A trì (#3) - Dè an obair a th' agaibh?

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PamB
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Re: A trì (#3) - Dè an obair a th' agaibh?

Unread post by PamB »

Tha mi ag obair ann an oifis - ann an 'workers co-operative' (cho-chomunn…?). Tha mi a' dèanamh larach lin, margaideachd agus 'sales' (reiceadaireachd?).


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Re: A trì (#3) - Dè an obair a th' agaibh?

Unread post by GunChleoc »

sales = rèic

Very well done! :D

Just be careful about those accents - they are important for vowel length: làrach-lìn
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Re: A trì (#3) - Dè an obair a th' agaibh?

Unread post by PamB »

Tapadh leat. Ciamar a tha thu ag radh 'workers co-operative' anns a Gàidhlig?
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Re: A trì (#3) - Dè an obair a th' agaibh?

Unread post by Seonaidh »

? Co-chomann an luchd-obrach?
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Re: A trì (#3) - Dè an obair a th' agaibh?

Unread post by GunChleoc »

Sounds good to me.
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Re: A trì (#3) - Dè an obair a th' agaibh?

Unread post by EowynAnduin »

Tha mi ag obair ann an oifis.
I work in an office.

Tha mi an einnseanair lìonraidh.
I am a network engineer.
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Re: A trì (#3) - Dè an obair a th' agaibh?

Unread post by faoileag »

Special structure used for jobs (and other things, but this will do for now! :spors: ):

'S e .... a th' annam = it's a .... that's in me.

'S e einnseanair-lìonraidh a th' annam. - I am a network engineer

'S e seinneadair a th' annam
'S e cluicheadair ball-coise a th' annam.
'S e dràibhear-tacsaidh a th' annam.


(I could do with you being a bit closer- my IT savvy is zero! :lol: )
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Re: A trì (#3) - Dè an obair a th' agaibh?

Unread post by Seonaidh »

If you must use the "I an an..." construction, you can, BUT you still need the "in" bit, i.e. not "I am a network engineer" but "I am in my network engineer" (Tha mi nam einnseanair-lìonraidh). More usual like what Faoileag says.
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Re: A trì (#3) - Dè an obair a th' agaibh?

Unread post by Thrissel »

I think I've read somewhere that the it's X that is in Y construction had a wider implication than the Y is in his X, as in 'S e seòladair a tha annamsa agus tha mi nam sgiobair a' bhàta seo - "I'm (generally) a sailor and I'm (currently) a captain of this boat". Not sure about this though.
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Re: A trì (#3) - Dè an obair a th' agaibh?

Unread post by Seonaidh »

Matter of cudthrom, me ole Thrissel. Usually, when you have occasion to say "I'm a ********", you're actually wanting to bring out what it is that you do - done in English by, maybe, raising the voice a bit, either in pitch or in volume (or both). It's often answering a question like "What do you do?". So, in Gaelic, it would be natural to stick the occupation first, hence "'S e chicken-sexer a th' annam" or whatever. I suppose you might occasionally want to stress it's YOU who's doing the job, e.g. "'S mise am Prìomh Mhinistear" or whatever. If you're not stressing owt, and if it's not answering a question, just a casual comment, e.g. "I was a student last year", you might say "Bha mi nam oileanach an-uiridh".

As for your example, I'd probably go for "'S e" for both bits, because it looks like an answer to a question with some further important elaboration.
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Re: A trì (#3) - Dè an obair a th' agaibh?

Unread post by Susy »

´S e neach-lagha a th´annam.
I´m a lawyer.

Tha mi ag obair aig banca.
I work at a bank.

Nach urrain dhuibh na fiachan agaibh a phàigheadh ?
You can´t pay your debts?

Is truagh sin, ach an uair sin, tòisichidh an obair agam.
It's sad, but then starts my work.

Feumaidh mi an càr, an taigh, a´chompanaidh agaibh a thoirt bhuaibh.
I have to take your car, your house, your company away.

Uaireannan lorgaidh tu am banca ùr, uaireannan pàighidh tu a h-uile sìon.
Sometimes you will find a new bank, sometimes you will pay all.

Chan eil mi coingeis a bheil na daoine mì-thoilichte.
It does matter, if people are unhappy.

