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Irish language revival

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Comments

  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 12,363 ✭✭✭✭Del.Monte


    Modh coinníollach.

    Two words to explain why it won't be revived.


    Tiocfaidh ár lá.

    Three words to explain why it will only ever be accepted by a part of the population and will alienate a further part. Banning the language would probably do more for its popularity and take-up than anything else.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 2,424 ✭✭✭janfebmar


    It's an ugly dead language and a waste if taxpayers money.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 15,202 ✭✭✭✭ILoveYourVibes


    Wanderer78 wrote: »
    What fcuking planet is that language from?

    We should do research into that. What planet IS Irish from?


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 16,517 ✭✭✭✭whisky_galore


    People weren't interested in reviving hebrew either. Infact rabbis were against it because it was a holy language. Rabbis tried to BAN it. (which probably helped reverse psychology)

    I mean it was dead for like 15 hundred yrs.



    Then ben yahuda said 'bitch hold my beer!'



    One crazy dude literally did it alone.

    Don't worry about it will be fine. And its not gonna be this huge laborious chore either. It will happen naturally.

    It doesn't need any of that funding so?

    Take away the props and supports and see how it revives. Or not.


  • Moderators, Science, Health & Environment Moderators, Society & Culture Moderators Posts: 60,170 Mod ✭✭✭✭Wibbs


    People brought Hebrew back.

    Irish could do the same.
    Hebrew came back under very different circumstances ILoveYourVibes, circumstances not applicable to the Irish situation. The primary difference is that Israel from the earliest settlers was receiving people from all over the world from different backgrounds and languages and required a common language. English was in the running for a time, German of all things was a front runner before WW2. This need for a lingua franca accelerated massively after WW2 and the foundation of the state of Israel and the massive influx of people into the country. There is also a strong element of a need for at least one aspect of a cohesive bond in a new country, with an understandable element of cultural and actual siege mentality coming into it too. Modern Hebrew had a long list of positive selection pressures for it to succeed.

    By comparison Irish and Ireland had none of the above, beyond that understandable element of cultural and actual siege mentality which fostered its massive support after the foundation of the Irish state and continues to foster it today. Problem was we already had and have a lingua franca, English. And a very useful one too as it turned out(If we'd been a colony of say Norway, I suspect Irish would have gotten a lot more traction after independence).

    When independence came we had more Irish speakers than we do today. That has steadily decreased even in the face of the billions and man hours spent on it. Our connection with the language has been fading for a long time even before then. Look at the Irish diaspora and compare it to others. Take America. Italian Americans, Jewish Americans, Chinese Americans and so forth are communities that have tended to keep at least some of their original language going, even if only in slang. German was the second language of the US until the First World War. Spanish is the second language now. Dutch Americans are a small group, yet more Americans can speak Dutch than Irish Americans can speak Irish and Irish Americans are numbered in the tens of millions(and seem to love the oul country and the diddly aye stuff).

    We dropped Irish as a language almost the second we dropped anchor in new countries and that's reflected everywhere we went and we went pretty much everywhere. Now there are all sorts of reasons and reasons given for this, but the plain fact is these reasons applied to all the other diasporas, but the Irish are pretty unique in dropping the language so quickly and completely.

    Rejoice in the awareness of feeling stupid, for that’s how you end up learning new things. If you’re not aware you’re stupid, you probably are.



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 29,909 ✭✭✭✭Wanderer78


    We should do research into that. What planet IS Irish from?

    an unusual one id say


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 8,722 ✭✭✭nice_guy80


    A lot of the problem with Irish is that when the geniuses of the 19th century were codifying and standardizing it they made a balls of it


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 15,202 ✭✭✭✭ILoveYourVibes


    Wibbs wrote: »
    Hebrew came back under very different circumstances ILoveYourVibes, circumstances not applicable to the Irish situation. The primary difference is that Israel from the earliest settlers was receiving people from all over the world from different backgrounds and languages and required a common language.


    Very true. But hebrew wasn't really a front runner. It could have easily have been Arabic.

    And still today Russian is spoken at home by 20% of the Israeli population.

    For all practical purposes it should not have been hebrew.

    It could have been any living language.

    Only 49 % of Israelis call Hebrew their native language.

    10% of Israelis speak Arabic at home.

    It would have been easier to pick of of these.

