Can Galway People Speak Irish / Gaeilge / "Gaelic"

Ойын-сауық

Can Galway People Speak Irish (Gaeilge)?
I went to Galway to find out if Galway people can speak Irish. I have made every effort to translate people's responses fairly and correctly; thank you to Roisin Ní Mhaoláin for help translating some of the native Galway phrases! Check her out: / roisin.na.gaillimhe
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Пікірлер: 363

  • @domurtag1978
    @domurtag1978Ай бұрын

    There's no way the people in this video represent a random sample of passersby. The average standard of Irish is way below what's shown here.

  • @Clisare

    @Clisare

    Ай бұрын

    Firstly, I’m in Galway City, which is very close to a Gaeltacht (Irish-first) area. That’s why I went there, for the comparison to my previous video, which was Dublin City - the nearest Gaeltacht to there is over an hour away. Secondly, these are just the people that agreed to be on camera. The majority of people with little to no Irish that I stopped refused to be on camera. At the end of the day, you can only get what you can get. We were out there for 3 hours and this is what we got. I have a blooper reel on my Patreon that includes footage of me being told “no”, “no I don’t speak it at all”, “no I don’t have enough to say anything”, etc. Ps also I was wearing a top that said “Labhair Gaeilge liom” (speak Irish to me) which I think helped with Irish speakers being more interested in speaking to us but wouldn’t have helped us get anyone that didn’t speak any Irish. Although I’ve never managed to get a single person in these videos that doesn’t speak any Irish because they don’t want to be on camera saying they don’t speak Irish 🤷

  • @domurtag1978

    @domurtag1978

    Ай бұрын

    @@Clisarethose are all very good points. Thanks for the reply

  • @diarmuidgrimes8766

    @diarmuidgrimes8766

    Ай бұрын

    @@Clisare Bhuel, bhí hata Maigh Eo ort freisin, so b'fhéidir sin píosa don fáth nach raibh na daoine eile ag lorg caint leat i nGaillimh ;)

  • @benvad9010

    @benvad9010

    25 күн бұрын

    My grandfather’s native tongue was Gàidhlig being that his people the MacNeil’s had migrated from Barra in the Outer Hebrides to Cape Breton Nova Scotia but due to lack of land the migrated just across to the Codroy Valley in Doyles Newfoundland where Gàidhlig was the everyday speech for the people up until my grandfather had his children. All the children my mother included understood the language but were discouraged (same story everywhere) to speak it and were expected to assimilate into what would eventually become Canada after 1949. There is still a community of speakers and attempts to revive it are ongoing.

  • @TokiDokiNara728
    @TokiDokiNara728Ай бұрын

    It's heartening to see that there are so many younger folk so passionate about keeping the language alive! I hope that only continues to grow

  • @biancafabiano
    @biancafabianoАй бұрын

    Gaeilge is just BEAUTIFUL!!! I'm from Brazil and currently studying it! Ireland's history is so sad, unfair… and yet, beautiful with very strong and warrior people! It's great to see there are people that still keep the language and culture alive!!! 🇧🇷🇮🇪☘️

  • @ParawhoreLoL
    @ParawhoreLoLАй бұрын

    Thank you for showing the people that actually do speak it, instead of focusing on all the people saying 'no i don't speak it' like most channels do

  • @Tim_Beitel
    @Tim_BeitelАй бұрын

    I feel like a lot of these people are being needlessly hard on themselves. I’m hearing a lot of them saying that they barely know the language but when you listen to them they’re having full conversations in the language with only one or two brief moments here and there where they might stumble over a word. To my mind, they’re more fluent than they give themselves credit for

  • @daivboveri

    @daivboveri

    Ай бұрын

    It’s such an Irish thing to self-criticize and beat yourself up. It’s hard for me to believe that hundreds of thousands of people that passed their leaving cert in Irish couldn’t do as well these people on the street. They just don’t have the confidence to give it a go and enjoy the Irish they have.

  • @marmac83

    @marmac83

    Ай бұрын

    Maybe so, but generally people who understate things are better at them than people who overstate things.

  • @bjcarew

    @bjcarew

    Ай бұрын

    that what i was going to say, its an Irish thing@@daivboveri

  • @nickymaccrimmon3615

    @nickymaccrimmon3615

    Ай бұрын

    It happens with Scottish Gaelic too. Even older fluent speakers will answer "Tha beagan Gàidhlig agam". Part of the issue is is where you have native speakers they have not been taught Gaelic so it's "colloquial" and people dont have confidence in their own Gaelic especially speaking to learners with their Sabhal Mòr (College) Gaelic.

  • @courtney.p.s.
    @courtney.p.s.Ай бұрын

    Irish language schools would be very popular here in the States in the correct areas. I wish we had more language schools, but they’re so few and they’re all very expensive.

  • @StoneCrow189

    @StoneCrow189

    Ай бұрын

    Absolutely. 35 million Americans are of Irish descent.

  • @llwyde1104

    @llwyde1104

    Ай бұрын

    a'r Cymru/Unol Daleithiau...and Welsh America...sadly gaslighted over there...

  • @Toirdealbhach-na-dTreabha

    @Toirdealbhach-na-dTreabha

    Ай бұрын

    Agreed.

