Americans giving Irish lessons now 🤦🏻‍♂️

by unsilent_majority

31 comments
  1. It’s pronounced GOWL. Like owl with a g in front.

  2. They obviously just listened to the Ulster dialect and were well meaning. No need to be a snowflake.

  3. i’m not sure what’s sadder, that you immediately ran off here to post this, or that you’re wrong in your posted picture

  4. To be fair, there are some celtic language scholars of the highest calibre in the States, with a command of Irish that would put many of us natives to shame. Not that yer man is likely to be one of them.

  5. Sad times to be putting others down who are making an honest effort to learn.

  6. I think they forgot the L, if you stick the L on it it doesn’t sound too far how I’ve heard it in west Kerry, Le-our-lan

  7. I was in a pub recently and an American couple accosted us talking about their tour of Ireland. They were saying the biggest city they think they’ve visited was Goolyway with a question mark at the end. My friend repeated Galway to them to help them seen as they said it as a question.

    They then looked at my friend like they were an idiot and said strongly no I think it’s pronounced Goolyway.

  8. People sharing the arguments they get into on Reddit as content is the peak of cringe.

    Anyway the yank probably heard that mangled pronunciation of “leabharlann” from Kneecap, who speak a falsely constructed Northern Ireland mangled dialect of “Irish” instead of real Irish.

  9. Hahahaha! it’s so funny when they try to school us on how Irish words are pronounced.

  10. I heard someone on this sub use the term plastic paddy yanks. As an American, I found that hilarious 😂

  11. Why would they think there’s a capital I in the middle of the word.

    Poor lad. He tried. He failed hilariously.

    It’s in the fuck URL the spoon.

    Americans have this beautiful ability to be risk being wrong with supreme shameless confidence

  12. I’m a Yank approaching 1000 days of Irish in Duolingo and I couldn’t imagine trying to correct anyone this confidently. I’m fully aware most of what I’m gaining is reading and writing, and my pronunciation is going to be wrong. It was still fun trotting out some basics on Inismor though.

  13. Once had an American on Reddit try to convince me and others that “Patty” is short for “Patrick”, and that the correct term for our national holiday was “St. Patty’s Day.”

    Multiple links with evidence to the contrary did nothing to sway them. I wonder why Americans get stereotyped so much?

  14. Most Redditors have an astounding confidence in talking out their ass about things they actually have no idea about.

  15. I’m blaming teanglann.ie for this one. Go listen to their pronunciation examples. Connacht and Ulster are bizarre accents. Munster is fairly standard on this one.

    I did my time in the Gaelteacht in Donegal, learned Connacht Irish in school, and live in Munster. Nowhere have I heard anyone pronounce it even remotely like the Connacht example.

    Maybe they pulled it from the islands?

    https://www.teanglann.ie/en/fuaim/Leabharlann

  16. Doesn’t seem like they’re trying to give lessons, just seems they wanted to share how it can be pronounced (in a different accent to what you’re familiar with) because Irish is an interesting sounding language to those who don’t know it. Love making fun of the yanks a bit but this post seems a bit too mean spirited for such a harmless comment. Especially when you are the one who seemingly is not aware that accents exist..

  17. Do you ever just wish the USA would fuck right off in it’s entirety?

  18. He also says the name Saoirse like she is the sister city of Sao Paolo, Sao Irsa.

  19. *American giving one dialect example of how to say a word as per an Irish website, not run by Americans.

  20. I don’t claim to be the best blacksmith in Whiterun. That honour goes to Leabharlann Greymane

  21. They’re going off of Teanglann, which, if you listen to the Ulster dialect, actually does sound like what he / she is saying, so following the Irish language resource they aren’t wrong, even if we may not actually say it like that in real life.

    Was this really deserving of its own thread? It’s not exactly the own you think it is.

  22. Was backpacking around Thailand years ago. An older American guy came up to us and asked what part of ireland we were from.

    I simply said “county wicklow”.

    Proceeded to go on a rant that he had visited Ireland many times and travelled all around it and never heard of anywhere called wicklow.

    I said “it exists…. (dramatic passive-aggressive pause)… I live there!”.

    He changed the subject and walked away shortly after, refused to admit I was right and he was wrong. I know a lot of really lovely Americans, but it baffles me that some people will look you straight in the eye and try to educate you about your own country.

  23. Americans are mythical beasts. We can drink a liquor or beer from any country and suddenly speak the language. It’s a fact. Traveling to London makes us an expert on life in Ireland since there can’t be that many cultural differences.

    Really though thank you all for babysitting our tourists. We don’t like them either.

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