into a language nobody here understands or finds use for is bizarre. What use has Irish when is it used? It's handy for the few words everyone knows if you want to start a brand over here for sure but what would making immigrants learn a language we ourselves haven't spoken for years should be expected to just be picked up by the new Irish. I have no distaste for the language but what I'm saying is to make Irish useful to the extent you want to require even immigrants to learn it to come over here would require a nationwide overhaul and trillions of Euros holding on to it does more harm than good, you don't expect fluency in ancient latin if you wanted to live in Italy, right? Insults aside taller buildings would not only look nicer but also be somewhat of a solution to the housing crisis. In a perfect world where everything was made out of sweets and icecream and everyone spoke Irish it would be great but for now unless some major miracle happens it's a relic.

heading down south for the twelfth tomorrow
hate those subhumans so much

More solutions
>stop funding GAA because it's not worldly competitive
>Irish trad shouldn't be promoted because it's not immigrant friendly

You seemed to be implying that the reason why we should do away with the language is because it makes things more difficult for immigrants, well that's a reason for keeping it in my opinion.

Is breá liom anime

nah lad just move to sweden without learning swedish they all speak english anyway :^)

>Everybody's against gaelic
>except those who aren't against it

How are you lads celebrating the 12th then?

Question. Do Recycle Ireland charge for rubbish you bring to them?

I have a large box of smartphone screens I wish to dispose of. Also printer ink cartridges.

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If Enniskerry was the only place playing the aul GAA I'm sure you'd be annoyed if billions were pumped into it, right? It's not really comparable as most of the country likes GAA and trad is liked through the world. The language on the other hand is pretty useless. I don't know why you're so defensive over it as if we lose it we're nothing, If that's the case most of the country other than a few villages are completely useless and cultureless, you're defence of the language borders on delusional.
>makes things more difficult for immigrants, well that's a reason for keeping it in my opinion.
Xenophobia aside. Yes, it would be more difficult if Irish was the sole language or even widely spoken over here but it isn't. Unless you and the other basement dwellers obsessed with reviving language become dictators that only permit Irish to be spoken it will never be relevant and if it was it would be a great deal of hassle or even trading internationally all in all the whole language has no point existing. It died in the 1850's and every attempt to revive it since has been a failure so stop playing with it's corpse and let it rest
>If I'm moving to egypt should I learn how to speak arabic or hyroglyphics? yeah just go for the dead language :^)
Not saying there aren't people that support it or speak it. Just saying there's more start trek nerds that speak klingon then there are Irish speakers, doesn't mean klingon should be a countries official language though.

>I don't know why you're so defensive over it as if we lose it we're nothing

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Was unaware that hyerogliphics were the official language of egypt

Hardly bait. You just tried to compare a dead niche language to some of the major things Ireland has and is known for, hardly comparable.
Well it used to be in the ancient times but it was replaced by Arabic so they just moved on and accepted it. A lot healthier than if they tried to force it on the populace and put hieroglyphics on every sign despite no-one speaking it. a shame our can't move on and desperately tries to hold on to the past.

>if it was it would be a great deal of hassle
How so? Most countries in Europe have their own languages and they're doing fine.

He means hassle for him.

If Slovenia can be Slovenian, by all rights Ireland should be Irish.

>If Enniskerry was the only place playing the aul GAA I'm sure you'd be annoyed if billions were pumped into it, right?
No, I would want to maintain and promote GAA throughout the country.

>by all rights Ireland should be Irish.
Cád as na eireann ach níl gaeilge? Cén aois thu?

Then why aren't you doing the same with Irish speak it exclusively and march throughout the country speaking it to maintain and promote it?

What do you mean? I speak what Irish I can with others who are willing and I have no issue with funding being spent on its maintenance and promotion just as I wouldn't have an issue with similar funding being spent on GAA even if it was relegated to Enniskerry

>Cád as na eireann ach níl gaeilge? Cén aois thu?
Ní dhéanann na focail sin aon ciall le chéile. Is Gael mé agus tá Gaeilge agam, dún do bhéal, Sasanach beag.

>Ní raibh mé sna Óglaigh na hÉireann
Fíor nó bréagach?

[spoiler] An bhfuil mo Gaeilge ceart go leor? [/spoiler]

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Fíor?

Irish language looks cool

More or less, but it doesn't seem to work saying "true or false" after that statement.
And I don't know this well enough, but I think you'd say "in" not "sna", but I'm not sure if that's because it's a formal name (in the grammatical sense) or because it's a name made up of multiple words. Or because it begins with a vowel.
Or maybe it's just because it's the name of an organisation and not a place (or set of places, which in my mind is what "sna" would usually be for). Maybe it's just idiomatic in English and the grammar's not much different, but to me it sounds as weird as saying "I was inside the marines".

Fíor, mo chairde! Feicfidh mé tú san Ard Fheis de Satharn, sea?

Tá sé an-mhaith mo chairde. An bhfuil an teanga den Fionnlainis beo agus ag ciceáil?

>it doesn't seem to work saying true or false after that statement?
Why not? Seems to be quite similar to the good old ceisteanna sa bhunscoil.

>inside the marines.
Óglaigh na hÉireann is what the RA call themselves as Gaeilge. I haven't a clue if sna is right there but maybe you can correct me now that you have the correct context.

>Irish people not born here or who have only recently arrived

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Slata... gnéas aerach... anime...

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>Why not? Seems to be quite similar to the good old ceisteanna sa bhunscoil.
Maybe it's been too long away from that for me. But the way of asking and answering questions in Irish is different than English in general, so maybe the fact that the statement was just a statement and not a question is what makes it seem off.

>Óglaigh na hÉireann is what the RA call themselves as Gaeilge. I haven't a clue if sna is right there but maybe you can correct me now that you have the correct context.
I don't think so because I knew what the phrase means and the sentence intended, it just sounds off to say "sna" because I think it can't be generalised to mean membership like the default English "in", only a positional description.

It sounds nice too.

*cartún as tSeapáin
mo chairde píteoga

Go bhfóiridh Dia orm, arsa mé 'chairde' in ionad 'chara'. Tá brón orm buachaillí.

>gnéas aerach
Rachaidh tú go dtí an séipéal gan a thuilleadh mhoille!

Too many big words for a brainlet like me, sorry. [spoiler] fucking wish I was born ar na hOileáin Árainn :( [/spoiler]

>píteoga
Makes me think of this bán agus BASED incident: broadsheet.ie/2018/07/03/piteoga-the-fool/

Ach ní dúirtimid "cartoon from Japan" as Béarla. Usáidimid an focail Seapáinis "anime"

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ag éisteacht ar seo

youtube.com/watch?v=UE7u3CvlPnE

>ní bheidh mise bulla tÜrk in am ar bith

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An bó dubh!!

Tá difríocht idir bó agus tarbh, má tá tú ag cacpostáil.

Baineann siad leis an TARBH BÁN

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owo what's this?

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Na buaiteoirí.

Is maith liom an gCróit :)

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cad a bhí a "ba" í scéal Táin bó Cúailnge? Ceap mé go raibh siad tairbh nó amháin ar a bheag

>tfw thóg sé tamall go leor rud posta

Taim laidir

>cad a bhí a "ba" í scéal
>nó amháin ar a bheag
???

what were the cows in the story
or one at least

did I goof

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