  • @ExOAte
    @ExOAteАй бұрын

    As a minority speaker in the Netherlands I resonate with this a lot. I wish we had a "Frisian Week" here too where it was sort of implied that that is the first thing you would hear and there's more attention for it. Your previous interview video is what got me hooked to your channel and I've stuck around ever since. Keep it up and good luck with the pregnancy!

  • @darthcrios

    @darthcrios

    Ай бұрын

    You should start your own Frisian week

  • @positivelynegative9149

    @positivelynegative9149

    Ай бұрын

    I love the KZread channel Friesian Horses. 😁

  • @PombalFranzOri

    @PombalFranzOri

    Ай бұрын

    They should add Frisian to Duolingo! I'm Dutch with Frisian ancestry. All my grandparents grew up in or very near to Friesland and spoke Frisian, but my parents only spoke a little and I never learned. I'm actually learning a bit of Irish at the moment, but I'd also love to learn Frisian.

  • @gstads

    @gstads

    Ай бұрын

    Sorry, but Frisian and Dutch are extremely similar languages. Irish and English are completely unrelated.

  • @petera618

    @petera618

    Ай бұрын

    @@gstads That is a very good point. I speak both Italian and Sicilian. Many people think Sicilian is a dialect of Italian, it's not, the local dialects derived from the original Sicilian language when Sicily was a separate kingdom. The difference is, is that both are of Latin origin whereas like you said, English and Irish are completely different from two different families of languages.

  • @cipherx6334
    @cipherx6334Ай бұрын

    The Celtic cultures and languages hang on to existence on the fringes of north western Europe. We need to start speaking them everywhere and be proud of who we are.

  • @SalK-LS

    @SalK-LS

    Ай бұрын

    Yes, the decline of Celtic languages is sad story, especially considering that, before Roman expansion (5th/6th century AD), almost ALL of what is now France spoke Celtic (Gaulish) languages.

  • @cipherx6334

    @cipherx6334

    Ай бұрын

    It is sad indeed. I hope people learn their native languages and protect their respective cultures from decline.

  • @mossyfable
    @mossyfableАй бұрын

    Omg Gaelige is a very attractive language to my ear! ☘I am a Gallego from Galicia.

  • @user-se1gb3su9x

    @user-se1gb3su9x

    Ай бұрын

    I visited the PSA plant in Vigo for work, and I was fascinated by the Mystical culture upon landing at the airport and around the city, and how close to our Irish mythology. I think even the weather was similar and changeable on the Atlantic cost to ours, but maybe that was just when I was there. Will need to come back sometime for a more personal holiday time soon.

  • @mossyfable

    @mossyfable

    Ай бұрын

    @@user-se1gb3su9x absolutely I know we share alot of history ancient and more recent and so much folklore. I Know In Cork there is also a University that has a Galician Learning center! Ive always admired the 2 nations kinship and similarities. I am currently in US but funnily my partner is applying for engineer work in Ireland so we can enjoy some time there. Would love to dig into that connection more

  • @johntuohy1867

    @johntuohy1867

    29 күн бұрын

    Galician and Irish pipes for musical connection too.

  • @keithjeremiahl
    @keithjeremiahlАй бұрын

    I am from Kerry and well I did Irish in school because I had a huge passion for it but since I left school I've forgotten most of the language as my family speaks English on the daily but that doesn't stop me from wanting to learn it again. It's such a beautiful language and I am proud to have it as my native tongue ❤

  • @daivboveri

    @daivboveri

    Ай бұрын

    Is féidir leat foghlaim agus cleachtadh a dhéanamh fós! Níl sé ródheireanach. Is mise Meiriceánach agus má tá mise in ann í a fhoghlaim, is féidir leatsa freisin!

  • @little.maggie
    @little.maggieАй бұрын

    níos mo content faoin nGaeilge le do thoil! maith thú :)

  • @patrickmoloney6001
    @patrickmoloney6001Ай бұрын

    Never never forget your native language irish language is beautiful.

  • @berniestuart8323
    @berniestuart8323Ай бұрын

    Born and raised in the Gaeltacht ,moved to the states and Canada in my 20s After 20 years I still can speak it The writing is a bit rusty but my town in county Galway are all Irish speakers so I’ll never lose it 😍

  • @caoimheeee

    @caoimheeee

    Ай бұрын

    Fair play duit, níor chaill tú a riamh é 😂

  • @johntuohy1867

    @johntuohy1867

    Ай бұрын

    Maith an fear

  • @seanoriain8294

    @seanoriain8294

    16 күн бұрын

    Mo cheol thú!

  • @APaganPerspective
    @APaganPerspectiveАй бұрын

    Claire these are my favorite videos . thank you for sharing the Irish language with us..Beannachta agas Slainte

  • @thedj9553
    @thedj9553Ай бұрын

    I love this! I speak Hebrew and sincerely hope the Irish (and the Scots, the Welsh, the Manx, the Cornish etc) can take some solace in the fact that a language being revived is not an impossible task like it may seem, and maybe learn from my people, the Jews, concerning how to revive a language.

  • @MiloAnglin05

    @MiloAnglin05

    Ай бұрын

    Nobody in Scotland wants to speak Gaelic

  • @eoin7

    @eoin7

    Ай бұрын

    @@MiloAnglin05ach tha na daoine in Èirinn ag iarraidh i a bhrudhinn cuideachd!