Ach ciamar a chanas an seannfhacal ? Cha dèan tapadh leis an fhìdhlear. :roll:
But as the saying goes ? No „thank you“ paid the fiddler.

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Re: A trì (#3) - Dè an obair a th' agaibh?

Unread post by Seonaidh »

Oh Siouxsie, if I understood your English, I might know what's wrong with your Gaelic...actually, neither's that bad, just hard to make out what you're wanting to say in Gaelic when the English is also a wee bit strange.
Sioux wrote:Tha mi ag obair aig banca.
I work at a bank.
Here's an example. Now, if a native English speaker said "I work at a bank", it would probably mean "the bank of a river" or some such, so in Gaelic "Tha mi ag obair aig bruach". But I don't think that's what you meant, as you've used the word "banca", which is the Gaelic for "bank" as in "place where you keep money". So I suspect your English should have been something like "I work in a bank", which gives the Gaelic "Tha mi ag obair ann am banca".

The next one, about paying debts, looks OK in Gaelic, but in English you'd usually have inversion, i.e. not "You can't pay your debts?" but "Can't you pay your debts?" Similarly "...but then my work starts" (no inversion): maybe the way you've put it is after the German, my knowledge of which is significantly less than your knowledge of either English or Gaelic. In the company statement, both English and Gaelic would tend to put in an "and"/"agus".
Siùsaidh wrote:Uaireannan lorgaidh tu am banca ùr, uaireannan pàighidh tu a h-uile sìon.
Sometimes you will find a new bank, sometimes you will pay all.
no "am": "am banca ùr" = "the new bank".
Suzy wrote:Chan eil mi coingeis a bheil na daoine mì-thoilichte.
It does matter, if people are unhappy.
I've not heard of "coingeis" - but that doesn't mean it doesn'y exist. "I am not coingeis": not sure how that maps onto "It does matter". Maybe there's a special German way of saying it that leads to these widely different forms in English and Gaelic. If it's "It does matter", I might prefer something like "Tha e gu diofar" or even "'S ann a tha e gu diofar". As for the rest, "It does matter if people are unhappy", that's a bit like saying "It does matter that people are unhappy", if it's English. In any event, "a bheil" is wrong, as it's the question form. It might just be possible to say "...a bhios daoine mi-thoilichte", but I'd tend to go for "...gu bheil daoine mi-thoilichte".

As for the seannfhacal, it's not one I've come across in English: I suspect it's a German one you've tronsloted into English and Gaelic, and doesn't really make sense in either.

Now, while my knowledge of German is pitiful, I happen to know there are at least 2 (probably loads more) people on the forum whose German is Pretty Good - it might be an idea if, instead of posting in Gaelic and English, you posted in Gaelic and German. At least that way we (not me, but the Germanophones) will know exactly what you are trying to say in Gaelic and can be of greater help to you in your endeavours.
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Re: A trì (#3) - Dè an obair a th' agaibh?

Unread post by Susy »

Good idea! :D
Thank you for your detailed comment. I´ll be waiting, what others say. Of course, Gaelic is the most important thing, if we write. My idea: I post and write in three languages and write the English and German text very small. I write so small, that no large text results. Then all will understand, what I mean. Perhaps people are also happy to read a little bit in German. Is that okay?
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Re: A trì (#3) - Dè an obair a th' agaibh?

Unread post by Thrissel »

Susy wrote:I write so small, that no large text results.
Shaoilinn gu bheil thu a' ciallachadh "so little". Ma bhios tu a' sgrìobhadh ro "shmall", cha tèid againn air a sgrìobhadh. :priob:
I think you mean "so little". If you write too "small", we will not be able to read it.
Anyway, go ahead!
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Re: A trì (#3) - Dè an obair a th' agaibh?

Unread post by GunChleoc »

Nach urrainn dhuibh na fiachan agaibh a phàigheadh ?

Uaireannan, lorgaidh tu banca ùr - no article needed

Chan eil mi coma a bheil na daoine mì-thoilichte. - cuingis means you're happy either way, come means you don't care.

3 languages is a good idea, but no need to write small. Maybe you can use colours and spacing, e.g. like this:

Gàidhlig

English

Deutsch

ETA: Habe Dein Layout gesehen, das ist gut, kannst Du so lassen :)
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