/gg/ Gaeilge General

bhuel. fuair mé rabhadh ar phostáil i nGaeilge ar Jow Forums, mar sin, is dócha go bheith mé ag crochadh timpeall anseo.

hmu with all of your irish, agus a bheith milis, tá mé nua anseo

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Other urls found in this thread:

teanglann.ie/ga/fuaim/cathaoir
youtu.be/2dTL_s8NkrM
twitter.com/NSFWRedditVideo

Hello! I am a Japanese girl and I made a thread for girls! Please come and say hi!! Please save the thread from getting deleted by Hitler janny!! Thank you!!

ciúnas bóthar cailín bainne

abair i nGaeilge é

How's Irish language revival going on?

a chara, cad é mar atá tú? conas atá cúrsaí?

díreach chomh maith leis an uair dheireanach a d'iarr tú

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Téigh go dtí an leaba a bhuacailli

haha tá mé plutered agus ná bí ábalta ag caint gaeilge

tá mé i mo leaba. ach codlata do na lag

bí cúramach agus bí ag faire ort féin! baint taitneamh as lol

Oíche mhaith

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>tfw nil gaeltachtai againn

can you translate what you said, I will say thank you

oíche mhaith agus aisling milis, a dheartháir

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ní tig liom. bí ag foghlaim na gaeilge agus stop a chur le tuairimí uiríseal a phostáil

tiocfaidh siad, a chara. beidh siad linn

How is the slender "r" pronounced? I've heard it pronounced like a slight "zh" in some recordings of some words, but I know that "Éire" is pronounced sort of like "Ey-reh"

I'm afraid the Irish language will not survive if even one of its speakers is stupid and degenerate enough to post shitty nureddit memes like feels guy on the Internet.

I was deeply disappointed to see an Iceland poster do the same.

Human garbage is everywhere, and us oldfags are outnumbered by 100 to 1.

like normal 'r' but with the slightest soft 'd' sound after it

Mutt

fuair an t-ualach seo

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do you realize that you just made me switch side in Irish conflict?

i said i was drunk and unable to speak irish

Is it a bit like a rolled r?
Btw I've also found sources saying that the broad r is sometimes rolled as well. Maybe it varies with dialect - I don't know.

seiceáil! agus cén taobh?

thank you

naw not really, listen to the Ulster dialect of

teanglann.ie/ga/fuaim/cathaoir

I'm not going to be affected by your pathetic psychoterror. You play life on easy mode. You don't hold a candle to the trolls of yesteryear, nor to the Irish patriots. You're not even worth my pity.

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both r's are taps. the broad one is velarized, the slender one is palatalized. same contrasting pair as most of the other consonants have.

cé chomh fada is atá an bata atá i do thóin?

In the Connacht pronunciation of "cathair," there's the unusual little zh sound at the end.

Go raibh maith agat

Is that northern user that's always drunk a depressing element in this general
asking for a friend

any wee sound that is alveolarised (tongue behind the teeth) but insignificant (doesn't too drastically alter the base 'R' sound) will do for slender r

FUCK OFF GYPSEY CUNT

níl a fhios agam air. i came from Jow Forums because they told me off for nearly getting triple digits on a /gg/ thread

Nìl, agus michael is ainm dom

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seiceáil, a thaisce. agus bígí deas.

it's not a zh, you're just not used to distinguishing palatalized sounds. it doesn't help that english j and zh are pronounced using/just before the palate. those are the closest thing you probably know to where the irish soft r is pronounced. the important thing is that the method of articulation is different even if the place is similar/the same.

never seen so much Gaeilge in this gen before

>the important thing is that the method of articulation is different even if the place is similar/the same.
what is this referring to?

tá fáilte romhat páirt a ghlacadh! :)

aye, but like, I'm from the north and my half hearted attempt to learn with duolingo didn't give me too much to work with I'm afraid
If I ever move back home I'll take some classes at Cultúrlann

íosfaidh mé breallach chailín liomsa :)

céanna anseo, a chara. coinnigh ar an bhfoghlaim, riachtanais do thír é! an bhfuil Clozemaster agat? ar do ghuthán?

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the tl;dr version is manner/method of articulation are what your tongue/throat/mouth do to produce the sound. the place of articulation is where it happens. for example, english "v" is a labio-dental fricative because it is pronounced at the lip/teeth and is produced by forcing air between a narrow space in between them

maith a chluinstin, a mhac. taitneamh a bhaint as sin

Yeah but what was the "important thing" you referred to about? Was it referring to the slender "r" sounds in different recordings, since those seem to be pronounced on the palate even though there seem to be differences in exactly how they're pronounced.

ah the important thing is the reason why I think you hear a zh: english has two sounds (j and zh) that are pronounced in the same place but in a different manner.

I speak another language that has a soft r and I more or less hear the same sound I use when I speak that language when I hear irish speakers say the soft r. The exception being irish that are actually english native speakers, they tend to use something closer to the english r.

So the r caol is pronounced in a similar place as "zh" but is more of a palatal tap?

bump

How long is the stick in my finger?

Long enough to point it at the true enemy within, and justly blame him.

cad a d'úsáid tú chun é sin a aistriú? haha a thiarcais

is é "chamchuirt" focal an lae inniu!

chamchuirt - to ramble, tour, wander

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Oíche mhaith agaibh... tá súil agam go mbeidh an snáithe seo beo amárach

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What are the best resources for learning Irish? Duolingo has a course on it but I'm not sure how good it is, seeing as I've found mistakes in their French and Italian courses. I've found two books on libgen that look possibly useful.

beidh sé, go dóchasach! oíche mhaith duit

Buntús Cáinte, agus Clozemaster (má tá tú ar do ghuthán go leor!), tá feidhmchlár ag Foclóir agus Teanglann anois, fosta!

go raibh maith agat

ná habair é, agus ádh mór leis an bhfoghlaim, a chara :)

Búmp

what could i do to turn /gg/ into an /extraflags/ thread?

god i wish that were me

cmon guys, you really dont like flags?

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Maidin mhaith.

That eir ad says a lot about normie Irish "culture"

Céard fógraíocht, mo chara?

youtu.be/2dTL_s8NkrM

>unlimited youtube and social networks
so much for net neutrality lol

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Dia daoibh a chara, cad é már atá tú?
I hope my Irish is ok. Haven't used it in years but its nice to see a thread in it. Also what do you think is the best dialect of Irish?

Connacht, ar ndóigh.

Any love ITT for welsh Gaelic?
helo brodyr celtig

cá mhéad smaointe faoi cúrsaí coláiste do an teanga a fhoghlaim?

>tfw brainlet aon-teanga

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>welsh Gaelic
I'm curious would there be any dialects or words in Welsh that were influenced by Irish? Especially in areas marked in pic related

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