  • @Londubh1

    @Londubh1

    Ай бұрын

    ​@@MiloAnglin05English puppet.

  • @Londubh1

    @Londubh1

    Ай бұрын

    🇮🇪🇮🇱🏴󠁧󠁢󠁳󠁣󠁴󠁿

  • @TineBeo

    @TineBeo

    Ай бұрын

    There are and I've met them. @@MiloAnglin05

  • @rebeccaanderson5191
    @rebeccaanderson5191Ай бұрын

    So glad to hear the language and that SOOOOO MANY of them speak it.

  • @havo9527
    @havo9527Ай бұрын

    Tá Gaeilge iontach ag Oisín, is é mo mhac agus bhí a lán fadhbanna aige ag labhairt ós ard, agus Táim an bhrodúil as Oisín agus a chuid forbairt.

  • @jahanas22
    @jahanas22Ай бұрын

    I’ve been studying Irish a lot recently and I’m happy that I understood more than I thought I would. My ancestors came from County Clare and Limerick. I’m going to be visiting later this year.

  • @freeplace5243
    @freeplace5243Ай бұрын

    Being part, Irish I love that the Gaeilge is alive and well! Great job Claire!

  • @pollyduron674
    @pollyduron674Ай бұрын

    I love this. I've been trying to learn Irish and Scottish Gaelic ❤. Both have been hard for me. I live in Texas, so I speak a lot of Spanish.

  • @leviturner3265

    @leviturner3265

    Ай бұрын

    I study German and Gaelic. I find Gaelic much more difficult. This is probably mostly because it is not a commonly spoke language or a commonly learned language. Therefore, resources are very limited. There are more resources to learn Irish, or even Latin than there are Gaelic. Outside of certain small regions of Scotland, or I've heard in Nova Scotia you will probably never get to speak it with another person unless you decide to learn it with someone, or meet someone online to communicate it with. Other than that it is sort of just a immersion into a people, and their history.

  • @LisEibh
    @LisEibhАй бұрын

    Is ghrá liom mo theanga dhuchais, táim an-brodiúil as, agus nuair a bhfuil mé ag labhairt as Gaeilge, braithim rud speisialta i mo chroí. Níl mé in ann mo chuid Gaeilge a úsáid ró-minic (tá mo chairde/chlann ro-neirbhíseach chun comhrá a dheanamh trí Gaeilge). Mar sin, is é an-dheacair dul chun chinn a dhéanamh ach is fearr Gaeilge briste ná Béarla cliste, nach ea? 😉 Agus tá mé lán-sasta le vloganna mar seo a fheiceáil at KZread. Maith thú, Clare!

  • @christinequinn5355

    @christinequinn5355

    Ай бұрын

    Well said. Maith an cailin.

  • @jimsvideos7201
    @jimsvideos7201Ай бұрын

    Great fun 😊 Thank you for encouraging people to think about and use the language! I'll have to learn about the word Gaelic itself now...

  • @krasnalthegreat
    @krasnalthegreatАй бұрын

    love the can they speak Irish videos Ní féidir fanacht ach cúpla uair an chloig eile

  • @eezyclsmooth9035
    @eezyclsmooth9035Ай бұрын

    Incredibly Fascinating and Interesting. This wonderful video is quite a departure from Clisare's much earlier video about "Dubliners". The people of Galway seem to have a different passion for the native language!☘

  • @drewc981
    @drewc981Ай бұрын

    Ní féidir liom a chreidiúint go bhfuil beagnach dhá bhliain agam ar Gaeilge Duolingo anois. I can't say I'm able to speak Gaeilge in a steady fluent way and still have to look up pronunciations of some words but it's fun and progress can be seen when watching a video like this and you're like hey, Tuigim é sin! without glancing at the subtitles. 😄

  • @daivboveri

    @daivboveri

    Ай бұрын

    Maith thú! Tá mé ag foghlaim Gaeilge ar Duolingo le dhá bhliain freisin. Is breá liom féachaint ar Ros na Rún ar TG4 agus tá cúpla leabhair agam a léim cúpla abairt ‘chuile lá.

  • @siouxsiesiouxseyebrows

    @siouxsiesiouxseyebrows

    Ай бұрын

    it feels great to understand at least half/most of a sentence without needing the subtitles lol

  • @willylumpnj
    @willylumpnjАй бұрын

    That was one of the most interesting and enjoyable videos I have ever enjoyed. All I know is "Slainte" and would like to learn more. It is a very beautiful language. My grandmother was raised in County Roscommon (Scardaun) and came to America in the 1920's and my great grandfather, William Patrick McCarthy, emigrated from Limerick in 1850. I was not raised with any knowledge of my Irish heritage and am learning more now. I have been to Ireland twice and love to visit more.

  • @RHCole
    @RHColeАй бұрын

    I absolutely LOVE this style of blog video! It feels way more authentic than someone just speaking to camera in their home! (No offense) More please! 👍🏻😁 Disclaimer: I am in no way implying that you are not authentic

  • @RHCole

    @RHCole

    Ай бұрын

    Fantastic! As I said in the chat it is mighty good to see younger folk speaking their native tongue. The world has lost too many languages and it would be a shame if Irish were one of them.

  • @_baert
    @_baertАй бұрын

    So successful this time around!!

  • @evillittlegoat8338
    @evillittlegoat8338Ай бұрын

    This made me so happy! 😊 Thanks for the video!

