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Taboo or??
Posted: Tue May 30, 2017 8:40 am
by GunChleoc
When you stub your toe, you can also say "Murt!", or a more colorful one, "Tòin an t-Sàtain!"
I got both of those from Lewis friends.
Taboo or??
Posted: Tue May 30, 2017 9:33 am
by GunChleoc
About calling people names, check out
https://www.academia.edu/2488427/Scotti ... nd_Edition_, section "3.4.3 Discourse Particles, Parenthetical Statements, and Interjections"
You might also enjoy
The Naughty Little Book of Gaelic.
As to calling people names, male idiots are Amadain!, female idiots are Òinseach!
I don't know about friendly insults, as people are usually very polite. Might be more common for bilingual Gaels living in Glasgow though

Taboo or??
Posted: Fri Jun 09, 2017 10:52 pm
by Droigheann
Fluffgar wrote: Would it be usual to just shout "càc" as an expletive say after stubbing your toe or something?
Just came across it in a book: guy should have left a place before 7am, but when we checks his mobile after waking up:
"Cac! Tha e seachad air deich."
(However,
the author is a apparently a learner, however advanced.)
Taboo or??
Posted: Mon Jun 26, 2017 11:14 am
by Fluffgar
Droigheann wrote: Fluffgar wrote: Would it be usual to just shout "càc" as an expletive say after stubbing your toe or something?
Just came across it in a book: guy should have left a place before 7am, but when we checks his mobile after waking up:
"Cac! Tha e seachad air deich."
(However,
the author is a apparently a learner, however advanced.)
Sounds like a reasonably reliable source to me

Language isn't a static thing anyway so I'm going to mark this as okay in my book. Taing.
Taboo or??
Posted: Sun Sep 24, 2017 10:08 am
by An Gobaire
It would be more common among native Gaels to put it in a sort of vocative case.
It would also be more common to hear it after a mistake is made. E.g. a singer fluffing their lines or something like that.
"A chaca!"