8 Things I did to Learn Scottish Gaelic

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  • Опубликовано: 21 май 2021
  • You can learn Scottish Gaelic today, and Scottish history tour guide Bruce Fummey has some suggestions from his own experiences learning Gaelic. He'd tried eight different ways and gives his opinions on which are best.
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Комментарии • 763

  • @ScotlandHistoryTours
    @ScotlandHistoryTours  2 года назад +37

    Watch Forbidden Clan here ruclips.net/video/gQQyqJAVeHo/видео.html

    • @roddymcniven8734
      @roddymcniven8734 2 года назад

      Yer erse is oot the windae

    • @stuartpenman6387
      @stuartpenman6387 2 года назад

      Gaelic is to Scotland as much as French or Latin is , our history proves it

    • @GudGudTheKid
      @GudGudTheKid 2 года назад

      Was funny the mention of mallaig because once I saw your videos I swear I met you while working at the west Highland hotel mallaig waiting tables. If you've visited their would be funny if you let me know

    • @duncancroal2668
      @duncancroal2668 2 года назад

      Remember my dad had tapes back in the 80s never learned though.maybe I should have a look at audible and see what's on there.
      Really like the videos make me realize how much history we didn't learn in school.

    • @TheoneZeldaplayer
      @TheoneZeldaplayer 3 месяца назад

      I a a lb a mucan Mara na na h inseachan agus eirinn a tuath bu choir dhaibh theagasg anns a mhor chuid de sgoiltean an tuig thu ne

  • @Bredaxe
    @Bredaxe 2 года назад +260

    I watch Gaelic with Jason! He's great. I hope the language makes a comeback for Scotland. Erasing a peoples language is a horrible thing.

    • @tawnymacleod4022
      @tawnymacleod4022 2 года назад +12

      I also watch Jason to, He makes it a lot of fun!

    • @scribble103
      @scribble103 2 года назад +4

      Nope, our language is dead. They don't even teach it in schools anymore.

    • @tawnymacleod4022
      @tawnymacleod4022 2 года назад +12

      @@scribble103 it’s dead that’s a shame! I’m took it upon myself to learn so I can talk to my Grandmother and grt Grandfather! It’s a beautiful language and Scottish culture.

    • @AlasdairMacCaluim
      @AlasdairMacCaluim 2 года назад +34

      @@scribble103 Chan eil sin fìor - tha a’ Ghàidhlig beò beothail!

    • @ConORiain1
      @ConORiain1 2 года назад +30

      @@tawnymacleod4022 it's not dead while it's still a spoken language by some. It's a living language, just not widely spoken. Same as my own language (Irish Gaelic). They aren't dead until they are no longer spoken as a 1st language by anyone.

  • @irenebas
    @irenebas 2 года назад +110

    As a native Spanish speaker I can tell you that learning a second or a third language is very helpfull for your brain. Not only it makes you think in a different way, it makes you discover a whole new world.
    My first meeting with Gaelic language was reading a book... aye, a romantic book with Highlanders 😁. and curiosity won because of a joke in Gaelic in the story. But the very first time I heard it was here!! So I have to thank you Bruce and I'll tell you in Spanish:
    Gracias por tu maravilloso trabajo, que tengas un hermoso día.
    Beannachd caraid

    • @dambrooks7578
      @dambrooks7578 Год назад +1

      While at uni, in actual fact it was her that inspired me to apply for uni, she is Spanish but we were together for seven or so years and in the summer that she spent in London because of a summer of attending Midlesex uni, I recall her amazement at beginning to dream in English.

    • @Aubert1926
      @Aubert1926 Год назад +1

      Es bueno encontrar jente fuera el Reino Unido que es interesada en Gaelic 👍

    • @TheHollowGHOST
      @TheHollowGHOST 6 месяцев назад +1

      I know that this comment is 2 years old, but I wanted to say how much I love it. The first thing that stands out to me is how we identify with things in English vs in Gaelic. In the former, we would say "I am depressed" whereas in the latter, it would be "I have depression on me". That would suggest to me that a language structure such as that in Gaelic can have profound implications for identity and even mental health. I would love to see some research exploring how those who Gaelic (or similar languages) identify with mental health difficulties.

  • @KrisHughes
    @KrisHughes 2 года назад +114

    The Duolingo Gaelic thing is a great place to start. Quite a bit better than other Duo languages, in my opinion, because it uses recordings of real native speakers - with a wide variety of accents - and you need to be prepared for that!

    • @HIMaina
      @HIMaina 2 года назад +5

      @@daemondaugherty9207 I can relate to this. I can hear the man perfectly, but I can't understand a thing when the lady speaks. Even the word "agus" sounds so different when she says it. The man says literally "agus" and the lady sounds like "aius" or something. I'm not sure if it's about the accent or something else. It's challenging for me even more, because I'm not a native english speaker and Duolingo doesn't offer courses in my native language, so sometimes (eventhough after years understanding english has become natural to me) I have to translate things from s. gaelic to english and from english to polish or all the way around. There are literally no courses or even dictionaries for Poles and it's frustrating, but also exciting.
      BTW I don't find Duolingo helpful with anything else than vocabulary and to some point listening. Just out of curiosity I've once chosen my native language to "learn" and duolingo lessons make no sense. It's full of phrases that no one would ever use. The same with italian and german.

    • @Mybassgruvin
      @Mybassgruvin 2 года назад +3

      I agree. I started using duolingo for Gaelic and I like it, I have learned a lot already.