    Hebrew is a lingua franca which is why many Jews want their kids to learn modern Hebrew and not lets say Yiddish.

    The Israeli Authorities actually banned yiddish for a while. Now its the second most widely spoken Jewish language after Hebrew cuz it had a revival. Although still only a handful of people speak it.

    If you want something to have a revival ban it.

    You would think since half the population of Israel are descended from Mizrahim they would all be speaking Arabic least likely was Hebrew.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 15,202 ✭✭✭✭ILoveYourVibes


    nice_guy80 wrote: »
    A lot of the problem with Irish is that when the geniuses of the 19th century were codifying and standardizing it they made a balls of it


    I am not a linguist i wouldn't be able to tell you whether they made a balls of it or what. :pac:


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 15,202 ✭✭✭✭ILoveYourVibes


    Wanderer78 wrote: »
    an unusual one id say


    Uh huh....it is from another dimension alright ....

    Numbers are like diff for ..people ...time ..things ...



    that would be an interesting subject.


    Maybe kids should study that in school along with the language make it interesting ...linguistics with Irish as a model.

    That whole inside when i am inside and inside when i am outside thing ....istigh isteach..like where did that come from??

    Thuas suas???

    THESE ARE QUESTIONS THAT NEED ANSWERS!

    We don't need to know verb conjugation we need to know why space moved around these people?




    Don't say to me you have never wanted to know these questions!

    Whose universe am i stepping into ..??:eek:

    We are not in Kansas anymore.

    Why does this **** sound like a cross between an inter-dimensional space alien, a native american and a german???


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  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 15,202 ✭✭✭✭ILoveYourVibes



    Why does this **** sound like a cross between an inter-dimensional space alien, a native american and a german???

    That is the most accurate description of the Irish language in all history.

    Some linguist has to tell me why its like that and more importantly WHAT that means and who these people were and how their minds worked.

    Because language is the key to thinking so it is.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 15,202 ✭✭✭✭ILoveYourVibes


    Whoever these people were the fact that

    1. they swapped their kids and had the richest raised by the ordinary or by their enemy

    2. they had such a strange extreme abstract language

    Makes me think they had much higher thinking than the British who came after them.

    And since all of that is gone ....the language is possibly the only key we have to their insights and inter dimensional space minds.

    Like if a dude traveled in time from ancient Ireland to here now ...we'd probably think he was weird ..but deep in our hearts we would want to make him our leader or something ..

    Except for the male guardianship thingy ...

    But did you know the law didn't apply to women ??..I could get away with everything.


  • Posts: 13,712 ✭✭✭✭ [Deleted User]


    janfebmar wrote: »
    It's an ugly dead language and a waste if taxpayers money.
    Ugly?!

    I know all beauty is in the eye of the beholder, but I think Irish is the most beautiful language I've ever even encountered. Not just the sounds, where the vowels are pricked and drawling as if stabbed with centuries of tragedy, like a half-dead crow, but it's meanings too. Only in Irish are your emotions ort - on you. Take sadness. Tá brón orm, You seem to wear it. Tá tú faoi bhrón, sadness is literally coming down on you from above.

    There are such beautiful ways of speaking about emotion in Irish, that i am convinced that our forebears were far more tuned-in to discussing emotions than we are even today.

    People associate the Irish language with a backwards, Catholic Ireland. But I'd say go back further, to a Catholic Ireland, yes; but one whose language is emotional, wild, bizarre and full of imagination, sex and mythology.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 3,915 ✭✭✭Greyfox


    You use the word "our" a lot there - have you checked with everyone else?

    I'm Irish, was born and raised in Ireland, but it most certainly NOT a part of my culture or my identity.

    I'm Irish and the English language is part of my identity and culture as everything I have done and learned in life has been through English. I've nothing against Irish, its just I dont have the time to learn a language that has no practical benefit to me


  • Registered Users Posts: 933 ✭✭✭El_Bee


    Irish isn't taught to be spoken in schools it's taught to pass exams. Compared to French and German teachers Irish teachers are amateurish at best, is there even an Irish language institute? literally nothing done to improve the language, which is crude & inexpressive (before people have a go at me, what's the Irish word for inexpressive?).


  • Moderators, Science, Health & Environment Moderators, Society & Culture Moderators Posts: 60,170 Mod ✭✭✭✭Wibbs


    Very true. But hebrew wasn't really a front runner. It could have easily have been Arabic.

