How to Say the Names of Irish Gods & Goddesses incl. Tuatha Dé Danann - Lora O'Brien - Irish Celtic

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  • Опубліковано 10 гру 2022
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    Lora O'Brien of the Irish Pagan School, a native Irish speaker, guides you on how to say the names of Irish Gods and Goddesses, including the Tuatha Dé Danann. Some of these are Celtic Gods and Goddesses, who are from the Irish specific pantheon.
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КОМЕНТАРІ • 31

  • @-RONNIE
    @-RONNIE Рік тому +14

    I know all the amazing work that Morgan, Jon and yourself are doing is going to help so many people in the future with quality information about the entire Irish culture. Keep up the great work 👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻

    • @IrishPaganSchool
      @IrishPaganSchool  Рік тому +2

      Hope so!

    • @-RONNIE
      @-RONNIE Рік тому +1

      @@IrishPaganSchool If people are truly interested it will

  • @thebeautifulseason
    @thebeautifulseason Рік тому +3

    Very grateful for this video 🙏

  • @darrellmonks
    @darrellmonks Рік тому +3

    Im just starting Lady Gregorys Irish mythology book and this will be a great help. Subscribed.

    • @IrishPaganSchool
      @IrishPaganSchool  Рік тому +3

      Maybe check out our Trustworthy Resources checklist too! irishpagan.school/checklist

  • @paulniziol5709
    @paulniziol5709 Рік тому +3

    Thank You! Going to have to go through this video a couple of times, as there was some unintentional misprouncination on my part.

  • @safenclean1752
    @safenclean1752 5 місяців тому

    thankyou i just try put on an irish accent in my head when i read them and just hope for the best !
    Thankyou for clarifying.

  • @karenwhite8602
    @karenwhite8602 10 місяців тому +1

    Very helpful thank you

  • @glochevalier
    @glochevalier Рік тому +1

    Thanks! This is super helpful.

  • @CarolineOceanaRyan999
    @CarolineOceanaRyan999 Рік тому

    This answers a lot! Thank you so much! I'll have to get the book.

  • @RyanEdmondsMyLifeAsRyan
    @RyanEdmondsMyLifeAsRyan 3 місяці тому

    Excellent. Thank you.

  • @ShiningNoctowls
    @ShiningNoctowls Рік тому

    Thanks for sharing; take care

  • @SpartaIndigo
    @SpartaIndigo Рік тому +6

    I love the sound of all those names. I'm wishing I had an Irish name rather them
    one of these biblical name we all got. I love St Patrick day because it's a
    celebration of the Irish but St. Patrick has and his Catholic church has been
    a curse to the Irish.

    • @suichearnaigh3246
      @suichearnaigh3246 Рік тому +5

      You can always change your name if it matters that much to you. I changed mine

  • @CapsuleerCowboy
    @CapsuleerCowboy Рік тому

    Thanks!

  • @pmhcare
    @pmhcare 7 місяців тому

    I'm loving your videos and am deeply interested in Ireland and the Irish language. I've noticed that you and most online instructors from Ireland don't say "Gaelic" but then there's one or two people who seem to be native from Ireland who post videos where they consistently do pronounce it "Gaelic" I'm curious if that's just a dialect thing or if there's some other explanation for it that I'm missing :)

  • @shawnharris4776
    @shawnharris4776 26 днів тому

    I know this video is kinda old but Ive been recently finding the history and energy of the goddess Airmid very interesting and im thinking about praying to her as well, but I havent been able to find much about her, aside from the story of the healing herbs with miach which I find very intune with my spirit as I like to grow and even dry and burn my own herbs for protection and healing. I know as much as shes the goddess of healing/medicinal properties and herbs but not much from there, so I was wondering if maybe you know any special tips or have any insight on the worship of Airmid (I hope im spelling that right ive seen multiple different spellings so Im still stuck on pronunciation) sorry for the long comment but im very interested 😂

  • @johnlavers3970
    @johnlavers3970 7 місяців тому

    old irish and medieval call irish gaidhlig or ghaidhlig. but few used older irish. they of course use the case system(often now called moods and modes because they don't follow the much better known latin case systm) , throughout fairly long passages, but i don't expect anyone to struggle with old grammar and pronoinciation, just that scottish gaidhlig preserves some of the old forms. iwould alos pronounxe the de with a dage in de dannaan as a je or hald andhalf j/d, as the e following isa slim vowel. however that might be a dialectal difference.

  • @joeokeefe5061
    @joeokeefe5061 Рік тому

    Hi lora i hope your well . There is a new film out called "The banshees of inisherin" . It looks interesting .

  • @dfrenchorn
    @dfrenchorn Рік тому

    This is unrelated, and I'm only commenting this here because it's the most recent video.
    I am continuing to do my digging, but the resources I'm finding are definitely like wading through deep water. (Which is fine, I'm not complaining!)
    I am looking for a litany of sorts (in English also) for all the namings of An Morrigan. For example in the Táin Bó Regamna, An Morrigan is referred by "Faebor beg-beoil cuimdiuir folt scenb-gairit sceo uath."
    Which I was able to find a sort of explanation of before, but have lost my page and can't find it again.
    What I would love to find is a list of all the different ways in which An Morrigan has been referred to, or all the differing ways in which she is named.
    I'm finding a lot of Morgan Daimler's webpages are saying that they're no longer available.
    I'll continue to do my research, and use the resources and codicis that you've mentioned many times so far. But if anybody can help out I definitely will appreciate it!!

  • @progressiveearlylearning
    @progressiveearlylearning 4 місяці тому

    I really want to pronounce Airmed correctly. Did I hear that right it's more like (in English) "ar- vidge" ? Also do you know if it was the same in old Irish? Thank you!!!

    • @wyldeunleashed
      @wyldeunleashed 4 місяці тому

      That is my name, and that’s how I pronounce it. Most people pronounce it AIR-med, though, as it’s spelled. So I just go by Airy, most of the time.

  • @ZephaniahL
    @ZephaniahL 4 місяці тому

    Would it be accurate to say the "tha" in Tuatha is then entirely silent? It sounded as though you pronounced it that way, but maybe my hearing is weak.

    • @andrewollmann304
      @andrewollmann304 4 місяці тому +1

      I can answer that, actually, provided you’re okay with a little roundabout explanation.
      The original Irish alphabet does not include the letter “h.” What we’re seeing as an “h” letter after some letters (such as “t” and “m”) is something called the séimhú (SHAY-voo). It changes the sounds of some consonants, and has a function in Irish grammar as well. In the original Irish alphabet, it was shown with a dot over the consonant. In the case of “Tuatha,” the “h” after the “t” signifies that the “t” should sound like an “h.” Therefore, it’s pronounced “too-ah-hah.”

    • @ZephaniahL
      @ZephaniahL 4 місяці тому

      @@andrewollmann304Many thanks.

    • @andrewollmann304
      @andrewollmann304 4 місяці тому

      @@ZephaniahL Anytime.