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Irish language - Gweedore people speaking Gaelic

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Uploaded by on Jan 2, 2009

A clip of people from Gweedore (Gaoth Dobhair) speaking in Irish Gaelic about Comharchumann Forbartha Ghaoth Dobhair and their work.

Físeán ag cuir síos ar an obair atá ar siúil ag Comharchumann Forbartha Ghaoth Dobhair.

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  • Ireland Republic (Poblacht nà Eireann) must get rid of the english language and adopt as its only official language this one, the beautiful gaelige. Wonderful language.

  • @chxavier2 Though I agree that Gaelic is a beautiful language and Ireland should have their official language, do not tell them to get rid of English, Irish accents are sexy. :P

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  • @SoulRythm its incredibly hard to learn or maybe its just the education system in ireland! but i've been learning since i was 4 and im 17 now and i'm not completely fluent yet. i can have a conversation with the people in this vid for example, but still its hard to master.

  • @xXmusiclife16Xx When you find the teacher pass the name to me. I want to learn this gorgeous language too. :)

  • I am from Michigan, with no one to teach me this beautiful language, but someday I will go to Ireland and learn this. Or find myself a teacher :)

  • @irishxxkelt The parent of Semitic languages may be from the earliest form of the Alphabet which is Phoencian. There is no way there is any direct link between Arabic and Irish.

  • @imawildman I am sorry but Gaelic is an Indo-European language related way back to Sanskrit. The other languages are Semitic languages. Fenian? That is what the Irish republicans were called. That came from the Fíanna, a mythical band of warriors led by Fionn Mac Cumhaíl The Phoenicians were great sailors and possibly traded for tin from Cornwall England. There is no proof that they ever came to Ireland, to trade or settle.

  • @chxavier2 I'm Australian and im reading Irish Origins of Civilisation Vol 1&2 and i've discovered that Irish Gaelic is the lost parent language of Arabic, Hebrew, and Sanskrit. Please do not loose this majestic and beautiful language that was originally spread around the world by the Fenian or Fenician (from Fenii or Phenii) Phoenician sailors.

  • @Linkswolfform It is their official language.  It's just not the language predominately used. The two things are not mutually exclusive.

  • @irishxxkelt why?

  • @stealth1692 Phew!

  • @irishxxkelt no i meant english lol

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