    • @jimburton1
      @jimburton1 2 года назад +15

      @@daemondaugherty9207 the old lady has a Lewis accent. That's where biggest concentration of speakers is, so it's a good thing to hear and understand it.

    • @alicemilne1444
      @alicemilne1444 2 года назад +2

      I just started doing the Duolingo Gaelic course a few days ago. I had started doing the Italian course a few weeks before that. The Italian course also has different speakers with different accents.
      I have no trouble understanding the accents, but that's because I heard Gaelic spoken at least once a week on the radio when I was a child and we knew Gaelic speakers from the Isles.

    • @Indyghurl
      @Indyghurl Год назад +3

      @@daemondaugherty9207 bear with her, the more you learn, the easier it becomes to make out her accent

  • @tireachan6178
    @tireachan6178 2 года назад +18

    As a native Irish Speaker I've been learning Scots Gaelic recently. My interest was peaked a year ago when my wife was watching 'Outlander' and all of a sudden I was able to hear entire sentences that I understood. It was almost like when I first heard the Ulster Irish Dialect and struggled to follow but got the meaning. It's a fantastic language and it comes with some outstanding benefits of understanding the depth of meaning behind Highland Culture that is conveyed by contemporary Scottish Gaelic musicians who every bit rival their Irish Gaelic counterparts in terms of Gaelic Musical Tradition.

    • @nomdeplume2213
      @nomdeplume2213 2 года назад +1

      Awesome!!! Ive always wondered if they were similar, like Spain Spanish and Mexico Spanish or if it was entirely different. I unfortunately cant speak Gaelic but have always wanted to learn.

    • @tireachan6178
      @tireachan6178 2 года назад +1

      @@nomdeplume2213 I think the Irish and Scots Gaelic languages could be compared with Spanish and Portuguese. It's essentially a case of divergence from a relatively recent common language. In the case of Irish and Scots Gaelic the parent language of both is Middle Irish.
      If you were about 1000 years ago and even later you'd find a continous Gaelic World from the South West of Ireland all the way up to to the North East of Scotland where you could speak with any Gael in a common tongue.
      I thinking learning a Gaelic Language is in many ways an act of cultural conservation that was almost eradicated in the wake of numerous historical events aimed at that very purpose. My only advice in learning a Gaelic Language is to pick one specific one and learn independently of the other until you've developed a good command of it. The other one you'll learn in short order thereafter. Trying to learn both simultaneously will have you all scrambled up.

  • @jamieduncombe9729
    @jamieduncombe9729 2 года назад +49

    I'm Scottish started learning in p4 never kept it up embarrassed too say our government should try and bring it into the schools there's more gaelic speakers abroad love the vids big man

    • @johnkelly3886
      @johnkelly3886 2 года назад +6

      Never make it compulsory. That will destroy interest in the language, and cause hostility towards it. What is needed is a Gaelic language appreciation course, along with a culture and history course. All should be soft options.

    • @jamieduncombe9729
      @jamieduncombe9729 2 года назад +11

      @@johnkelly3886 I didn't say compulsory but should at least be an option in all Scottish schools

    • @johnkelly3886
      @johnkelly3886 2 года назад +3

      @@jamieduncombe9729 I know you didn't. And I accept that you have no such intension. But, I think it important to caution the over enthusiastic.

    • @theyoutubeguy1
      @theyoutubeguy1 2 года назад +7

      @@johnkelly3886 Welsh is compulsory in Welsh schools and it has helped save the language. I don't know how exposing a people to the language of their country would make 'destroy interest'.

    • @leviway8874
      @leviway8874 2 года назад +1

      Mae'r rhan fwyaf o'r bobl yn fy nosbarth i yn ei chasáu achos mae RHAID iddynt ei dysgu. Mae'r un peth yn digwydd yn Iwerddon yn anffodus.

  • @1Coursier
    @1Coursier Год назад +29

    As teenager (American but very interested in the Scottish side of my family) I tried to learn Scottish Gaelic from a book I bought from Borders. It was brutally hard and I was heartbroken to give up. I have since learned French fairly well, but you’ve motivated me to look at my options now in the internet age and see if I can do it! Alas it won’t help for my trip to Scotland in a few weeks, but maybe for next year!

    • @1830mof
      @1830mof 7 месяцев назад

      By far the worst bit is the whacky way the letters sound but keep at it.

    • @l.jagilamplighterwright9211
      @l.jagilamplighterwright9211 Месяц назад

      I had that experience as a teen with Welsh.

  • @mairianncullen8753
    @mairianncullen8753 2 года назад +8

    I did Duolingo and then moved on to online beginners' course LearnGaelic. Also added in RUclips SpeakGaelic, plus linked podcasts, then the linked online lesson. Time and repetition are key. Recently added Miss MacDonald's RUclips channel for kids, to try to remember days of the week, months of the year, numbers etc. 🙂

  • @hawfcut2394
    @hawfcut2394 2 года назад +32

    I've been wanting to learn Gaelic for a while now. I want me and my kids to speak what was supposed to be our mother tongue. When I hear it, I feel robbed, cheated of a birth right.
    Edit: I already had followed Jason, but I'll tell a fib and say you sent me anyway.

