gaelic

listen to the pronunciation of gaelic
Englisch - Türkisch
Gal dili

İskoç Gal dilini öğreniyorum. - I'm learning Scottish Gaelic.

kuzey iskoçyalı
{s} İskoçyalı
{i} Keltçe

Fransızca öğrenmek kolay mı? Şey, Keltçe'den daha kolay. - Is it easy to learn French? Well, it's easier than Gaelic.

Dört ay önce Tom Keltçe öğrenmeye başladı. - It was four months ago that Tom began to learn Gaelic.

{s} İrlandalı
i., s. Gaelce; İrlandaca; İskoçça
(isim) Keltçe
{s} Kelt

Dört ay önce Tom Keltçe öğrenmeye başladı. - It was four months ago that Tom began to learn Gaelic.

Kim Keltçe konuşmak istemiyor? - Who wouldn't like to speak Gaelic?

s bu Keltlere veya dillerine ait
s iskoçya Keltlerinin dili
Gaelce
ırlandalı
ıskoçyalı
scottish gaelic
iskoçça
Scottish Gaelic
i., s. İskoçça
irish Gaelic
İrlandaca
scottish gaelic poetry
galce iskoç şiiri
Englisch - Englisch
Of or relating to the Gaels, the Celtic peoples of Scotland, Ireland, and the Manx, or their languages
Goidelic; any Goidelic language
Scottish Gaelic
Of or relating to the Gaels, the Celtic peoples of Scotland, Ireland, and the Manx, or their language
Gaelic is a language spoken by people in parts of Scotland and Ireland. We weren't allowed to speak Gaelic at school. Gaelic is also an adjective. the Gaelic language
{s} of or pertaining to the Gaels; of or pertaining to the Gaelic language
Gaelic means coming from or relating to Scotland and Ireland, especially the parts where Gaelic is spoken. an evening of Gaelic music and drama. one of the Celtic languages, especially spoken in parts of Scotland and in Ireland (Gael (18-21 centuries), from Gaidheal). adj. Gaelic Nation Gaelic football Gaelic revival Gaelic language Scottish Gaelic language
{i} Celtic language
Of or pertaining to the Gael, esp
to the Celtic Highlanders of Scotland; as, the Gaelic language
of the Highlanders of Scotland
any of several related languages of the Celts in Ireland and Scotland
relating to or characteristic of the Celts
a language spoken by the Scots
The language of the Gaels, esp
A language of Ireland or the Scottish Highlands
It is a branch of the Celtic
various distinct but related languages of the celtic peoples of Scotland, Ireland and the Isle of Man
Gaelic coffee
Irish coffee
Gaelic coffees
plural form of Gaelic coffee
Gaelic football
A form of football played mainly in Ireland
Gaelic football
{i} type of football played with 15 players on each team having a net attached to the goal where the object of the game is to kick or punch or dribble the ball into the net or over the crossbar (played mainly in Ireland)
Gaelic football
a game played in Ireland between two teams of 15 players, using a round ball that can be kicked or hit with the hands. Irish sport, an offshoot of the violent medieval game mêlée. In the modern game, sides are limited to 15 players. Players may not throw the ball but may dribble it with hand or foot and may punch or punt it toward their opponents' goal. Goals count as either one or three points, depending on whether the ball passes above (one) or below (three) a crossbar attached to the goalposts. It is played mostly in Ireland and the U.S
Gaelic revival
Resurgence of interest in Irish language, literature, history, and folklore inspired by the growing Irish nationalism of the early 19th century. With the 17th-century English conquest and settlement of Ireland, Irish almost disappeared as a literary language. By the mid-19th century, translations of heroic tales from ancient Irish manuscripts led to the popularity, among the educated classes, of poets who wrote in patterns echoing ancient bardic verse. The revival laid the scholarly and nationalistic groundwork for the Irish Literary Renaissance. See also bard
gaelic-speaking
able to communicate in Gaelic
Irish Gaelic
the Celtic language indigenous to Ireland, commonly called Irish
Manx Gaelic
the native language of the Isle of Man
Scottish Gaelic
The Gaelic language of Scotland, spoken primarily in the northern and western parts of the country, with important communities in Glasgow and Edinburgh. Scottish Gaelic had its widest influence between 800 and 1200 CE, as place names throughout Scotland attest
Irish Gaelic
The Goidelic language of Ireland. Also called Erse, Irish
Scottish Gaelic
The Goidelic language of Scotland. Also called Erse
Scottish Gaelic language
Celtic language of northern Scotland, a descendant of the Irish speech introduced into northern Britain by invaders in the 4th-5th centuries. Gaelic gradually supplanted Pictish (see Picts) as well as the British Celtic Lowlands dialects, and by the Middle Ages it was the language of all of the Scottish Highlands and part of the Lowlands. Until the 17th century, Classical Modern Irish (see Irish language) was the literary medium of Gaeldom, and only after its collapse did writers regularly begin to use features that distinguish Scottish Gaelic dialects from Irish dialects. Increasing Anglicization, suppression of traditional culture after the Battle of Culloden, and the 19th-century land clearances precipitated a marked decline; today it is probably a true community language for fewer than 80,000 people, most of whom live on the northwestern coast and the Hebrides
scottish gaelic
the Gaelic language of Scotland
gaelic
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