  • @Jeabel_S
    @Jeabel_SАй бұрын

    I’m American, my mother’s family is from Kerry (I actually have more family there than in the US) I’ve always wanted to learn geailge, my great auntie from Kerry who lived us still spoke a bit in her 90’s, it’s a beautiful language💚👍(I’m in my early 40’s, do you think it’s too late to give it a start😅)

  • @POEMH

    @POEMH

    Ай бұрын

    Never too late. I studied and gained my BSc in my 40s

  • @hectorquinones5579

    @hectorquinones5579

    Ай бұрын

    Try Duolingo's Irish Course for a start.

  • @elizabethhoover4672
    @elizabethhoover4672Ай бұрын

    I'm not from Ireland, but I actually (and sadly) didn't even know there was an Irish language until I was in my late 20's. I can't believe I didn't know that for so long. This was such a cool video to watch.

  • @niall7597
    @niall7597Ай бұрын

    Nerd Niall here 🤓. But in Donegal we call it Gaelic aswell, nerd Niall out.

  • @Clisare

    @Clisare

    Ай бұрын

    I was more talking about the American way they call it Gaelic but point taken!

  • @CCc-sb9oj

    @CCc-sb9oj

    Ай бұрын

    @@Clisare Words can go from being common to almost non-existent within a generation. I do always feel the need to point it out that 'Gaelic' was once a very normal name for the language in Ireland (and is still not abnormal some places in the country), particularly on behalf of my granduncle a chuaigh ar shlí na fírinne deich mbliana ó shin agus a thug neart béaloidis agus piseoga ó Chontae Chiarraí dom, agus geallaim duit nárbh aon poncánach é! (B'iomaí uair a chuala mé 'Gaelic' i mBéarla in oirthear agus iarthar Chiarraí agus in iarthar an Chláir chomh maith, daoine níos sine a bhí i gceist, ach ba rud nádúrtha dóibh í ina gcanúint) Labhair tú le neart daoine deasa i nGaillimh ansin, 'Gaelic' mhaith ag cuid acu :p treise leat!

  • @J.T.Equestrian

    @J.T.Equestrian

    Ай бұрын

    @@Clisare but it’s not wrong to say Gaelic so why say it is?

  • @lynchiesoup

    @lynchiesoup

    Ай бұрын

    Ach is Gaidhlig a labhraíonn siad in Alba. Is saghas ‘catch all’ é an focail Gaelic d’eachtranaigh. Is teanga Gaelic í an Gaeilge.

  • @tomasbyrom3954

    @tomasbyrom3954

    Ай бұрын

    In places with large Irish diaspora like the US, Canada, Australia and NZ, we call the language Gaelic because of historical reasons. During the time of most immigration (whether during the famine, due to other political or warfare issues, or as convicts in the case of the early USA and later Australia), Ireland was not an independent country. As an occupied colony of the UK, there was no official language of Ireland (except English), just the native language which in both Scotland and Ireland (dialects of which were mutually inteligible at the time) was usually called Gaelic. Gaelic speakers in the diaspora used this word, and this was also the word used in Australia when bans were put on the public use of the language by convicts in certain areas. The word Gaelic has a huge amount of historical importance in the diaspora (people were arrested for speaking "Gaelic" in some areas), and for the history of Irish people in Ireland. After independence, and especially after the "official standard" was created to teach in schools by mixing different native dialects together to form a version that could be spoken all over the country, the word Irish became the official term used. This was also when the word "Gaeilge" was chosen as the standard name for the language in Irish, rather than another varient such as Gaolann, Gaeilig, Gaedhlig, etc which are still used by some Irish speaking communities today. So yes, in Ireland, the official term is Irish for the national standard, but the language many diaspora people grew up hearing about was almost always referred to as Gaelic and it has its own rich history outside of Ireland (both in the diaspora and in the related languages in Scotland and the Isle of Man) which is easily forgotten when we demand that the language be only referred to as Irish. Educating people on the language is amazing work, but I hope that as time goes on, Irish people can come to realise that those of us from outside Ireland aren't using the word Gaelic out of ignorance, we are using it because of very specific historical and political factors that lead to the different terms being used in different countries.

  • @irenemarcaros7691
    @irenemarcaros7691Ай бұрын

    It’s wonderful to see people like yourself Clisare promoting your language and culture. As a proud Australian born greek i too try to practice my greek and i watch a lot of greek speakers on youtube to keep up. So keep up the good work.

  • @belle_fast3551
    @belle_fast3551Ай бұрын

    Love this and all that you do to promote and centre our beautiful language. I found Irish hard at school and (sadly) to the dismay of my Irish teacher, gave it up as soon as I could! Your vids always inspire me to start again and I’m determined to do so this year! Thanks again Claire and delighted to hear your recent amazing news! 💜

  • @Jay-ql4gp
    @Jay-ql4gpАй бұрын

    I love these, thank you so much!

  • @Brian-vn4xb
    @Brian-vn4xbАй бұрын

    I really enjoyed the video. It was interesting 😊

  • @thecocktailian2091
    @thecocktailian2091Ай бұрын

    Everyone spoken to was quite pleasant. I did quite enjoy the older gent in the yachters coat whose grandkids speak Irish better than he.Nice change of pace Clisare.