  • @sassandsavvy007
    @sassandsavvy007 2 года назад +22

    I'm a Bavarian living in the Bavarian Highlands, the alpine region. No Gaelic speaking people around here. However, I love languages and my heart beats Scottish, sooooo at a tender age of 59 I am learning my 7th language - Scottish Gaelic.
    I can inly applaude to everything you said in this video. Learning Gaelic is fun and with constant repetition it works quite well. I worked with an old BBC course on RUclips for a while but the audio quality wasn't sgoinnel, no real interaction. Now I'm doing endless repetitions on duolingo and for grammar and the fun factor, I'm watching Jason's videos which are a great help.. This guy is one heck of a language teacher, his love for Gaelic is contagious if you're not infected already..
    If an old goat fromrural Bavaria can learn Gaelic - everyone can. It's very unlikly to find one here but in my younger days my secret of quick progress in learning a language was to find a boyfriend who's a native speaker... just saying 😉
    Sadly, my friends in Scotlad don't have Gaelic and sven if I'll never meet anyone I could speak Gaelic with, it's still worth learning.... if you have Scotland in your heart.
    Beannachdan blàth à Bavaria🙋🏻‍♀️

  • @dabsafe
    @dabsafe 2 года назад +26

    “Oh, there’s a bar!” 🤣🥃🍺 Being a retired Canadian I have found myself relearning the French that I studied in secondary school 50 years ago. The downside is that unless you use the language around native speakers it becomes forgotten. The last time I visited Quebec where French is the primary language spoken, I found myself subconsciously sliding back in to the language and then being “shocked” when I returned to the English speaking world. My Scottish Gran grew up around her Gran that spoke Gaelic exclusively and learning my heritage language is something I would like to try in the near future. Thanks for the videos and keep them coming. 🇨🇦🎸😎🏴󠁧󠁢󠁳󠁣󠁴󠁿

    • @johnlynch78
      @johnlynch78 2 года назад +2

      I’m using Duolingo for French s as well. I’ve got a tripped planned for Quebec, Lachute and St. Andrews regions in Argentueil for some ancestors that migrated to Canada from Islay-to New York-to Vermont before coming back to America.

    • @johnmarks936
      @johnmarks936 2 года назад +1

      But Quebecois is not the French taught in Ontario schools; Parisian French is. Quebecois is 1600s French. Just as the Gaelic spoken in Nova Scotia and New Brunswick is from about the same period.

    • @stanrogers5613
      @stanrogers5613 2 года назад +3

      @@johnmarks936 Cape Breton Gaelic isn't nearly that old - it's from the Clearances for the most part, so mid-19th century. Most of the earlier Scottish imports spoke Scots and English. And "Québecois" isn't really a thing either - that's like saying "British English" expecting it to cover everything from Doric through RP and on to whatever the kids are speaking down the estuary these days. (My own French is from southeast Northern Ontario, and both "proper" Montréal French and joual might as well be foreign languages to me until I've had a while to get my ear around it _and_ make a bunch of grammar and vocabulary adjustments.) That reflects the fact that French wasn't really _a_ thing until fairly recently either; both within the langue d'oil and langue d'oc there were a number of... well, they're on the border of whether you'd call them distinct languages or merely dialects, and that doesn't count anything that was shading into Savoyard.

    • @johnmarks936
      @johnmarks936 2 года назад

      @@stanrogers5613 The numbers of "Gaelic as a first language" I quoted were from Stats Can.
      The clearances go back to 1750. Some of the Cape Breton settlements go back almost that far. This is an excerpt from the Nova Scotia Museum page concerning Gaelic speaking highland migration: "Between 1773 and 1850, tens of thousands of Gaels made the journey across the Atlantic Ocean to settle in Eastern Nova Scotia and Cape Breton. They tended to settle amongst their own kinship groups - people who came from a particular area of Scotland, sharing similar traditions, dialects and beliefs. The Highlands and Islands of Scotland where the Gaels came from and where Gaelic was traditionally spoken is known to this day as the Gàidhealtachd."

  • @brucehartnell1475
    @brucehartnell1475 Год назад +4

    As an old punk rocker, I suggest buying a record by Oi Polloi. One of Scotland’s finest.
    This channel is great. Very informative and hilarious.
    My interests stem from a woman from Edinburgh I met in Germany in 1983. She is a life long friend and the one that got away. This channel brings back great memories of her for me.

    • @LiyemEanapay
      @LiyemEanapay Год назад

      I’ve been meaning to get my hands on some Oi Polloi. I’ve been listening to Mànran at work. Òran na Cloiche goes so fvcking hard

    • @brucehartnell1475
      @brucehartnell1475 Год назад

      @@LiyemEanapay great! Definitely a good place to start. A legendary band

  • @stonemarten1400
    @stonemarten1400 2 года назад +40

    If you climb the Munroes (mountains over 3000 feet) in Scotland, or enjoy exploring the Highlands, it's useful to know some Gallic, as many names are descriptions in the language; Ben More means Big Mountain, for example.

    • @allano937
      @allano937 2 года назад +4

      Some of the OS maps for the North West are entirely Gaelic. It was hillwalking that made me want to learn

    • @hughmac13
      @hughmac13 2 года назад +4

      Like "claymore": claidheamh-mór: "big sword" or "great sword."

    • @architexturalchaos1862
      @architexturalchaos1862 2 года назад +4

      I can never tell anyone where exactly have I been on my holidays in Scotland. I am part ashamed of my inability to pronounce it, part scared to accidentally summon Satan if I try.

