Urgent t*ns Request
Urgent t*ns Request
Hello all,
I am hoping someone can provide me with a tr*nsl*t**n of the phrase "Until you (pl) meet again under the Lantern" - it is for a eulogy for a friend's father who is a Macfarlane, hence the reference to the 'lantern' (i.e. Macfarlane's lantern - a local term for the full moon).
Thanks very much!
I believe in Irish it is something like - Go gasfar le chéile sibh arís "faoi an lóchrann...."
I am hoping someone can provide me with a tr*nsl*t**n of the phrase "Until you (pl) meet again under the Lantern" - it is for a eulogy for a friend's father who is a Macfarlane, hence the reference to the 'lantern' (i.e. Macfarlane's lantern - a local term for the full moon).
Thanks very much!
I believe in Irish it is something like - Go gasfar le chéile sibh arís "faoi an lóchrann...."
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- Rianaire
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LOL wrong language.
"Gus an coinnich sibh a-rithist fon lanntair"
will do the trick.
"Gus an coinnich sibh a-rithist fon lanntair"
will do the trick.
Do, or do not. There is no try.
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- Rianaire
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That a depends on whit ye cry "Scots".Thrissel wrote:Wouldn't it be youz in Scots?
"Yous/youz" is affy modern and mair nor a wee bit weegie. (It wis brocht in by the latest brood o Gallick an Erse speakers in Glasgow wha wantit somethin tae mak up for no bein able tae say "Sibh".) But then again, Ah ay said it when Ah wis wee, an ah'm no fae the weege....
MikeSz,
What they're getting at is that "Scots" is the name of an Anglic language, closely related to English, that has traditionally been spoken throughout the south and east of Scotland for around a thousand years (first introduced to the Lothians circa 600). "Scottish Gaelic" is something very different, and it's incorrect to call it "Scots". (You wouldn't call English "Irish", even though it's spoken in Ireland, because there's already a language called Irish.)
If you have a look at everything I wrote before your name, you'll see that it's relatively easy to get the gist of it for an English speaker, similar to how a Danish speaker can read most Swedish, even if he sometimes can't understand things said out loud.
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- Rianaire
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Och, no...
Hiberno-English is Irish, not Scottish, descended from the English spoken by English invaders during the 17th century.
Scots is descended from Northumbrian, an Anglo-Saxon dialect that was altered by invasion and settlement by the Danish Vikings between 800 and 954 AD. After centuries of conquest and counter-conquest, Northumbria was eventually split, with the northern part becoming part of Scotland (the Lothians and Borders regions are historically Northumbrian) in 1018. A very different language indeed.
Just to muddy the waters, there were later Scottish settlements in Ireland, but that gave rise to the dialect of Scots known as Ulster-Scots or Ullans (silly name), which bears little relation to the Hiberno-English dialect(s) of English.
Hiberno-English is Irish, not Scottish, descended from the English spoken by English invaders during the 17th century.
Scots is descended from Northumbrian, an Anglo-Saxon dialect that was altered by invasion and settlement by the Danish Vikings between 800 and 954 AD. After centuries of conquest and counter-conquest, Northumbria was eventually split, with the northern part becoming part of Scotland (the Lothians and Borders regions are historically Northumbrian) in 1018. A very different language indeed.
Just to muddy the waters, there were later Scottish settlements in Ireland, but that gave rise to the dialect of Scots known as Ulster-Scots or Ullans (silly name), which bears little relation to the Hiberno-English dialect(s) of English.
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- Rianaire
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