Added: 3 years ago
From: rtenewsontwo
Views: 37,094
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  • All the weather girls on TG4 have massive knockers...

  • Errr. she isn't langue irlandaise, dudes...

  • is aoibheann liom Aoife Ni thuarisisg :)

  • "Worm" in Irish is "péist" for the person who was asking.

  • Does TG4 have a youtube channel where I can see more? I love this language :)

  • The video uploader has asked of the whereabouts of this Irish presenter, well Aoife has recently been on an interview in Dublin on "Jehovah's Witnesses". You should look her up if you like her so much. :-)

  • Basically for those non-Irish speakers, she's saying the weather is gonna be shite!!!

  • is that rain or herpes?

  • I only understood "Rod Stewart" :D

  • Gaeilge go deo :) Is aoibheann liom TG4.

  • Fucking rain again.....shit!!!!

  • Support the Irish language! Speak it everywhere and as much as possible! Bring it back to its original common grandeur!

  • I could be an Irish-speaking weatherman. All I'd need to know how to say is "it's raining".

  • céard sa diabhal atá á rá aici?

  • A good looking Irish girl speaking fluent Irish - there's nothing sexier.

  • Tomorrow night a million spearheads will fly in from the atlantic

  • WAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAATTTTTTTT­TTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTT???????­?? :S

  • I LVOE her. Beautiful love.

    WHY is it that people on TeeVee always refer to Northern Ireland when they are talking about any part of Ireland? Isn't the entire island just Ireland? Nobody EVER says "The South of Ireland" or "Southern Ireland".

    wassup with THAT?

  • @DancingSpiderman cos politicaly the north of ireland is part of britian but he rest belongs to ireland

  • @kaylesemma Thank you so very much for that tidbit of knowledge; I did not know it.

    Seems to me that, map-wise, the southern part of Ireland is closer to the big island England, so ... aww, never mind. I might accidently start a war between northern Ireland and the REMAINDER of Ireland. When I was a kid, I remember Irish people, always on the national TV news, throwing bombs & rocks at each other. Maybe alcohol was involved. See...? I don't want to start a war with my ignorant questions...

  • @DancingSpiderman ahhhh! ur questions arent ignorant! the fighting u probaly seen on tv was either somethin 2 do wi protesting against the government or fighting against the IRA, but since u mentioned bombs involved it was most likely 2 do with the IRA.

  • @DancingSpiderman its because northern ireland is part of britian. however southern ireland is known as the republic of ireland and not as the south because the republic isnt divided in two.

  • shes smoking hot! or should i say... ana te! :P she still presents on TG4

  • omg.. This language is so good!!!

  • Go raibh maith agat! Is liom i.

  • One of the hardest languages to learn

  • @hellsxrebellion

    so ive heard....so is it weird that im 14 and fluent?

  • it would be cool if in england they did the news reports in anglo-saxon!!!!!!! two languages i only want to learn are dead : [ anglo-saxon and irish gaelic!!!!

  • @seamuspowers

    It can't be too dead if they are making forcasts in it. It's Celtic Gaelic and it is Ireland's first language. Plenty still speak it. I highly encourage you to learn it.

  • @seamuspowers

    its not ''dead'' exactly.there are still entire parts of the country that speak irish as their first language...and every irish student under the age of 18 has to study as part of the curriculem(did i spell that right?)

  • yup, it's raining again in Ireland

  • @Tostig68 i love the rain, must be the anglo-irish in me lol

  • soft day

  • great tits

  • Hey, theres no need for that kinda talk. This woman is a fine example of the virtue that is Irish womanhood. to behold and respect. Not some carpet burned old slag, like the women in your country. This woman is saving herself for marriage and will not be dropping her trolleys for no letcherous bastards.

    However. I am in agreement with you.

  • Tá se fliuch arís!

  • agus inniu... tá sé ag báisteach aríst. Tá na aimsir éasca ar fad sa Éireann

  • what is "tree" in Irish?

  • @yashil17 crann

  • @yashil17 the number 3. though usually said 'uh tree'. Well.. really depends on the context kinda, but if your counting then ya for the most part: tree is three.

    btw, there is no "th" sound in irish so that may just have to do with that.

  • @Moos547 i meant tree like wood, but i'm so glad to hear that Irish and maybe Gaelic doesn't have the "th" sound, i think the only language to have that would be modern English in n.america, not even in England!

  • @yashil17 Crann. Do you know how to say it?

  • @AmaindeJH

    not really, "C-er- aan"?

  • @yashil17 than say at least: "Cén ghaeilge atá ar "tree"?"

  • @sauenn

    so "Cén" is "what"? and what is "ata" and "ar"? and if u know tree? is it similar to "derakht/deragh" by any chance?

  • @yashil17 literally people say: "What Gaeilge is for 'tree'?" But remember, in Gaeilge people switch the verb and subject, so the verb comes first and secondly the object. So it means "What is Gaeilge for 'tree?' I don't know what you mean with "derakht/deragh".

  • @sauenn

    that is awsome, in Persian/Iranian we say the verb and then the object like in Keltic/Gaelic: in Persian the statement would be - "Chi ye Gillaki bara e Derakht?" What is Gillaki(Northern Province in Iran) for tree

    what i meant for derakht/deragh is that i read an article by someone credible - a historian or journalist, stating that in old Irish/Gaelic a sacred tree was called "deragh" which is derived from the Iranian word - derakht ...

  • @sauenn ...

    by the way im yashil17 using a different account, sorry for late mention,

    anyways in Persian we say Derakht to tree and in old Gaelic they called their sacred tree Deragh, in which if im correct "gh" in Gaelic is pronouced "kh" hence it would be equal to derakh and derakht is even more closer, so i was wondering what tree is in modern Irish and it is crann, however can u tell me what is worm in Irish. thanks, and can u answer my last reply about the older questinons, thanks alot

  • @yashil17 a "tree" is "crann" like a plant ... but some people pronounce three as tree so the number is "trí"

  • @yashil17

    Crann!

  • @yashil17 "tree" in Irish is "crann". The combination -gh is pronounced like /j/ as the y- in English "you". But I think I understand what you are saying. In Irish -ch is pronounced like /ch/ as in Bach, perhaps in Persian -kh is pronounced the same way (Irish -c is pronounced as /k/). "Cén" is indeed "what" of "which", "atá" is a contraction of "a" and "tá", so it is a depended form of "tá" (to be) and "ar" is "for". So: "What is Irish for..."

  • @sauenn - crann ! I've seen it spelt as creánn in a very old Irish book.

  • @sainglain Ow, that is possible. Perhaps they pronounced the cr- slender in that time then

  • Jeeez,,, I'm melting of awesomeness of this language...

  • WOW! I really like that, wonderful language! Wish I could learn it!

    EIRANN GO BRACH ( all I know)!

  • wonderful: it sounds like a mix of arabic and romanian!

  • Is she related to the guy who played Mairtin in An gra Faoi Ghlas ? She seems to have the same surname as he does.

  • What a beautiful language!

  • She's a wonderful Irish speaker! Her pronunciation is so precise - right down that characteristically Irish 'tr' sound in 'trasna'. I really wish I could speak Irish with the ease and beauty that she brings to it.

  • interesant language

  • hmmm.... blasta

  • Love Aoife, sexy as hell!

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