  • @michael_r
    @michael_rАй бұрын

    This is great - the video that got me into your channel was the one you did years ago on whether Irish people can speak Irish. A long awaited sequel! 😂

  • @s.s.2048
    @s.s.2048Ай бұрын

    Clisare- I love all that you do on KZread, but this is the best, and so, so important. I've only a few words of my grandmother's Scots Gaelic (I'm working on adding to it!!) and I treasure them. Thig ar latha!

  • @tcqlkelly404
    @tcqlkelly404Ай бұрын

    Ohh Thanks a million for that video!👌🤩😎 That answered a big part of my curiosity/BIG interest about Ireland 💚☺😁

  • @Pebbles79
    @Pebbles79Ай бұрын

    Very interesting! You are teaching me so much about my home country! Great video! ❤

  • @calypso8436
    @calypso8436Ай бұрын

    Well done Clare I love this. I can't wait for my daughter to learn Irish in school 🥲 I need to learn a bit of it myself!

  • @Jiddy12345
    @Jiddy12345Ай бұрын

    lovely and informative video

  • @Baeomran
    @BaeomranАй бұрын

    I thoroughly enjoyed this video. Please make more videos in Gaeilge. I love listening to it spoken by native speakers, and it would be nice to be able to make new friends who speak it. My dream Happy Easter 🦆🥚🍀

  • @michaelm8806
    @michaelm8806Ай бұрын

    This made me incredibly happy watching it.

  • @jlcutright0723
    @jlcutright0723Ай бұрын

    Love how much you love your country and your origins

  • @jasonniles9270
    @jasonniles9270Ай бұрын

    Great video learn some more things about you and your country and the language which is really cool bless you and your family end all the Irish people have a good day now

  • @geoplanetaire
    @geoplanetaireАй бұрын

    What a great video! I took Irish in university here in Canada for 2 semesters. They told us the 2 students with the highest grades would be offered a scholarship to go to the Irish immersion program in Carraroe. I studied non stop for a year and got the scholarship. My summer in Connemara was one of the best experiences of my entire life! It was an amazing time being surrounded by the Irish language and the locals were very welcoming and encouraging. This video brought me right back and even though that was 12 years ago, i feel inspired to start learning Irish again! So thank you!!! ❤

  • @jelle_smid
    @jelle_smidАй бұрын

    As a Frisian speaker in the Netherlands i love this type of content and can totally relate. Be proud, keep it alive and be european all the same time. 💪

  • @sandramccusker5520
    @sandramccusker5520Ай бұрын

    I love your Irish language videos! We’ve been in the US since the 1920s but I would love to learn Irish.

  • @joannesmith7042
    @joannesmith7042Ай бұрын

    I wish I spoke the language but I was in school in the 70’ and mid 80’s where Irish was hated and we never took pride in learning it… so I am delighted the younger Irish he are speaking it with pride …my grandad gre up,speaking Irish.

  • @Kaylor_Ryan
    @Kaylor_RyanАй бұрын

    What a lovely video 🤩

  • @MaelBrigde
    @MaelBrigdeАй бұрын

    Brilliant!

  • @HM-kg8so
    @HM-kg8soАй бұрын

    So cool!! And everyone was so friendly :)) and excited to speak Gaelic (sp?) sorry, but what a nice video :))

  • @sueb1337
    @sueb1337Ай бұрын

    Such a lovely language! I’m glad people are keeping the language alive😊

  • @serasotasadie
    @serasotasadieАй бұрын

    That is so fascinating! As an American who only got tastes of other languages in school, no real immersion or attempt at being fluent (how can we be with 2 years each of 4 languages?) I love the sound, I love how many do have the Irish language at all ages, and I hope it doesn't get "lost" like other native languages sometimes do over many, many years. What a treat of a video. I've heard the Irish language before, and I love seeing more. I sure have seen you pull it out with Callie-Ann and Ciara on the Try channel!

  • @joelaldodiaz
    @joelaldodiazАй бұрын

    I think this version of Irish with a lot of English words is going to be the modern Irish. If you try to keep it so purist very few people will want to learn it. If you allow it to be flexible and forgiving to English words, it will spread much faster

  • @lorrainethomas241
    @lorrainethomas241Ай бұрын

    Wow. I wish my"little bit" of Gaeilge was on the order of any of those speakers. I giggled at the end, though; this very minute, I'm wearing band merch from Seo Linn that bears the same quote that last lass used.

  • @shybard
    @shybardАй бұрын

    This is fantastic! I didn't understand it, but that's why we have subtitles.

  • @jgg59
    @jgg59Ай бұрын

    When I was back in September visiting it was interesting hear irish people talk about decolonizing their minds. This was language, I never heard before in regards to the Irish language and just being Irish. Go raibh maith agat as é seo a dhéanamh

  • @seanoriain8294

    @seanoriain8294

    16 күн бұрын

    The very first thing to do in decolonizing their minds, if they are serious, is to learn Irish and use it every day, and speak it to their own children.

  • @dennishinkle5010
    @dennishinkle5010Ай бұрын

    I enjoyed hearing the language it's very interesting although confusing.👍

  • @kpf8186
    @kpf81866 күн бұрын

    I found this very interesting and educational. The editing was done well. I want to be on that street having a good time not understanding anyone. LoL

  • @TexasKid747
    @TexasKid747Ай бұрын

    Thanks for sharing this Claire. I, being a native Texan, have made the effort to learn Spanish for about 1600 days with an app on the phone. I want to use that app to learn Irish but this video has me perplexed with all the variants. Alas, the lovely people of Ireland will help this poor Texan and his family when we visit in 2025. Love your work and your content. Cheers from Texas.

