I've seen in another message that Esenthiel gave a translation in Irish Gaelic, therefore this message is mainly addressed to him, but anyone, feel free to reply, if you know the answer ;-)
I remember having met an Irish girl from Cork, a few years ago, as a student, and she gave a few words in Irish Gaelic, just like 'Dia is Muire duit' (not sure about the spelling - litteraly 'May God and Holy Mary be with you') as meaning 'Hello'.
However, I just checked by chance yesterday, and according to Freelang, it is 'Conas ta tu', which, in my mind, means 'How are you'
Can you confirm (or correct) this ?
Thanks,
Geoffrey
Irish Gaelic
Moderators: kokoyaya, Beaumont
Valvador wrote:According to : [url]http:\\ww.summerlands.com\crossroads\irish\lesson2.html[/url] :
Dia's muire duit : hello
Conas tá tú ? : How are you.
Maybe Esenthiel can confirm this but I'm quite sure.
In an URL, we use "/"

And on this forum... there's no need to add "url" "/"url" tags with an "http://" or "www. ..." expression...
=> http://www.summerlands.com/crossroads/i ... sson2.html
note: this url is incorrect.

Les courses hippiques, lorsqu'elles s'y frottent.
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If you think about it though, it can be used as a greeting I suppose. Kind of like when someone says "How's it going?" or "What's up?". I'm not sure on its usage.Geoffrey wrote:Thanks for the confirmations.
Then, it means that the 'Hello' page of Freelang.com gives a wrong translation. Beaumont, this one is for you :-)
Geoffrey
PS: Thanks to Laura, because of whom I checked ;-)
Es den dotil.