    And still today Russian is spoken at home by 20% of the Israeli population.

    For all practical purposes it should not have been hebrew.

    It could have been any living language.

    Only 49 % of Israelis call Hebrew their native language.

    10% of Israelis speak Arabic at home.

    It would have been easier to pick of of these.
    Oh sure, but my point still stands IL. If anything you've reinforced it. Israel and its peoples come from many different backgrounds and language cultures and need some common ground. It is not close to the homogeneity of Ireland and its culture. Down the centuries and outside of smaller language enclaves Ireland has been a culture of two languages and for all sorts of reasons one ended up being more useful on a daily basis. When the language of trade and especially education drifted from Irish a couple of centuries ago it was on a sliding slope, destined to be a minority cultural artefact. Plus even among bilingual Irish people, the vast majority are more fluent in English than Irish. The numbers who learn Irish as a first language are tiny and when they do it's the language of childhood by necessity.

    Rejoice in the awareness of feeling stupid, for that’s how you end up learning new things. If you’re not aware you’re stupid, you probably are.



  • Posts: 13,712 ✭✭✭✭ [Deleted User]


    El_Bee wrote: »
    (before people have a go at me, what's the Irish word for inexpressive?).
    No interest in having a go, but I'd say 'in ísle brí'


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 2,398 ✭✭✭Franz Von Peppercorn II


    We dropped Irish as a language almost the second we dropped anchor in new countries and that's reflected everywhere we went and we went pretty much everywhere. Now there are all sorts of reasons and reasons given for this, but the plain fact is these reasons applied to all the other diasporas, but the Irish are pretty unique in dropping the language so quickly and completely.

    You mean people stopped speaking Irish in the US and UK. Hardly surprising. Most Irish speakers in the famine era would have known some English anyway. Ireland was a duo-lingual society.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 1,646 ✭✭✭_blaaz


    Wibbs wrote: »
    Plus even among bilingual Irish people, the vast majority are more fluent in English than Irish. The numbers who learn Irish as a first language are tiny and when they do it's the language of childhood by necessity.

    The most of bilingual people i knows think in irish as it comes easier to them...now they speak in english etc



    The best example i could think of is....when my grandmother mind was starting to go of old age etc.....a childhood friend came to visit her and she was able to converse grand in irish with her.....but she struggled to keep up converstaions in english......

    .its same for cousins of mine...when off their face/drunk its too much effort to talk in english as they think in irish......you really would have to see it to believe it


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  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 15,202 ✭✭✭✭ILoveYourVibes


    El_Bee wrote: »
    Irish isn't taught to be spoken in schools it's taught to pass exams. Compared to French and German teachers Irish teachers are amateurish at best, is there even an Irish language institute? literally nothing done to improve the language, which is crude & inexpressive (before people have a go at me, what's the Irish word for inexpressive?).




    I am making it up gan leiriu.????..i forgot some fadas.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 15,202 ✭✭✭✭ILoveYourVibes


    Wibbs wrote: »
    Oh sure, but my point still stands IL. If anything you've reinforced it. Israel and its peoples come from many different backgrounds and language cultures and need some common ground. It is not close to the homogeneity of Ireland and its culture.


    Probably true in fairness.


  • Posts: 13,712 ✭✭✭✭ [Deleted User]


    _blaaz wrote: »
    The most of bilingual people i knows think in irish as it comes easier to them...now they speak in english etc



    The best example i could think of is....when my grandmother mind was starting to go of old age etc.....a childhood friend came to visit her and she was able to converse grand in irish with her.....but she struggled to keep up converstaions in english......

    .its same for cousins of mine...when off their face/drunk its too much effort to talk in english as they think in irish......you really would have to see it to believe it
    I wonder if this is related to syntax. A lot of us, as solely english speakers, grew up speaking Hiberno Irish where syntax is often borrowed directly from Irish, especially in rural Ireland.

    Locals in my area (a non Gaeltacht, English speaking area) will tell you that someone was or had 'got dead' instead of having died, which corresponds well to the Irish where death is a thing that is received (Fuair Maidhc bás).

    People will also often prefer to answer a simple question in a way that other English speakers might find unusual.