    • @crywlf9103
      @crywlf9103 2 года назад +2

      Gallic and Gaelic are different things lad. Gallic was spoken in mainland Europe in Gaul, France

    • @hughmac13
      @hughmac13 2 года назад

      @@crywlf9103 The language spoken in mainland European region known by the Romans as Gaul is much more typically called the Gaulish language. Using "Gallic" to refer specifically to the language is something of an improper usage in that way.

  • @deanworsley2244
    @deanworsley2244 2 года назад +19

    I wanted to learn since I discovered Runrig, loads of their songs obviously in Gaelic and I just love the sound of the language

  • @YakimaGulag
    @YakimaGulag 2 года назад +8

    A couple things help with learning both Irish and Scots Gaelic, learn songs. The grammar is always correct and music is the last form of memory to leave you. If there’s TV shows, watch for a couple hours a day. Take notes. That helps with idiomatic expressions and slang.

  • @trikepilot101
    @trikepilot101 2 года назад +28

    I did a semester of Gaelic in my first year of Uni. What I learned is that I have real trouble learning languages.

    • @rippedtorn2310
      @rippedtorn2310 2 года назад +6

      No its not you ..its the teaching methods . Look up Finlay MacLeod on Facebook or the Moray Language Centre . You'll be speaking Gadhlig in no time .Immersion with NO translation {i know it sounds counter-intuitive but trust} ..emphasis needs to be on speaking then later if you want to disect it you can ..in gadhlig .

    • @schoolingdiana9086
      @schoolingdiana9086 2 года назад

      If they aren’t teaching the way your brain learns, you’ll never retain the information. You can try the Thomas Michel method. My oldest son has learned both Spanish and Mandarin that way. He can spend the entire day saying whatever he needs to say, in either of them, so it’s not just a 15 minute convo he learned that way.

    • @carolynmacdonald7024
      @carolynmacdonald7024 Год назад

      If you could learn English as a child, you can pick up another language. Our brains are wired for it. You may just have to find your own way of doing it. Perhaps a more organic way.

  • @tricksandtunesHQ
    @tricksandtunesHQ 2 года назад +8

    I began my journey learning gaelic at the start of the first UK lockdown, started with the duolingo course, and then moving on to books, gaelic in 12 weeks, blas na gàidhlig. I also discovered around the same time that my partner was expecting my son. So I made it my goal, no I made it my personal mission to have the first words to my son be in gaelic.
    My advice to people that are looking to start learning gaelic is, go for it! You will never learn if you don't try, yes there will be days where you have very little motivation. But you will get through it.

    • @LiyemEanapay
      @LiyemEanapay Год назад

      Blas na Gàidhlig has been an indispensable resource for me.

  • @jimcazador6057
    @jimcazador6057 2 года назад +5

    I tried learning Ulster Gaelic many years ago, forgotten most of it now as I never used it, Coincidentally many Scots Gaelic speakers can understand Donegal Gaelic speakers well, there is a strong connection between them and the Scottish Western isles.

    • @resourcedragon
      @resourcedragon Год назад +1

      As I understand it, there is a bit of a spectrum from Irish in the SW of Ireland through Donegal and Ulster, through to the Western Isles of Scotland, through to the north.

  • @Alpvagabund
    @Alpvagabund 2 года назад +9

    I’m actually learning it right now. I don’t really know why, because I’m a German-Norwegian teenager from America, but I am. I just have always been fascinated by Scottish culture and history, and I figured that there’s not much that’s more Scottish than Scottish Gaelic. I’ve been doing it on Duolingo for a while now, and I’m fine at it. I hope to one day be fluent🤞🤞🤞

  • @graywolf4208
    @graywolf4208 2 года назад +22

    Alright Brucie lad?
    What a morning. Irish breakfast, Peruvian coffee, Polish bloke and his Scottish marra from RUclips. Day doesn't get any better than that.
    Just recently I've started to learn Irish and Scots gaelic using duolingo and I must say tá sé go hiontach. I highly recommend learning a second language. It's one of the best things you can do for yourself. Mòran taing Bruce. Sláinte!

    • @GreenmanDave
      @GreenmanDave 2 года назад +1

      Tha e sgoinneil gu dearbh! 😁

  • @tK-be6ns
    @tK-be6ns 2 года назад +29

    I've been learning Irish in fits and bursts. The phrases and words that stick with me over the years is the ones I hear or use with native speakers

  • @blueberrycomics
    @blueberrycomics Год назад +3

    As a Greek, it was really random but I was always fascinated by Celtic culture so I decided to learn Gaelic.

  • @macleod1602
    @macleod1602 2 года назад +17

    I'm a Gaelic learner so thank you for this one!

  • @odetbeauvoisin
    @odetbeauvoisin 2 года назад +13

    PS thanks for the super video; it feels like a chat over a cuppa.

  • @svmadelaine856
    @svmadelaine856 2 года назад +4

    I’m using Duolingo currently along with songs/books. As I want to teach my son so the language doesn’t die.