  • @Gaeilgeoir
    @GaeilgeoirАй бұрын

    Maith an bhean! 🥰 Agus Maigh Eo abú!! 💚❤️

  • @seamussc
    @seamusscАй бұрын

    I know many of my own ancestors came from Galway area to the US during the famine or right after to work on railroads or in mines. Census records they were unable to read or write, but I have always wondered if that first generation were Irish speakers.

  • @Anamalainn

    @Anamalainn

    Ай бұрын

    Chances are they were given where they were from and the time period, as long as they weren't from Galway city, unlikely then they would have been Irish speakers. Is as Gaillimh mé

  • @jackal59
    @jackal59Ай бұрын

    You are quite a good interviewer.

  • @Clisare

    @Clisare

    Ай бұрын

    Thank you so much!

  • @hillmidget1326
    @hillmidget1326Ай бұрын

    I started on duo lingo cause I was except as a child but I'm hoping to start proper lessons this year

  • @bongdonky2568
    @bongdonky2568Ай бұрын

    I never realized how much Scandinavian influence Irish language has.

  • @smaugmik
    @smaugmikАй бұрын

    I really enjoyed this video. Once again, I didn't understand a damn word, (well,maybe 3or4) but I just put on my cans, closed my eyes, and enjoyed listening to the musical sound of you and your "guests" conversing in your beautiful tongue. I'd love to learn it, but a brain tumor destroyed my memory. (It was benign)

  • @Kurdedunaysiri
    @Kurdedunaysiri27 күн бұрын

    Please more videos like that

  • @DHoberer
    @DHoberer26 күн бұрын

    This was a great video. Very enjoyable. (But my American ear heard what sounded like so many curse words in what the interviewees were saying LOL.)

  • @mattkevlarlarock5469
    @mattkevlarlarock5469Ай бұрын

    It's a beautiful language. I'm glad some people are still speaking it.

  • @Antraxjoy94
    @Antraxjoy94Ай бұрын

    WOW. Native spanish speaker here (hi from Puerto Rico again!). English is my second language. I'm fully bilingual and my inner dialog has always been in English. Guess I'm wired lime that and so is my daughter. Gailege is fascinating and sooooo different. Both spoken and written, it's wild!

  • @carolmurphy7572
    @carolmurphy7572Ай бұрын

    Canadian here, obviously of Irish descent. As a unilingual person, I'm delighted to hear your native tongue is not lost! It sounds like such a beautiful language, and it would certainly be a shame for it to be lost. Great video, Clisare!

  • @shamrock4500

    @shamrock4500

    Ай бұрын

    Did you know, the only Gaeltacht (Irish speaking area) outside of Ireland is in Erinsville, Ontario Canada. They do have a festival yearly.

  • @carolmurphy7572

    @carolmurphy7572

    Ай бұрын

    @@shamrock4500 No, I did not know that! How cool! Thanks for the info!

  • @thesoul2sqeeze

    @thesoul2sqeeze

    Ай бұрын

    Kindly wondering why you said "obviously of Irish descent" ?

  • @carolmurphy7572

    @carolmurphy7572

    Ай бұрын

    @@thesoul2sqeeze Simply because of my surname being Murphy, which, to many people, is instantly recognizable as an Irish surname. I apologize if my choice of phrasing left you puzzled. Sláinte!

  • @johnmcgrath6192
    @johnmcgrath6192Ай бұрын

    Great post. I was surprised that people could speak the Irish at all. ... In NYC my mother from Ireland, I discovered in the 8th grade, spoke fluent Irish. I found out because I watched her have a fluent, fast long conversation, with lots of laughs, in Irish. I was busy being a kid, a schoolboy and an American to think much about the fact that my parents were from Ireland. and both, as i later learned, were active in the Irish War of Independence in a county that was constantly in insurrection. The parents no attention to St. Patrick's Day except to go to Mass and I paid it no attention either after attending one parade and finding it not very engaging unless you were drinking. My father's family could not speak Irish. In a census - in the 1840s I think - my mother's family was listed as being able to read, write and speak both English and Irish. The neighboring families spoke only English. I think there was a lot of Irish speaking in that area before Catholic Emancipation. Both my parents families, and their neighbors, had the vote when very few Catholics in the country did. As a result I think those families were much more engaged in Irish politics, which was conducted in English. My parents were very close to an Irish Protestant neighbor because he too had fought in the Irish War of Independence. They atttended his family's special events at their Episcopal Church and liked that the services were in English. They knew what the Catholic prayers in Latin meant, as did their children, but they liked the ceremonies in English, ceremonies quite similar to the Catholic ones.

  • @bigjon19871
    @bigjon19871Ай бұрын

    Thanks for sharing this. ❤ Its interesting the filler words are almost all english. I wonder what are some common Irish filler.

