Ready! Player 31M to Microblog MemesEnglish • 11 months agoIrish Namesimagemessage-square21arrow-up1345arrow-down16file-text
arrow-up1339arrow-down1imageIrish NamesReady! Player 31M to Microblog MemesEnglish • 11 months agomessage-square21file-text
minus-square@[email protected]linkfedilinkEnglish43•11 months agoPlay on the name Niamh, pronounced Neeve
minus-squarejan telilinkEnglish13•11 months agoDamn I thought english was bad. How do you get neeve from niamh?
minus-square@javasuxlinkEnglish32•11 months agoIrish spelling rules are actually very internally consistent, they just don’t use the Latin alphabet the same way that English does. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Irish_orthography
minus-squarejan telilinkEnglish7•11 months agoOh I thought they meant irish as in irish english (the dialect, like how I speak australian english)
minus-square@CheemslinkEnglish4•11 months agoA lot of people think that Gaelic is what Irish actually is. Which they are two different languages
minus-squareReady! Player 31OPMlinkEnglish16•11 months agoBecause Irish is literally a different language. You wouldn’t ask the same thing about French or Vietnamese or whatever.
minus-squarethemeatbridgelinkEnglish7•11 months agoBecause “v” isn’t a letter in Irish, but it is a phoneme approximated by “mh” or “bh.”
Play on the name Niamh, pronounced Neeve
Damn I thought english was bad. How do you get neeve from niamh?
Irish spelling rules are actually very internally consistent, they just don’t use the Latin alphabet the same way that English does. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Irish_orthography
Oh I thought they meant irish as in irish english (the dialect, like how I speak australian english)
A lot of people think that Gaelic is what Irish actually is. Which they are two different languages
Because Irish is literally a different language. You wouldn’t ask the same thing about French or Vietnamese or whatever.
Yeah I know lol, I was thinking irish english
Because “v” isn’t a letter in Irish, but it is a phoneme approximated by “mh” or “bh.”