  • @judem1359
    @judem1359 2 года назад +3

    “I’m cold, wet, tired and the English did it” 🤣🤣🤣. I am so fascinated by this. There’s a bar! What a great idea on holidays. I’m familiar with Irish Gaelic but am rubbish at it and need classes. 🇦🇺🇦🇺🇦🇺 I hope one day to bring my kidlets to Scotland as their Dad was descended from the Scott’s and their last name is appropriately Scott. They luckily have the blend of two branches of the Celts: Irish and Scottish. What could be better 💜

  • @henrybinks978
    @henrybinks978 2 года назад +5

    Yeah I'm interested in learning Scottish Gaelic as it is my heritage.... Heather

  • @alethearia
    @alethearia 2 года назад +10

    The phrase "more x than you can shake a stick at" comes from mid-19th century America, where a "shake" was a term commonly associated with roofing and building. Essentially it was coined in a newspaper because there were "more Taverns as you can shake a stick at" here meaning, "we have so many taverns that the roofers can't shave the wood fast enough to shingle them."

  • @markberry4198
    @markberry4198 2 года назад +4

    Duolingo is also great, perhaps not for conversational Gaelic but for expanding your vocabulary. Also Jason does some really good short novels for Gaelic learners.

  • @scottjones6947
    @scottjones6947 Год назад +2

    I thought about learning Gaelic many years ago. I love medieval history and I collect arms and armour as a hobby. I really enjoy your videos Bruce!

  • @jrogue7715
    @jrogue7715 2 года назад +2

    I’m a native Texan who studied over a year in Edinburgh. I fell in love with Scotland. Like us Texans, I connected with the level of pride that emulates from the people. My heart breaks that there isn’t more Gaelic speakers and hope that it is changing for the better! Staying connected to the past, culture, and history is important!
    I wanted to learn the language to connect to a culture that is near and dear to me, connect to the history, and be able to say in a conversation “I speak English, Spanish, Portuguese, and Gaelic”.

  • @annegreen9499
    @annegreen9499 Год назад +2

    I can thoroughly recommend Jason's channel. He's got a great teaching style & my Gaelic has improved loads since I found his lessons.

  • @suerose7479
    @suerose7479 2 года назад +12

    Yes this Sassanach, living in SW England (Exmoor) has tried to learn the Gàidhlig through Duolingo, mainly because of the Outlander books 💕 and my visit to the Highlands 💕. Got only so far and because you had to answer in written form I gave up, no explanation of any rules if there are some 😳

    • @BliffleSplick
      @BliffleSplick 2 года назад +3

      In Duolingo you can hit the speech bubble once you've answered and there are other users talking about the "why"
      My main issue is some of the spellings vs the spoken are akin to French - you only say half the letters

    • @Ev_deGallery
      @Ev_deGallery Год назад

      This sassenach living in Central California started learning Scottish Gaelic on Duolingo. "Chan eil" easy! No obvious pattern, the letters make the wrong sounds or no sounds when they should, but "Tha Gàidhlig cho spòrsail!". I don't know why my brain finds it easier to write it out than to speak it. Same thing happened in High School German and Elementary French.

    • @mikem9001
      @mikem9001 Год назад +1

      I encourage you to persevere. After a while, it starts to make sense! Also, if you find some Gaelic music that you like, e.g. Julie Fowlis.

  • @everleeherdson4925
    @everleeherdson4925 2 года назад +3

    Absolutely beautiful language, so unique and exciting!

  • @a.macdonald8895
    @a.macdonald8895 2 года назад +1

    Duo Lingo now has Gaelic! It’s easy, it’s free, and it teaches reading, writing, and speaking. It’s become the “game” I play on my phone at any down time.

  • @berniemilliken5496
    @berniemilliken5496 2 года назад +1

    My grandfather spoke Gaelic so I learnt from him from the moment I learnt to talk and even now speak it with a good friend of mine and with my God daughter

  • @magnusosmond1835
    @magnusosmond1835 2 года назад +7

    I take a lot of pride in being a scottish ginger so I've been learning Gaelic on RUclips from a channel called Gaelic with Jason and it's been very help full and I've learned a lot fast and he makes it easy.

    • @ScotlandHistoryTours
      @ScotlandHistoryTours  2 года назад +5

      😂😂😂Aye ye didnae get time tae watch the video eh?

    • @Chief_Brody
      @Chief_Brody 2 года назад

      @@ScotlandHistoryTours haha seems he didnae

  • @SteveHB59
    @SteveHB59 2 года назад +11

    Born in Wales, grown up in Australia, wish I’d been able to learn the welsh language before now

    • @marconatrix
      @marconatrix 2 года назад +1

      What is preventing you, especially with the internet ???

    • @exponenttie9707
      @exponenttie9707 2 года назад +1

      Duolingo has a Welsh course available for free

    • @marconatrix
      @marconatrix 2 года назад

      @mike davidson Sut mae hynny yn wir???

  • @ritacummings2310
    @ritacummings2310 2 года назад +2

    Thank you so much for all of the time that you took to share this video . Also thank you for picking this topic . It has been on my mind because I do want to learn Gaelic . I am finding that , for me , when I hear it as I do a lot , I am understanding slowly but surely . As for my opinion on learning any language other than one’s own native tongue , I think it has great value in that I learn different concepts and a different culture . I learn about some differences between how my culture is and someone else’s . I grow . I can see things in a different light or perspective. I learn the commonalities we share as people . My father spoke Gaelic as did my grand parents . Although not very often did they speak it . That is another story . Thank you again sir .

  • @JR-bj3uf
    @JR-bj3uf 2 года назад +3

    Yes, I have wanted to learn Gaelic but I have a shockingly bad memory for languages of any kind. My interest started when we were cleaning out my grandmother's house after she had a stroke. We found a book that belonged to her mother and it was a prayer book in Gaelic. The only English in the book was on the fly sheet and it said "Bringing prayer and the word of God the the Highlands." Fascinating

  • @dustinwhitaker9377
    @dustinwhitaker9377 2 года назад +5

    Much respect, Bruce. Lovin' the videos.