  • @darthcrios
    @darthcriosАй бұрын

    You should try Navan 😂 the Gaeltacht in the rath cairn may have a few heads

  • @randombaddie1767
    @randombaddie1767Ай бұрын

    Interesting to hear the Irish language

  • @bogwoppit792
    @bogwoppit792Ай бұрын

    I think it's amazing that the Celtic languages are still being spoken 🙂 I remember as a young kid on holiday, not understanding that Scotland had it's own language when listening to some gaelic music on the radio. Since then learning about the history on how Ireland and Western Scotland had a link through the Kingdom of Dal Riata. In North Yorkshire where I'm from there are a few landmarks that are from old welsh. Plus the old system of counting sheep that the farmers use in Yorkshire and Cumbria is suppose to be from old welsh too. I do hope that the Celtic speaking nations carry on and keep their respective languages alive 🙏

  • @OurNotSoSeriousLife
    @OurNotSoSeriousLifeАй бұрын

    Thank goodness for the subtitles. I wouldn't understand amy of it.

  • @AB-kc9qv
    @AB-kc9qvАй бұрын

    Heileo, Clisare! Físéan maith! Any advice for people who don't live near a Gaeltacht but want to become fluent in the language? I take comhrá classes a few times a week, and I will start attending my local Ciorcal Comhrá this week. I keep a diary as Gaeilge, read books as Gaeilge. I also watch and listen to a load of Irish language media. But there aren't many other options in Limerick, faraor. I'm planning on travel to various Gaeltachts over the next few months, and hopefully settling in Galway before the end of the year. So hopefully all of that will help.

  • @johnmackenreillytag5692

    @johnmackenreillytag5692

    Ай бұрын

    If you’re getting regular exposure in lots of different ways and interacting with the language consistently (which you seem to be doing already) then it sounds like you’re well in on your way in terms of learning/relearning Irish! One thing I’d say from my own experience; after a certain point try to make sure you’re doing things THROUGH Irish, rather than focusing all your attention on learning ABOUT Irish. It’s a living language after all, and chatting in the pub, board games night with your friends, etc. will always be more engaging than poring over a grammar book!

  • @Clisare

    @Clisare

    Ай бұрын

    That would be my advice, read it, listen to it, go to events in Irish and it’ll come back to you, that’s what I’m doing! Also take a course with Gaelchultúr

  • @AnnaAnna-uc2ff
    @AnnaAnna-uc2ffАй бұрын

    Thank you.

  • @LearnIrishOnline
    @LearnIrishOnlineАй бұрын

    Iontach ar fad Clisare! Agus Gaillimh abú!

  • @ofthenearfuture
    @ofthenearfutureАй бұрын

    This was a great video! Nice to see so many people, especially the younger generation, speaking Irish... important to keep the language and culture alive. As an aside (which might be a touchy subject or you might not know the answer, sorry), but was the Irish language banned in NI? I'm just curious because my mum is Welsh and it was still restricted when she grew up so she never learned it. Pretty sad, but it's seemingly become more popular with the younger generations, maybe in a similar way to Ireland.

  • @Clisare

    @Clisare

    Ай бұрын

    The language was banned in Ireland as a whole for 800 years but I don’t know if it continued to be banned in NI once the Republic got its independence. I know it’s recognised there now. I have a video called “can people from Northern Ireland speak Irish” talking to people from Northern Ireland about this

  • @cigh7445

    @cigh7445

    Ай бұрын

    @@ClisareIrish was never explicitly banned in Ireland as a whole (the Statutes of Kilkenny in 1367 only applied to English settlements and even within the Pale it would have been very difficult to enforce) but it was progressively squeezed out of any realm of life which would have given it power or influence. The Penal Laws targeted Catholics, many of whom happened to be Irish speaking, but Irish was often used in official courts up until and even after the time of the famine and most courts had interpreters available for the judges (something we haven't had for a while now despite being independent, but with so few monolingual speakers I suppose the State does not consider it a real necessity...) It also wouldn't have been possible for Irish to have been banned all over Ireland for 800 years, as the country was never fully colonised until after the Flight of the Earls. Not including Dublin, the entirety of Ireland was under British administration for about 350 years.

  • @Clisare

    @Clisare

    Ай бұрын

    Thank you so much for explaining my own country's history to me /s

  • @mypradasatthecleanerss

    @mypradasatthecleanerss

    8 күн бұрын

    @@cigh7445 it’s important to be accurate as you have here! Shame your comment wasn’t well received!

  • @WRover4669
    @WRover4669Ай бұрын

    Picked up a few words while on the Inishmore last year. Been trying to learn ever since thanks to you and others on KZread. As well as Dualingo. The problem I run is that some of the pronunciations are regional. I kind of want to just learn the Munster annunciations but I've no clue if I'm hearing Munster, Connecticut, Ulster or Leinster 🤔

  • @Clisare

    @Clisare

    Ай бұрын

    Terma.ie has the different pronunciation for the different dialects. DuoLingo isn’t pronouncing most of right as the voice is very American

  • @Tchernobog11
    @Tchernobog11Күн бұрын

    Aw man. Not irish myself but would've been nice to be able to say Hello while you were in town :)

  • @DingoDin
    @DingoDinАй бұрын

    Yes! Please hold onto your language that’s where culture thrives (otherwise the whole world will look like an international airport terminal). Go raibh maith agat ❤

  • @arwensdorf8311
    @arwensdorf8311Ай бұрын

    I love this! I started learning Gaeilge about 2 weeks ago and as a person who grew up teaching myself languages but hasn’t studied one in years, it feels good to be back. Do you have recommendations for children’s books in Gaeilge? Thats one of my strategies since they often use repetitively helpful language and simple grammar and vocab.