    Are you at home?
    I am (there is no clear word for Yes in Irish)
    Can I come over?
    You can not (similarly, no clear translation for No)


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 4,732 ✭✭✭BarryD2


    I've always thought there's an interesting comparison to be drawn between our traditional language and our traditional music. The language has been supported by state policy since the early days of independence. There has been some success in maintaining Gaeltacht regions and a whole raft of public policy to support and promote and yet the language languishes in the majority of citizens minds. The growth of the Gaelscoill movement is positive but it exists for many reasons other than a simple love of the language.

    On other hand, Irish trad music was largely ignored by the state until recent times. The church and state combined even to try and suppress it, it was tinkers music and associated with loose morals at house dances etc. And yet it survived like a wild weed, people kept playing away and in time has become a considerable success both at home and abroad. Emigrating Irish people to London, States etc often kept the music even if they didn't the language. It's still a minority genre in Ireland, you'd have to seek out people to play tunes with. But I'd argue that it has a much more positive image in ordinary peoples minds.

    So instead of banning spoken Irish, maybe the state should just simply ignore. Let people speak it for the love of it and do nothing more.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 13,825 ✭✭✭✭Igotadose


    _blaaz wrote: »
    The best example i could think of is....when my grandmother mind was starting to go of old age etc.....a childhood friend came to visit her and she was able to converse grand in irish with her.....but she struggled to keep up converstaions in english......

    A friend is a nurse in the local hospital. She's said this is very common among elderly and stroke victims, reverting back to exclusively Irish.

    My mother learned English as a young woman having migrated to the US from Poland. When she in hospital after a bad fall, for the first few days she couldn't speak English though it came back to her. She was a natural polyglot though, English, Russian, German, French, only English learned in school. French learned from maids at the home in Poland when she was a child.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 9,786 ✭✭✭wakka12


    Its taught so badly in schools , needs to change radically. Drop all the poetry and written grammar and tenses ****e and focus on teaching how to speak properly and effectively communicate with other people. here in norway teenagers are as good at english as any native english speaker after having learnt the language throuhout their schooling years. Irish adults should be completely fluent in irish after 14 years of education yet most cant even string a conversation together, its sad and all those hundreds of hours of education were clearly a huge waste of time and money


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  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 16,517 ✭✭✭✭whisky_galore


    BarryD2 wrote: »
    I've always thought there's an interesting comparison to be drawn between our traditional language and our traditional music. The language has been supported by state policy since the early days of independence. There has been some success in maintaining Gaeltacht regions and a whole raft of public policy to support and promote and yet the language languishes in the majority of citizens minds. The growth of the Gaelscoill movement is positive but it exists for many reasons other than a simple love of the language.

    On other hand, Irish trad music was largely ignored by the state until recent times. The church and state combined even to try and suppress it, it was tinkers music and associated with loose morals at house dances etc. And yet it survived like a wild weed, people kept playing away and in time has become a considerable success both at home and abroad. Emigrating Irish people to London, States etc often kept the music even if they didn't the language. It's still a minority genre in Ireland, you'd have to seek out people to play tunes with. But I'd argue that it has a much more positive image in ordinary peoples minds.

    So instead of banning spoken Irish, maybe the state should just simply ignore. Let people speak it for the love of it and do nothing more.

    Music is an international language, and people derive enjoyment out of playing and listening.
    People from other cultures can fall in and jam with it and they don't need to understand the spoken language of other musicians.

    And it's fun, something which many find Irish is anything but.


  • Posts: 13,712 ✭✭✭✭ [Deleted User]


    wakka12 wrote: »
    Its taught so badly in schools , needs to change radically. Drop all the poetry and written grammar and tenses ****e and focus on teaching how to speak properly and effectively communicate with other people. here in norway teenagers are as good at english as any native english speaker after having learnt the language throuhout their schooling years. Irish adults should be completely fluent in irish after 14 years of education yet most cant even string a conversation together, its sad and all those hundreds of hours of education were clearly a huge waste of time and money
    It teach so bad in school it need change radical. Drop all the poetry and write grammar and tenses sh!te and focus to teach how to speak proper and communicate effective...

    You get my drift? The educational system manages to teach grammar, cases and tenses very well in other languages. There is nothing particularly difficult about Irish grammar or its verbs. In fact, it's arguable that its grammar comes easier to many of us (outside of the cities) than does English grammar.