  • @Mybassgruvin
    @Mybassgruvin Год назад +3

    I have always wanted to learn Gaelic, especially when I found out I have Scottish ancestry. I started about four months ago with Duolingo. I took your advise from this video and looked up Jason Bond. I enrolled in his online course about one month ago. Jason is great, he has a really good teaching method and helps the Gaelic stick in your mind...thank you for the recommendation.

  • @sharonpeek4578
    @sharonpeek4578 2 года назад +1

    I've used the phrase "more than you can shake a stick at" my whole life. I was born and raised here in Georgia, U.S.A.

  • @nancyberg6676
    @nancyberg6676 Год назад +2

    Just want to say that I've been working my way through all your previous videos and have been enjoying your channel. Also, huge THANKS for directing folks to Jason's channel - it's exactly what I needed to find, because Duo wasn't making the grade for me! Keep 'em coming.

  • @davidmilne6259
    @davidmilne6259 2 года назад +7

    I'm learning Gàidhlig at the moment, it's great fun! Gaelic with Jason is a brilliant channel, much like this one with its great content! Love from Stirling / Sruighlea

  • @jasoncox5674
    @jasoncox5674 2 года назад +5

    Tha Gaidhlig beag agam ach tha mi a ionnsachadh. A slaodaiche. Tapadh leibh mo charaid.

  • @CaveMan72
    @CaveMan72 2 года назад +1

    Thank you for this and all your videos. Keep spreading the knowledge, keep the fire burning

  • @JReed305
    @JReed305 2 года назад

    Thanks for the great info. Time to get to learning!

  • @paddyblah887
    @paddyblah887 2 года назад +6

    That's so cool I was already learning with Jason... Its a small Internet..

  • @darkred83
    @darkred83 2 года назад +3

    Tapadh leat! I needed a nudge to get started on a refresh before the 3rd Gaelic course. I started on Duolingo during the first lockdown with the aim to finally learn to pronounce Gaelic place names. It only took 11 years to get started... Work then began offering courses and 1,5 years later I still haven't stopped. Thanks for the different suggestions, will look them up and see if I can fit in a week on Skye next year :D

  • @cpt.marcusronaldthe3rd274
    @cpt.marcusronaldthe3rd274 4 месяца назад

    Found this because learning Gaelic is kind of a resolution of mine, and soon as he said "Bruce Fumey" i realised he's an old teacher of mine.

  • @DawnShive
    @DawnShive 2 года назад +3

    In response to this video, let me tell you a story. LOL. I am 67 and lost my Mom this past year. She grew up speaking Gaelic as a second language. Her Mom was born in Edinburgh. I have cousins in Scotland I stay in touch with. I occasionally have to have them translate if they slip a Gaelic word into our conversation. I want to learn Gaelic before I pass. I am just sorry I didn't do it sooner. I grew up speaking French as my second language because we lived in France when I was a child. French was the second language on my Dad's side of the family.It just always seemed English, then French were the most likely to be spoken in our family. I want to learn Gaelic as a tribute to my Mom.

  • @gwynethamy5543
    @gwynethamy5543 2 года назад +1

    Thanks for the info on the school in Skye. I’ve added that to my ‘travel and experience’ list. Funny you should mention Jason, I found his RUclips channel the same week I found yours. Thanks for all the great info.

  • @raydriver7300
    @raydriver7300 10 месяцев назад

    You are so good at what you do. As a physics teacher you may appreciate how I teach science to my 5-8 year old swimmers. Newtons 3rd law - push the wall backwards you go….. forwards. Conservation of angular momentum- the tighter your tuck on your forward roll, the faster you turn etc. 🌞

  • @lauraketteridge324
    @lauraketteridge324 Год назад +2

    Many years ago, I took a couple of weekend courses in Gaelic at the University of Edinburgh. It was great, and I remembered enough to understand "I'm cold, I'm hungry, I'm tired." and I burst out laughing when you said "The English did it" :o)
    Very soon after these classes, I move to Wales and started learning Welsh. This pushed most of the Gaelic out of ma heid.
    I started off going to a weekly conversational Welsh class, and that was fine, but progress was slow. The second year, I added in using a website resource run by the BBC. It had text and audio. Ten minutes a day helped me consolidate the foundations, and increased my vocabulary. Next, I started singing songs, and watching children's television. Over time, I was able to watch television aimed at adults, starting with using English subtitles, and then moving on to Welsh subtitles.
    What worked for me was the combination of many different types of learning, and including it in my daily life.

  • @Diskode48
    @Diskode48 2 месяца назад +1

    Im trying to learn Irish Gaelic first and once I'm fairly fluent in that I'm gonna learn Scottish Gaelic as well since i find them very cool since their my ancestors mother tongue. Learning Scots would be cool as well as its similar to english.

  • @DanieVargas
    @DanieVargas 2 года назад

    THANKS FOR SENDING ME TO JASON’S PAGE!! I’m gonna keep watching him….

  • @MargaretPinard
    @MargaretPinard 2 года назад +2

    Thank you for the resource links, Bruce! Tapadh leat!

