Colourful Irish Phrases
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About this ebook
There are many phrases that when translated, word for word, they sound different, unusual and sometimes funny. But above all, they are rich and deeply rooted. Visitors to Ireland who want to get some notion of our native identity will find these phrases both instructive and revealing.
Topics covered range across subjects as diverse as insults and put-downs, being human and the gift of the gab.
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Colourful Irish Phrases - Micheál Ó Conghaile
MERCIER PRESS
3B Oak House, Bessboro Rd
Blackrock, Cork, Ireland.
www.mercierpress.ie
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© Micheál Ó Conghaile, 2018
Published in association with Cló Iar-Chonnacht
ISBN: 978 1 78117 555 2
Epub ISBN: 978 1 78117 556 9
Mobi ISBN: 978 1 78117 557 6
This eBook is copyright material and must not be copied, reproduced, transferred, distributed, leased, licensed or publicly performed or used in any way except as specifically permitted in writing by the publishers, as allowed under the terms and conditions under which it was purchased or as strictly permitted by applicable copyright law. Any unauthorised distribution or use of this text may be a direct infringement of the author’s and publisher’s rights and those responsible may be liable in law accordingly.
Introduction
I remember not being able to speak English. Growing up in the 1960s on a small island, Inis Treabhair, off the Connemara coast, Irish was the everyday language of its dwindling population of about forty people. Six households in all. The reason I remember so clearly not being able to speak English is the summer visits when our first cousins from London and Galway city would come to spend a few weeks with us. I must have been three or four years old at the time. As kids, they spoke only English. I spoke only Irish. But we got along and played together, communicating with each other as children from different backgrounds do. I picked up some English from them and later learned English at school, where every subject except English was taught through Irish. When I entered the island’s national school in 1966 there were twenty-one students enrolled there; when I left in 1975 the number had dwindled to five. The school doors were locked for the last time in 1980, the numbers having fallen to two.
The same fate awaited life on the island. In the 1870s when its population peaked, 171 people lived there. A couple of years ago the last native islander, Patsy Lydon, left the island to live with family members on the mainland, bringing an end to island life which had gone on unbroken for at least 200 years.
So much dies with the death of island life. Even in the future, if other people go to live there, the chain or the link to the original inhabitants will be forever broken. It was the islanders and their forefathers who named and knew every field and hillock on the island; its strands, inlets, shores and rocks; the surrounding tides and currents and waves they had to navigate in all sorts of weather; the joys and pains of hundreds of years of continued life; the local lore, songs, poems and stories. And the language – the language that brought everything to life. In this case it was Irish.
The Irish language phrases in this book are ones that I mostly grew up with. Others I picked up over the years. Most of them were part of what we were, of our daily speech and lives. Perhaps some of them originated on the island. Most of them can be heard from native Irish speakers from all Gaeltachtaí in Ireland, still very much alive and in use. We don’t know for sure how old they are. Some of them may have been used for over 1,000 years, originating in Old Irish before the ninth century, living through Middle Irish, 900–1200, through Classical Irish, 1200–1600, and still to the fore in Modern Irish, surviving through the Great Famine of the 1840s and the decline of the language in most parts of the country. We know for sure that one of them, the phrase Fáilte Uí Cheallaigh, the O’Kelly welcome, is nearly 700 years old