--- title: "Dè an t-ainm a th-ort? – Lesson 8" date: 2014-11-19T07:31:48Z Blog: ["Kilted Scot"] category: - "Gàidhlig" tag: - "Gaelic" - "Gàidhlig" - "term1" - "week8" image: ["/images/IMAG0612_1-edited.jpg"] Type: ["article"] draft: false --- As I was being a good citizen and attending jury duty in high court and that case being of a mentally and emotionally draining nature, I missed week’s 6 and 7 and as such we’re jumping straight into week 8 and all of the joyful complexities that it contained! This week’s lesson was focussed around a homework piece which the class had discussed during the previous week’s lesson and been utterly confused. I was sent the piece to attempt as homework however, without any of the context they had discussed and boy did I make a lot of mistakes! I’ll discuss the homework in my follow up notes article and it as it related to family and counters for people I’ll write about that here. I presume that this was the content of much of week 7 and possibly even week 6 anyway so it will bridge the lesson gap somewhat for me. ***An teaghlach*** **– The Family** The crux of the lesson was on the use of different possessive pronouns and how they change the reference to members of a family, but first a vocabulary list of said family members: | **Gàidhlig** | **English** | | --- | --- | | _Màthair_ | Mother | | _Màthair-chèile_ | Mother-in-law | | _Athair_ | Father | | _Athair-cèile_ | Father-in-law | | _Bràthair / Braithrean_ | Brother / Brothers | | _Brathair-cèile_ | Brother-in-law | | _Piuthar / Peathraichean_ | Sister / Sisters | | _Piuthar-chèile_ | Sister-in-law | | _Seanmhair_ | Grandmother | | _Seanair_ | Grandfather | | _Antaidh_ | Auntie | | _Uncail_ | Uncle | | _Mac_ | Son | | _Balach / Gille / Balaich_ | Boy / Boy / Boys | | _Caileag_ | Girl | | _Pàisde_ | Child | | _Leanabh_ | Baby | | _Nighean / Clann Nighean_ | Daughter / Daughters | | _Bantrach_ | Widow / Widower | Note that with regards to the in-laws, male family members don’t lenite _cèile_ but female family members do lenite _chèile_. This is relatively simple, well pronunciation aside at least. Next we’ll look at the different personal pronouns: | **Gàidhlig** | **English** | | --- | --- | | _mo_ | my | | _do_ | your | | _a_ | his | | _a_ | her | | _ar_ | our | | _ur_ | your (pl) | | _an_ | their | Immediately you should spot an issue, the pronouns for both his and her are the same! However, possessive pronouns _mo_ (my) _do_ (your) and _a_ (his) are followed by lenition. All others are not, thus allowing us to distinguish between a masculine and a feminine pronoun. | **Gàidhlig** | **English** | | --- | --- | | _mo mhàthair_ | my mother | | _do mhàthair_ | your mother | | _a mhàthair_ | his mother | | _a màthair_ | her mother | In the case of _Athair_ (father) the pronoun is abbreviated as the word starts with a vowel so _mo athair_ becomes _m’athair_, _do athair_ becomes _d’athair_ etc. In order to avoid confusion between his and her father, her father becomes a h-àthair. Next, let’s look at counters for people (only applied to people) which cover between two and ten people, I believe that any greater then you just use the normal number (happy to be corrected!). | **Gàidhlig** | **English** | | --- | --- | | _Dithis_ | Two | | _Triùir_ | Three | | _Ceathrar_ | Four | | _Còignear_ | Five | | _Sianar_ | Six | | _Seachdnar_ | Seven | | _Ochdnar_ | Eight | | _Naoinear_ | Naoi | | _Deichnear_ | Ten | Finally, we looked over numbers again by way of a rest! As mentioned before, Gaels count in units of twenty which isn’t overly tricky but tired minds find even the simplest tasks difficult so again this was a point of confusion. On top of the numbers we previously heard we learned _ceud_ (hundred), _mìle_ (thousand) and _millean_ (million), the first two being very familiar from the phrase _ceud mìle fàilte_ meaning ‘a hundred thousand welcomes.’ We were told that you can either say numbers following an English style of just reading out the number as you see it.. so one hundred and fifty eight could be read as _ceud dà fichead ‘sa ochd deug_ (one hundred two twenties and eighteen) or full-fat Gaelic which would be _seachd fichead ‘sa ochd deug_. Reading years was slightly different as you read the first part as hundreds and the second as it is, so 1919 would be _naoi deug ceud ‘sa naoi deug_ although that looks far simpler than the extensive discussion that was had around it in class. As always, we finished with a song though thankfully we didn’t have to sing along as I would have objected to doing so. It was a Gaelic _salm_ (psalm) and I would have been silent on the grounds of atheism. However, unbeknownst to me this is a famous style of singing in Gaelic and would have been .. difficult.. for us to replicate. This style of singing has a presenter sing the lyrics then the rest of the choir jump in to repeat, using whatever tune they fancy. I’ll apologise now as it just sounds like a bunch of drunks trying to sing along at karaoke in an echo chamber as far as I’m concerned but each to their own :). **Salm 72**