  • @racheltaylor6578
    @racheltaylor6578 2 года назад +1

    I did a distance learning course at Telford College and went to night school for a while in North Lanarkshire.I used to go to Clì Gaelic learning days in different parts of Scotland.Duolingo is great for learning Gaelic and the Learn Gaelic app is great.I used to love Colin and Cumberland Scots Gaelic on BBC and Beag air Bhheag.

  • @johnmackay996
    @johnmackay996 2 года назад +1

    Speaking Gaelic is very interesting to me. I've tried to learn on and off for years now. My desire stems mostly from my Grandmother MacAulay, who grew up in a small fishing town on Cape Breton, Nova Scotia. She remembered being able to understand older people speaking in Gaelic, but by then the people her age didn't learn to speak it anymore. Thanks for this video and info.

  • @douglasbrown5189
    @douglasbrown5189 2 года назад +1

    Been wanting to learn Gaelic since I was about 7 and I'm 28 now! You're insight is very helpful. I've been considering Jason's subscription for some time now, good to know it works.

  • @Mustang727L
    @Mustang727L 2 года назад +2

    I tried to learn Gaelic (Irish) many years ago with the aid of a textbook. The main drawbacks I found was pronunciation, dialect, and lack of feedback/conversation.
    I haven't given up, just delayed a bit.

  • @seanwattles9264
    @seanwattles9264 2 года назад

    THANK YOU FOR THE LINK TO THE SHORT COURSES PROGRAM!!!!! Hopefully Covid will finally be either under control or recognized for what it might well be and I will be able to take a lovely week vacation learning the language of my forebears.

  • @stephenwade5534
    @stephenwade5534 2 года назад

    Hi Bruce, been watching your vids since a good Uni pal put me on to you @Random Wanderings . I love the idea of learning Scottish Gaelic, your experiences make me even more determined lol. Keep on keeping on

  • @kerrypitt9789
    @kerrypitt9789 2 года назад +3

    Yes I have thought of it over the years. Actually in 1985 on Skye there was a mobile Gaelic library. I thought first.....wow! Someone translated books into Gaelic or were some of them taken from original Gaelic manuscript. The Isle of Skye felt like home to me.

  • @fondasharkey-wyatt9944
    @fondasharkey-wyatt9944 3 месяца назад +1

    I would love to learn gaelic. I'm Amercan. Gaelic is such a sexy sounding language. Traveling to Scotland and take lessons would be a dream.

  • @mariannecormier3021
    @mariannecormier3021 Год назад

    I live less than an hour away from Nova Scotia. Love to drive down Main Street in Amherst and look at the beautiful old houses

  • @matthewmackenzie5773
    @matthewmackenzie5773 2 года назад

    Thank you for all the videos you do!

  • @abrahamtomahawk
    @abrahamtomahawk 2 года назад +1

    Good to see you continuing to learn it. I heard a great story recently about the children of a family who moved to Stornoway as refugees from Syria getting wonderful plaudits for their learning of Gaidhlig.

  • @iandunning8342
    @iandunning8342 Месяц назад +1

    Gaelic is fun........it sure is ! got the book .

  • @sandramarieroberts1172
    @sandramarieroberts1172 Месяц назад

    One of the things I used to do when I first started was to record myself speaking back to the speaker during the practice sessions. Then I could listen later to hear where I went right or wrong. I used to teach French and I had a little mini digital recorder I used. Probably could do it on a phone these days. I’m also a strong believer in immersing yourself in the language and culture. Even if you can’t get there physically, you can start to think in the language and go about using vocabulary as you go about your daily activities, even talk to yourself in the shower just for practice.

  • @graemem111
    @graemem111 2 года назад +1

    Bruce? You’re preachin’ ma pal. Keep it up.

  • @rubyarana1401
    @rubyarana1401 Год назад

    I'm learning Gaelic from Jason! I started with his RUclips videos and now I'm doing his Gaelic beginner's course.

  • @azimuth2142
    @azimuth2142 2 года назад

    I just started watching his videos and yours.

  • @charlesdriggers199
    @charlesdriggers199 2 года назад

    I have thought about learning Gaelic for a couple of years now and recently started with Jasons RUclips channel. You are the one who inspired me to go ahead and do it. Agus sin the math. It is still a work in progress.

  • @moburgess3072
    @moburgess3072 2 года назад

    Thank you again Bruce for the motivation and inspiration .. and what a coincidence... I signed on to Jason's course last night so I'll be sure to pass on the message.
    I'm sitting here in South Africa attempting to learn Gaelic... you've lit a wee fire with all those stories.... from a quyne frae Aiberdeen.

  • @animeluver45
    @animeluver45 2 года назад +2

    I am not Scottish but unsurprisingly I love the Outlander show and now I want to visit Scotland one day. I am learning Scottish Gaelic on Duolingo and only have been learning for 7 days now but it is great. Not to mention there are not many speakers anymore so I would love to get on the train and learn Gaelic

  • @Islaview01
    @Islaview01 2 года назад +1

    Ileach here ! another great video Bruce , I feel really lucky to have grown up surrounded by gaelic speakers ,it was even part of the curriculum in both primary and high school and i was quite surprised when I learnt that it wasn't a thing outside of the hebrides but then again we still get two weeks holiday in October for picking totties.

  • @bumblebeesusan8034
    @bumblebeesusan8034 2 года назад

    Love Gaelic w Jason. Hes so fun too!
    Recently found your channel. You are fab!! Live learning w you. Love the humor as well.

