Learn Irish - Numbers 1-10

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I'm just starting my Irish language learning turas, your video was helpful for me to memorize the numbers, you have a new subscriber!

nornironnomad
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1. A Haon - 0:13
2. A Do - 0:16
3. A Tri - 0:19
4. A Ceathair - 0:22
5. A Cuig - 0:25
6. A Se - 0:28
7. A Seacht - 0:31
8. A Hocht - 0:34
9. A Naoi - 0:37
10. A Deich - 0:40

jaydenboots
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I'm a new ACW reenactor (69th Pennsylvania Irish Volunteers)and this video was actually helpful for me. When we march we use one and two to tell us what foot to land on. Often we use Irish and I was beyond confused when the corporals would say it in Irish.

charlesvitanza
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I learned this in school tell me if I spelt right haven't watched the video
A haon = 1
A dó = 2
A trí = 3
A ceathar = 4
A cuíg = 5
A sí = 6
A socht = 7
A hocht = 8
A neigh = 9
A de = 10

murphylouise
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bro dropped this masterpiece and decided to go quiet

CIA_Agent
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When are you uploading more? If you do, can you upload the alphabet, diphthongs, and grouped consonants, etc?

pakonstekamiada
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These number are much more similar to Italian then English, just compare them side by side you will see for yourself. Celtic languages and romance languages are related.

greathornedowl
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Sometimes it feels : an arabic speaking hindi.

pursuitoftruth
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Really cool. Ah shocked, ah hooked, ah tree :) the spelling doesnt match at all. 4 - in Croatian we say četiri, it seems like there is a similarity in the root (or not?)

NN-qvif
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Wtf we are brothers it is close to most of the Indo European languages

hiwaubaid
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Why is this the only video on ur channel

Wasserschwein
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This video uses a completely wrong pronunciation, she is pronouncing Irish as if it was English and completely ignoring Irish phonetics, I’ll write up how they really should be pronounced and in different dialects:
A haon: ə heːnˠ (Munster), ə hiːnˠ (Connacht and west Ulster), ə hɨːnˠ (east Ulster)
A dó: ə dˠoː (all dialects, sometimes dˠɔː in Ulster)
A trí: ə tʲɾʲiː (Munster and Connacht), ə t͡ʃɾʲiː (Ulster)
A ceathair: ə cahəɾʲ (all dialects, the ɾʲ can become a sound like the czech ř, or soften even more to a j sound in French)
A cúig: ə kuːɟ (all dialects)
A sé: ə ʃeː (all dialects)
A seacht: ə ʃaxtˠ (Munster, Connacht and west Ulster), ə ʃɛxtˠ (east Ulster)
A hocht: ə hɔxtˠ (all dialects)
A naoi: ə nˠiː (all dialects)
A deich: ə dʲɛç (Munster and Connacht), d͡ʒɛç (Ulster)

deoirdanandrei
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I'm Irish but I came here to get help...

debbiemcauliffe
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Everything would be so much easier if You explainn first how does your weird phonetic system work

Jav
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Please try again but this
time WITHOUT your strong US -american accent. It's trí and not "tree". And hocht and not hockt.

AndreusMcH
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A haon
A do
A tri
A ceathair
A cuig
A se
A seacht
A ocht
A naoi
A deaich
Fiche a haon twenty one
Fich a do twenty two
Fiche a tri 23
Fiche a ceathair 24
Fiche a cuig 25
Fiche a se 26
Fiche a seacht 27
Fiche a ocht 28
Fiche a naoi 29

youtubergames
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Interesting how it sounds almost like Spanish. Is Gaelic somehow related to Latin?

AMN
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"a tree"?? 🤔Why is someone with an American accent pronouncing this? I learnt Irish with Irish recordings, Irish people don't speak with USA accents like this.

irened.
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Scary that the number four is pronounced just as in albanian ! We say ‘kater’... scary ...

gp
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that is the Guinness logo at the start

nzteagux