    I agree with a previous poster who mentioned that continental languages are taught much more effectively, in terms of being user-friendly. That may be because publishers of French and Spanish can market their texts to enormous markets, whereas Irish publishers have fewer resources and skills to draw upon.


  • Banned (with Prison Access) Posts: 4,850 ✭✭✭Stop moaning ffs


    janfebmar wrote: »
    It's an ugly dead language and a waste if taxpayers money.

    There’s that signature bitterly anti Irish sentiment you’re so famous for.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 525 ✭✭✭Jupiter Mulligan


    My kids were sent to a gaelscoil two decades ago mainly for the perceived middle class attractions of fewer skanger kids and better teaching resources. For us, the Irish language was an incidental extra, as both the missus and I had no particularly strong feelings regarding the lingo.

    A couple of decades later we have two fluent Irish-speakers who are positively inclined towards the language and speak it naturally and comfortably whenever they meet their former classmates. They're normal too; not rabid, turf-smoking fanatics who regard the language as a totem pole with which to hit others over the head. (in which regard, I still recall with rage that linguistic snob and all-round prick Mickey dee Higgins describing critics of TG4 as the "culturally deprived" - if I had been in his immediate vicinity when he said it, my size 10 George Webb would have been lodged two feet up his supercilious rectum.)

    So I'm all for the lingo - but I loathe the fanatics with a passion.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 15,202 ✭✭✭✭ILoveYourVibes


    No one has answered my space indian questions. I want a gaelgoirs opinion please.

    I know you guys don't think i am serious but i am! :)


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  • Registered Users Posts: 1,925 ✭✭✭Reati


    wakka12 wrote: »
    Its taught so badly in schools , needs to change radically. Drop all the poetry and written grammar and tenses ****e and focus on teaching how to speak properly and effectively communicate with other people. here in norway teenagers are as good at english as any native english speaker after having learnt the language throuhout their schooling years. Irish adults should be completely fluent in irish after 14 years of education yet most cant even string a conversation together, its sad and all those hundreds of hours of education were clearly a huge waste of time and money

    Here is another great Irish language myth example.

    No one is learning Irish for 14 years. They are learning it for a 3 and a half hours a week for the lenght of school term. That's 40 minutes a day for 180ish (primary school) days a year. Assuming most kids arent actually paying attention for the full 40 mins, it's not a whole lot of time given that you you speak or think in English for over 6000 hours a year.

    But other languages are thought better? The leaving cert results again don't marry with this. Students do better in higher level Irish than French and German combined even though More students take those papers.

    But let's not stop there. We all learn maths for the same amount of time as Irish? Shouldn't we all be maths geniuses after 14 years of maths?

    The leaving cert results don't marry that at all either. In 2016 5024 students got between an A1 and a B1 in Irish yet only 2750 got the same in maths?

    Why aren't we demanding, given the worse return in investment, that maths is no longer compulsory for college entry. It's clear a waste of money. I can barely remember anything I learned in those 14 years bar the basics. Just like most people and Irish ;)

    The problem with speaking Irish is the view it's everyone else's fault we can't speak it. There is always an excuse but if you want to to relearn it and speak it there is a world or resources but you have to put in the effort.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 15,202 ✭✭✭✭ILoveYourVibes


    Reati wrote: »
    maths is no longer compulsory.


    MATHS IS NO LONGER COMPULSORY!????? WTF ARE WE DOING???

    THIS IS NOT HAPPENING THIS IS NOT HAPPENING!


    How will people study ...anything ..like in college????

    You need it for everything!

    How will they live?

    EDIT

    OMG I JUST REALIZED IRISH IS THE ONLY COMPULSORY SUBJECT IN THE LEAVING AND I AM FREAKING OUT!

    No wonder people can't answer my space monkey linguistic question.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 2,398 ✭✭✭Franz Von Peppercorn II


    I don’t think it said it was not compulsory but that given the argument that Irish shouldn’t be, the same thing might be said for maths as most people aren’t “fluent” at it.


  • Banned (with Prison Access) Posts: 4,850 ✭✭✭Stop moaning ffs


    Reati wrote: »
    Here is another great Irish language myth example.