  • @stevenfaber3896
    @stevenfaber3896 2 года назад

    Thanks sir!

  • @robdavidson4945
    @robdavidson4945 2 года назад

    Having spent time as a young teenage traveler first to Norway and Scotland to see family then a two year stint in the United States Marine Corps in Okinawa, "Mainland" Japan and the Philippines. I discovered many years ago other than ordering food and alcohol the main phrases absolutely needed were , where is the bathroom or Loo, How much does it cost and " I Love You". That last should be spoken with emphasis and meaning only acquired with practice.

  • @charliecrawford3776
    @charliecrawford3776 2 года назад

    It was nice to watch your video on learning Gàidhlig. It is a great language. Most of my ancestry is Scottish (from Lanarkshire), though I don't personally know anyone who speaks the language. I decided to give it a go using Duolingo. Tha beagan Gàidhlig agam. I guess that's why it stood out to me that you end videos with Tioraidh an drasta. Thanks for the encouragement!

  • @Kussenagi
    @Kussenagi 2 года назад +1

    Wanted to learn since forever, finally got a chance to start last year when I heard Duolingo had a course! I just need people to practice with now haha

  • @spanky814
    @spanky814 7 месяцев назад

    I'm learning a bit. My great grandfather barely spoke English, according to my grandad because he lived his whole life in a fairly remote tiny northern town and just never needed English often, but he never passed it to my dad, didn't speak it much himself, plus my dad moved to the States as a teen so Im at a little disadvantage from distance as well. But I'm excited because I'm already picking up words I recognize now from songs and poems I've always known but not well enough to know what it meant.

  • @grendel_nz
    @grendel_nz Год назад

    I learnt a little at night classes while a student at Moray House College ~1990. I still understand those useful beginner phrases :) thank you. Loving your enthusiasm and vids. Yes, learn Gaelic if convenient. I left Scotland in 1996 for better weather elsewhere :)

  • @judeross3875
    @judeross3875 2 года назад

    I started duolingo and also you tuber Jason. Love to learn locally xx Thanks for extra resources xx

  • @quick2angerslammer
    @quick2angerslammer 2 года назад +1

    I'd love to learn Gaelic, its hand to understand what I'm looking at on maps at work.
    It would also be hilarious on holiday to be a menace to answer people in the Gaelic!

  • @sabsg3361
    @sabsg3361 2 года назад

    I've been a student virtually of Jason's for a bit over a year...slowly but surely making progress! Lovely to find your video!

  • @pikeyMcBarkin
    @pikeyMcBarkin 2 года назад

    My dad was born in the highlands, and spoke Gaelic natively. He learned french before learning english. I asked him one day why I don't speak it. He said at the time, he saw it as a dead language.

  • @sandramarieroberts1172
    @sandramarieroberts1172 Месяц назад

    Yes, I started to learn Gaelic by cd in 2007 as part of my effort to stretch my my brain while I was off work due to a concussion. There wasn’t a lot available back then, so I started with Irish. I know, I know… but eventually I found cds and a book on Hebridean Gaelic which is the language of my ancestors. I have some Gaelic music and listen to the lyrics. Mary Jane Lamont in particular. Now, I follow some on instagram and have done some of Jason’s RUclips videos. I kind of got turned off when it became more witchy than Gaelic stuff, but he’s a good teacher nonetheless. I believe there’s a school in Cape Breton. Fun story: one of my Islay ancestors who immigrated to Canada was walking with her husband to the local store and he got sidetracked en route by talking to a neighbour. She carried on to the shop and the shop keeper asked her what she wanted. She replied “ wait until Lachlan arrives with the English”.

  • @TheAdventuringFoodie
    @TheAdventuringFoodie 2 года назад

    Physics teacher! And a stand up comic! Sgoinneil! My first major at University was Physics. My second Theater Arts. Another great video!

  • @steventhompson9875
    @steventhompson9875 2 года назад

    Always wanted to learn Bruce, you've just tipped me into doing it.. gonna do it over summer break from my course thanks haha

  • @legendrides
    @legendrides 2 года назад

    Having lived in Scotland most of my life starting learning online Duolingo is the sight I'm using.

  • @connor735
    @connor735 2 года назад +2

    I speak a decent amount but this will all help! I'm also from Argyll and Bute, Dunoon to be exact, you should give it a visit mate, tapadh leat a charaid!

  • @juliestott3178
    @juliestott3178 2 года назад +2

    I've heard "more ______ than you can shake a stick at" all my life so I've never thought much about it. But we tend to use lots of descriptors like that in "my neck of the woods". I'm definitely going to check some of the video and audio options you suggested. Thanks, Bruce!

  • @glenbucket
    @glenbucket 2 года назад

    Thanks for all the tips and especially the link to Jason!

  • @Athabina
    @Athabina 5 месяцев назад

    as a child I Knew a few phrases in Gaelic taught by my father or uncle but that was nearly 70 years ago and now forgotten 🤫

  • @aslancallenreese7016
    @aslancallenreese7016 Месяц назад

    You’re the best!! Thank you thank you thank you! 😁💕

  • @terri200
    @terri200 2 года назад

    I pick up dialects easily. I'm going to try Gaelic. It's so beautiful to listen to!

  • @okiwatashi2349
    @okiwatashi2349 2 года назад +1

    They say you should do 3 different courses, I certainly found that very helps learning Spanish. My Spanish is far from perfect but I can converse relatively well.