
A' clubadh clòimh le clibean
Re: A' clubadh clòimh le clibean
Agus mas e air sop-feòir (wisp of grass) a bha iad a' siubhal, chan e commuters a bh' ann, saoilidh mi... 

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Re: A' clubadh clòimh le clibean
Uill cha chreid mi gun robh an Tùr BhT no mòran commuters ann aig toiseach 20mh linn ach tha sibh ceart, chanainn gum faod an Sluagh gluasad ann an tìm cho furasta mar am faod iad gluasad ann am farsaingeachd
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Re: A' clubadh clòimh le clibean
Another two questions:
Is mo chiad rather than a' chiad ... agam used only for the first [whatever] in one's life or should one always see "my, your etc. first" as inalienable?[...] Ardlui, far an do dh'òl mi mo chiad chrogan leann [...]
Isn't coirce just one type of arbhar?Far an robh arbhar is coirce is feur nuair a dh'fhalbh mi, tha oil-seed rape a' lìonadh an t-saoghail a-nis.
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Re: A' clubadh clòimh le clibean
Food and drink usually falls under inalienable i.e. mo bhiadh, mo dheoch...
I guess so but I think due to the importance of coirce, it's often seen as separate from arbharIsn't coirce just one type of arbhar?
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Re: A' clubadh clòimh le clibean
Taing! So it would apply to the other ordinal numbers too, eg "nuair a dh'ith mi mo threas bonnach" ? (And would it be bonnach or bhonnach when the adjective precedes the noun?)
I see, that makes sense.I guess so but I think due to the importance of coirce, it's often seen as separate from arbhar