    No one is learning Irish for 14 years. They are learning it for a 3 and a half hours a week for the lenght of school term. That's 40 minutes a day for 180ish (primary school) days a year. Assuming most kids arent actually paying attention for the full 40 mins, it's not a whole lot of time given that you you speak or think in English for over 6000 hours a year.

    But other languages are thought better? The leaving cert results again don't marry with this. Students do better in higher level Irish than French and German combined even though More students take those papers.

    But let's not stop there. We all learn maths for the same amount of time as Irish? Shouldn't we all be maths geniuses after 14 years of maths?

    The leaving cert results don't marry that at all either. In 2016 5024 students got between an A1 and a B1 in Irish yet only 2750 got the same in maths?

    Why aren't we demanding, given the worse return in investment, that maths is no longer compulsory. It's clear a waste of money. I can barely remember anything I learned in those 14 years bar the basics. Just like most people and Irish ;)

    The problem with speaking Irish is the view it's everyone else's fault we can't speak it. There is always an excuse but if you want to to relearn it and speak it there is a world or resources but you have to put in the effort.

    Pains me to say it and no way would anyone admit it but we’re in effect still a british colony. We managed to kick them out sure but they recolonised culturally as soon as the advent of tv emerged.
    I’ll never understand how the bbc was allowed broadcast into Ireland.
    Tied into that is entire generations suffered under Christian brothers and nuns and the language being taught so badly and hated by so many who came through the education system.
    It needs an entire overhaul in our current education system to energise and excite kids/ future generations to want to learn it and see its value.

    You’re not ‘not Irish’ if you don’t see any value in it but I’m flummoxed by anyone from here speakin badly of it or hating it.
    It’s part of your culture and heritage whether you like it or not.
    More should be done to bring it back.
    We wouldn’t let the gpo or trinity go into ruin, but we’re standing by letting a core component of who we are rot and die.

    It’s a shame and a confusing one.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 15,202 ✭✭✭✭ILoveYourVibes


    I don’t think it said it was not compulsory but that given the argument that Irish shouldn’t be, the same thing might be said for maths as most people aren’t “fluent” at it.


    Maths is not compulsory.

    And musicians are fluent in maths. :P Whether they know it or not.

    I got lucky with a great teacher my last two years he was a maths phd. He made it interesting.

    I wouldn't have made it through the logic part of my college course if i hadn't had any maths.

    And I am far from 'fluent' at maths.

    You are DROWNING kids before they start without it.

    Ironically you need maths for linguistics!


  • Registered Users Posts: 1,328 ✭✭✭Upforthematch


    Pains me to say it and no way would anyone admit it but we’re in effect still a british colony. We managed to kick them out sure but they recolonised culturally as soon as the advent of tv emerged.
    I’ll never understand how the bbc was allowed broadcast into Ireland.
    Tied into that is entire generations suffered under Christian brothers and nuns and the language being taught so badly and hated by so many who came through the education system.
    It needs an entire overhaul in our current education system to energise and excite kids/ future generations to want to learn it and see its value.

    You’re not ‘not Irish’ if you don’t see any value in it but I’m flummoxed by anyone from here speakin badly of it or hating it.
    It’s part of your culture and heritage whether you like it or not.
    More should be done to bring it back.
    We wouldn’t let the gpo or trinity go into ruin, but we’re standing by letting a core component of who we are rot and die.

    It’s a shame and a confusing one.


    What are you talking about? Yeah we're part of the English speaking world and isn't it great that we are for jobs and prosperity?

    But, that doesn't mean we can't have the Irish language, Irish music and a great Irish sense of humour. It's there for those who want it - thankfully!


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 16,517 ✭✭✭✭whisky_galore


    Pains me to say it and no way would anyone admit it but we’re in effect still a british colony. We managed to kick them out sure but they recolonised culturally as soon as the advent of tv emerged.
    I’ll never understand how the bbc was allowed broadcast into Ireland.
    Tied into that is entire generations suffered under Christian brothers and nuns and the language being taught so badly and hated by so many who came through the education system.
    It needs an entire overhaul in our current education system to energise and excite kids/ future generations to want to learn it and see its value.

    You’re not ‘not Irish’ if you don’t see any value in it but I’m flummoxed by anyone from here speakin badly of it or hating it.
    It’s part of your culture and heritage whether you like it or not.
    More should be done to bring it back.
    We wouldn’t let the gpo or trinity go into ruin, but we’re standing by letting a core component of who we are rot and die.

