How do you say maith in Irish?

How do you say maith in Irish?

How do you say maith in Irish?

Pronunciation

  1. IPA: /mˠa/, /mˠah/
  2. (Ulster) IPA: /mˠaɪ/, /mˠaɪh/

How do you reply to raibh maith agat?

He or she says Go raibh maith agat and you want to say ‘No bother, you’re welcome’. A good response is: Go ndéana sé maith duit (‘May it do you good’).

What is raibh maith agat?

Go raibh maith agat: Literally “May you have goodness.”

How do you respond to thank you in Irish?

Irish has many ways to say “you’re welcome” as an answer to “thank you”. And older speakers didn’t use it before they learn English, I think. Have a look at Dinneen’s dictionary at “fáilte” and you won’t find any mention of “you’re welcome” as an answer to “thank u”.

What is maith thu?

You can subscribe to us on YouTube by clicking here. Maith thú! /Mah hoo/ Well done!

What does go raibh mile maith Agaibh Go Leir meaning?

Thank you all very much
English translation:Thank you all very much.

Why do the Irish say thanks a million?

Thanks a million Where other languages, such as German or Italian, contend themselves with just a thousand thanks (“tausend Dank” and “grazie mille”, respectively), people in Ireland decided to take it over the top and add a few zeroes. So this is just a common Irish way of simply saying “thanks a lot”.

What does maith mean in Irish?

translation and definition “maith”, Irish-English Dictionary online. maith. acting in the interest of good; ethical ( good intentions ) useful for a particular purpose ( it’s a good watch ) Is smaoineamh maith é sin.

When to use maithfidh and maith?

¹ When the preceding noun is lenited and governed by the definite article. ² When the preceding noun ends in a slender consonant. maith ( present analytic maitheann, future analytic maithfidh, verbal noun maitheamh, past participle maite )

What is the adverb for go maith?

maith ( genitive singular masculine maith, genitive singular feminine maithe, plural maithe, comparative fearr ) Takes the adverbial construction go maith when used predicatively after a form of bí: