CS9 Posts

Stories and Poems by our members.

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AnnetteR
Posts: 207
Joined: Sat Dec 11, 2004 2:45 pm
Location: Glasgow

Post by AnnetteR » Sun Mar 13, 2005 3:56 pm

Hi Bob

Hope you are feeling better. That was a very interesting read and I will be the first to admit that I am ashamed that I have never even attempted to learn Gaelic. It was offered to us at school all those years ago but I avoided it like the plague preferring to take French. Don't know why I bothered with that as my French nowadays is almost non existent. The only language I ever mastered to a certain degree was Spanish but that was because I wanted to learn it and I had to speak it when I lived in Spain. The funny thing is that when you are abroad people assume because you are Scottish you must be fluent in Gaelic. How wrong they are :oops:

Cheers

Annette
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Researching in Fife: Wilson, Ramsay, Cassels/Carswell, Lindsay, Millar, Bowman and many others.
In Glasgow and West of Scotland: Aitchison, Wilkinson, Keenan, Black, Kinloch and Leiper.

mesklin
Posts: 325
Joined: Tue Dec 07, 2004 9:25 pm

Post by mesklin » Sun Mar 13, 2005 6:48 pm

Bob

Was moochin around PC World today. And there it was, in the Learn a Language section. Learn to Speak Scots! Alongside Gujarati, Portuguese and Zulu.

I was a little disappointed to discover they meant Gaelic (Would have bought it for a laugh if they had meant Scots english!), but at least it shows that there is some interest down here.

The 'Learn to Speak English' box was 3 times thicker. No comment! :D

Dave

DavidWW
Posts: 5057
Joined: Sat Dec 11, 2004 9:47 pm

Post by DavidWW » Sun Mar 13, 2005 7:10 pm

The Great Toast

Suas i, suas i;
Seas i, seas i;
A'nall i, a'nall i;
A'null i, a'null i;
Na h'uile la gu math diut, mo charaid.
Sguab as i!
Agus cha n'ol neach eile as a ghloine so gu brath!

To be drunk standing on a chair with one foot on the table. The glass is raised and lowered, brought in and out, with each line, drained on the words Sguab as i!, and smashed at the end.

Up with it, up with it;
Down with it, down with it;
Over to you, over to you;
Over to me, over to me;
May all your days be good, my friend.
Drink it up!
And let no one ever drink from this glass again!

Davie

Moonwatcher
Posts: 207
Joined: Mon Dec 13, 2004 8:38 am
Location: North West Highlands. Scotland

Post by Moonwatcher » Sun Mar 13, 2005 7:34 pm

Annette. Dave.

I’ve always been impressed by people who could speak other languages. I’ve never managed it massell. I reckon my brain isn’t wired that way. I regularly come into into contact with a number of nationalities – Polish, Chilean, Spanish, Norwegian, Dutch, English – and I can always make myself understood (talking louder seems to help :) ). But don’t ask me to speak their words, the glesca tongue jist wulnae dae it!

When I announced to folk that I was moving up to the Highlands someone gave me a set of tapes called ‘Can Seo’. Come to think of it, it was Alan’s mum. Remember Alan from the Echo 6 stories? Well, ‘Can Seo’ (I think that’s how it was spelt) was based on a BBC TV programme teaching us Lowlanders how to speak The Gaelic. It was full of stuff like ‘Is this the right road to Aberdeen?’ and ‘Morag has a bun in the oven’ and ‘Hamish is breaking in a new sporran for Dougall’. Well maybe not those exact phrases you understand, but the tapes are up in the attic somewhere and there’s no way I’m going up there tonight without a sherpa escort!

The thing is, I spent the first couple weeks driving around the northwest coast listening to these tapes and talking absolute jibberish to myself! Then one night, I walked into a group of native gaelic speakers in a rather rough Stornoway pub. Not only were they not interested in Morag’s bun, but they made it quite clear that glesca blokes taking the mickey out of their native tongue was NOT appreciated! It cost me a few Glenmorangies tae get oot a that wan ah kin tell ye!

Davie,

That’s a cracker! On a chair ye say? Hmmm.

Bob.

BobG
Posts: 84
Joined: Sat Dec 11, 2004 12:46 am
Location: Massachusetts USA

The Western Isles

Post by BobG » Sun Mar 13, 2005 10:58 pm

Bob

Good reading. Thanks for the education! As a note: If anyone is doing research using the US census they may come across the term “Western Islands or Isles” as the place of origin for a fair number of immigrants. Census takers were referring to the Azores Islands, an autonomous region of Portugal, and not The Outer Hebrides.

BobG
Researching Grigor/Roy/Symon in Morayshire & Banffshire. Mearns/Roy/Low in Insch & Auchterless, Aberdeenshire.

nelmit
Posts: 4001
Joined: Wed Dec 15, 2004 11:49 pm
Location: Scotland

Re: Cyber Seance 9

Post by nelmit » Sun Mar 13, 2005 11:45 pm

Moonwatcher wrote: Right, here we go. First you have to get your Scottish Gaelic and your Irish Gaelic sorted out. Both are very similar, but the Irish pronounce it ‘Gay-lik’ while the Scots pronouce it ‘Gah-lik’ as in garlic. People will correct you if you get it wrong.
Hi Bob,

As an enumerator of the 1991 census in Glasgow, I had one lovely lady in her 90's who was blind so I had to visit her home and help fill in her form. After making the tea, getting comfy and havin' a gab we eventually got round to the census form. When I reached the question and asked he if she could speak 'Gay-lik' she was most indignant and informed me of the of the correct pronunciation- 'The Gah-lik'.
I always correct anyone I know who says any different.

Loved the helicopter part of your story. I once tried to watch a Gaelic soap on telly and built a whole story round Gaelicgaelicgaelicgaelicvodkaandorangegaelicgaelic. The young folk were in the pub at the time.

Annette M