    It’s a shame and a confusing one.

    That rather bald, unconvincing argument "it's your culture, therefore you should learn it".

    Thatched cottages are part of our culture... Shouldn't everyone learn how to thatch? Or play the harp or other Irish music, or dance Sean nós? Or hurl?
    Why does language trump any or all of these?

    If none of these things are your bag or you haven't the faintest interest, what right have you or anyone else got to browbeat you into learning them? Like shaming works anyway...


  • Registered Users Posts: 1,925 ✭✭✭Reati


    Maths is not compulsory.

    And musicians are fluent in maths. :P Whether they know it or not.

    I got lucky with a great teacher my last two years he was a maths phd. He made it interesting.

    I wouldn't have made it through the logic part of my college course if i hadn't had any maths.

    And I am far from 'fluent' at maths.

    You are DROWNING kids before they start without it.

    Ironically you need maths for linguistics!

    That's playing with semantics. Maths is compulsory by the fact you need it as a leaving cert result for the majority of colleges and universities. Few people actually drop it before doing leaving.

    About all that it's ignore the underlying point that most people learn maths for the same period as Irish yet underperform more than the Irish in the leaving exams


  • Banned (with Prison Access) Posts: 4,850 ✭✭✭Stop moaning ffs


    What are you talking about? Yeah we're part of the English speaking world and isn't it great that we are for jobs and prosperity?

    But, that doesn't mean we can't have the Irish language, Irish music and a great Irish sense of humour. It's there for those who want it - thankfully!

    Oh I agree completely. We can do both. But look at music for example. We don’t support our own homegrown talent bands etc. Unless they come back from England or America having made it there. Teenagers can name you a hundred Arya grandes or lady gagas but they’d struggle to name two bands from their own country.
    And don’t get me started on the premiership

    We remain a british outpost down as far as British shops and chain stores here.
    It’s depressing but true.

    Gaelic revival 2.0 is needed

    Someone ring Liam o moanlai haha


  • Registered Users Posts: 1,925 ✭✭✭Reati


    What are you talking about? Yeah we're part of the English speaking world and isn't it great that we are for jobs and prosperity?

    No, it's not. I posted this myth many pages ago. How does a English speaking monoglot compare to the other 1.7 billion people with Irish as a second language who can also speak other languages. Speaking English actually doesn't mean much anymore because a huge number of people speak it. All the businesses that moved from the UK to mainland Europe in the Brexit fallout surely showed people the "we speak the English" didn't count for much when the money was on the table.

    And if it's so good for prosperity how come Ireland was so bad off economically till the last 20 - 30 years given English has been the main spoken language for a long time?


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  • Closed Accounts Posts: 4,732 ✭✭✭BarryD2


    We wouldn’t let the gpo or trinity go into ruin, but we’re standing by letting a core component of who we are rot and die.

    The use of Irish declined in the 18th & 19th centuries - it had largely 'rotted and died' as you describe in those times. As the OPs title goes, the discussion is now about revival and reinvention which started with the Gaelic League of the late 19th century. WRT latter I've wondered if a modern Irish speaker met a native speaker from say the 18th century, would they be able to converse at all meaningfully? Even now, there are differences in vocabulary between Ulster, Connacht and Munster Irish and then there's the official version. The whole area is full of contradictions but I suppose such is life.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 15,202 ✭✭✭✭ILoveYourVibes


    Reati wrote: »
    That's playing with semantics. Maths is compulsory by the fact you need it as a leaving cert result for the majority of colleges and universities. Few people actually drop it before doing leaving.

    About all that it's ignore the underlying point that most people learn maths for the same period as Irish yet underperform more than the Irish leaving.


    I was opposite.

    And its not playing with semantics. I am not making an argument against Irish. You are making enemies where there are none.

    I have no issues with Irish.

    I just think not having maths as compulsory is kind sad and dangerous to be honest.


  • Banned (with Prison Access) Posts: 4,850 ✭✭✭Stop moaning ffs


    That rather bald, unconvincing argument "it's your culture, therefore you should learn it".

    Thatched cottages are part of our culture... Shouldn't everyone learn how to thatch? Or play the harp or other Irish music, or dance Sean nós? Or hurl?
    Why does language trump any or all of these?