  • @johnmackenreillytag5692

    @johnmackenreillytag5692

    Ай бұрын

    The An Siopa Leabhar website has a great selection of children's books; one I'd personally recommend is Scéalta ó Oileán an Turtair, it's a collection of short Native American folktales written in simple Irish.

  • @arwensdorf8311

    @arwensdorf8311

    Ай бұрын

    @@johnmackenreillytag5692 native american stories wow! Interesting! Thank you so much for the recommendation, i will take a look through their options!

  • @johnmackenreillytag5692

    @johnmackenreillytag5692

    Ай бұрын

    @@arwensdorf8311 Fadhb ar bith, bain sult as do thuras teanga! 💪

  • @flahfact
    @flahfactАй бұрын

    Físeán iontach! Táim ag foghlaim Gaeilge arís agus is fearr liom rudai seo a feachaint, go an-chabraidh!

  • @salihbey
    @salihbeyАй бұрын

    I have still my german to gaeilge dictionary. One of my hardest learning time, to learn this language. Unfortunately, due to move out from Ireland, all is forgotten.

  • @ghaven1929
    @ghaven1929Ай бұрын

    What a beautiful language. The Irish people have such a rich history of storytelling. It's only fitting they have a lovely language as well.

  • @floxy709
    @floxy709Ай бұрын

    i understood two words! Bearla agus 'agus'

  • @stephen1462
    @stephen1462Ай бұрын

    I was extremely fortunate to attend university for one year in Galway in ‘85-86. I signed up for an Irish literature course and thought I’d get to learn about legendary writers such as Joyce and O’Casey. I got to the first class just before the start, but the large lecture hall was full and there were only a couple seats left in the very front row. This was in September 1985 and I kinda stuck out as an American as I was still very tanned from summer in the States, wore my Nikes, and had a typical American backpack for books. Anyways, I’m sitting in the front row and the professor comes out speaking Irish. It was an Irish literature class - in Irish. I didn’t understand a word, but I’m pretty certain he made a joke about me as he looked right at me, said something in Irish, gave a wink, and everyone laughed. I just sat there for the entire one hour because I didn’t want to stand up and walk up the steps to get out of the lecture hall in front of at least one hundred students. I dropped the class, obviously, but loved my time in Galway, returning for a visit in 1988. I definitely hope to visit again when I retire in a couple year as Galway is one of the most beautiful cities you’ll ever see. I’ll try to pick up a little Irish, though, before I return. 😀

  • @hbee921
    @hbee921Ай бұрын

    Hey Claire! My family is from Galloway...I will visit there someday. KZread Serenity Sue may help me find relatives. I enjoy your videos.❤

  • @eriktroske6405
    @eriktroske6405Ай бұрын

    I’m American, and one of the ones who actually isn’t ethnically Irish ("less than Rihanna", as I described to a friend after singing "Óró sé do bheatha abhaile" last week). It’s heartening to see lots of people young and old actually speaking back in what sounds rather fine, even if some were obviously a bit uncomfortable at first. I also saw the video of the guy trying to speak Irish in Dublin with constant rejections, and thought it was very sad. Language is perhaps the most important aspect of culture - you can get back most of the rest later if you’ve lost it, and not everyone has to be the same anyways, but losing your language makes the rest of that basically impossible. I can only sing some songs in Gaelige, but there's even an interest in bringing it back to life in parts of the US - I'm in Chicago.

  • @blotski
    @blotskiАй бұрын

    Just a quick correction. Scots Gaelic is pronounced 'gallick' in English. Not gaylik. Wonderful video by the way.

  • @Chief_Brody

    @Chief_Brody

    Ай бұрын

    No, it's pronounced Gay-lik in English. Gallick in Gàidhlig

  • @MrBulky992

    @MrBulky992

    Ай бұрын

    @@Chief_Brody The Scots speak English as well as gaelic and every Scot I ever heard on the 7 years I lived in Scotland including BBC Scotland pronounced the name of the language "gallick", never "gaylick".

  • @karinaiscool3

    @karinaiscool3

    Ай бұрын

    @@Chief_Brodyit’s definitely gallick in both gàidhlig and english

  • @mitchyoung93
    @mitchyoung93Ай бұрын

    It was so cool to hear 'smithereens' ....just about the only word I recognized.

  • @countycricklewood
    @countycricklewoodАй бұрын

    2nd man had it 👍

  • @sbrock6385
    @sbrock6385Ай бұрын

    💗

  • @sowhatdidithink4205
    @sowhatdidithink4205Ай бұрын

    ah the Gaeilgeoir , I'm Irish but due to health problems as a child , it was the only subject in school I could not keep up with, got enough points to qualify for University but because I didn't have Irish, was not allowed to attend. do those commenting know that if you spoke Irish and did the leaving cert ( a Levels or SAT) in Irish you immediately got 10% extra in your exams before answering a single question. I happen to think Irish is vital and should be kept alive but looking back now, those in charge who were the most passionate about the language were also the most small minded and held the country back for decades..

  • @Clisare

    @Clisare

    Ай бұрын

    Sure you get 10% but you have to do maths and biology in Irish so that’s *hard*

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