    If none of these things are your bag or you haven't the faintest interest, what right have you or anyone else got to browbeat you into learning them? Like shaming works anyway...

    Who said anything about browbeating or forcing anyone? As if that would work. It wouldn’t.
    There is any amount of ways to rebrand it and make people want to engage though. The impetus just isn’t there.


  • Registered Users Posts: 1,925 ✭✭✭Reati


    I was opposite.

    Good for you. There is always outliers to statistics. You would have covered that in your maths lessons I'm sure ;)

    Edit. You've edited to add colour to your post so mine loses context.

    It would be good to hear why maths should be compulsory?


  • Posts: 13,712 ✭✭✭✭ [Deleted User]


    (in which regard, I still recall with rage that linguistic snob and all-round prick Mickey dee Higgins describing critics of TG4 as the "culturally deprived" - if I had been in his immediate vicinity when he said it, my size 10 George Webb would have been lodged two feet up his supercilious rectum.)
    I don't know what your George Webb is, but I hope you're referring to an item of footwear, and not something else :eek:


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 15,202 ✭✭✭✭ILoveYourVibes


    BarryD2 wrote: »
    The use of Irish declined in the 18th & 19th centuries - it had largely 'rotted and died' as you describe in those times. As the OPs title goes, the discussion is now about revival and reinvention which started with the Gaelic League of the late 19th century. WRT latter I've wondered if a modern Irish speaker met a native speaker from say the 18th century, would they be able to converse at all meaningfully? Even now, there are differences in vocabulary between Ulster, Connacht and Munster Irish and then there's the official version. The whole area is full of contradictions but I suppose such is life.
    That might be hard with any language. I know a french guy who read Descartes in English because it was easier. The translation had to be into modern English..but in France they read Descarte in the period french of descartes time none of them can understand it easily.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 16,517 ✭✭✭✭whisky_galore


    Who said anything about browbeating or forcing anyone? As if that would work. It wouldn’t.
    There is any amount of ways to rebrand it and make people want to engage though. The impetus just isn’t there.

    What ways would those be?

    You can rebrand all you like.
    Face it. Most people aren't interested and you can't make them interested. They already have a language to communicate with.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 15,202 ✭✭✭✭ILoveYourVibes


    Reati wrote: »
    Good for you. There is always outliers to statistics. You would have covered that in your maths lessons I'm sure ;)

    Edit. You've edited to add colour to your post so mine loses context.

    It would be good to hear why maths should be compulsory?

    There is no part of of science you can do without knowing some maths. You can't read music. You couldn't study philosophy or linguistics.

    Accountancy business. Plumbers architects builders all need maths.


    And no i didnt recolour my post you have quoted yourself you are just seeing bizarre things in it that aren't there.

    Once again i have no issue with Irish.


  • Banned (with Prison Access) Posts: 4,850 ✭✭✭Stop moaning ffs


    What ways would those be?

    You can rebrand all you like.
    Face it. Most people aren't interested and you can't make them interested. They already have a language to communicate with.

    Thankfully we don’t all have that attitude.
    Watch this. It’ll warm your heart. This kid and those like him put us all to shame

    https://twitter.com/johnhyphen/status/1133732626316091393?s=21


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  • Registered Users Posts: 1,328 ✭✭✭Upforthematch


    Reati wrote: »
    No, it's not. I posted this myth many pages ago. How does a English speaking monoglot compare to the other 1.7 billion people with Irish as a second language who can also speak other languages. Speaking English actually doesn't mean much anymore because a huge number of people speak it. All the businesses that moved from the UK to mainland Europe in the Brexit fallout surely showed people the "we speak the English" didn't count for much when the money was on the table.

    And if it's so good for prosperity how come Ireland was so bad off economically till the last 20 - 30 years given English has been the main spoken language for a long time?

    Ever hear of first mover advantage? You're right it doesn't matter as much today but it undoubtedly did in the past.

    Speaking English has helped Irish people make a living for over 150 years - outside of Ireland in particular. I don't think we realise just how important that diaspora (particularly in USA) has been for us economically and politically.

    It has helped prosperity in Ireland also, not singlehandedly but in combination with other factors, particularly in more recent decades. We can't ignore that the shift in the mother tongue was - for the most part - a pragmatic and incentivised choice, not a violent struggle.

    Ní bheathaíonn na briathra na bráithre as they say.


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