Gnjusno.
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Gnjusno.
I also understood Patrick Murphy as a proxy.
You now change the topic the second time.
I first claimed that it would be possible to switch to English in Ireland if that is really wanted and I emphasised that that was my only point.
After you also questioned whether that would be legit to do considering that a lot of people don't care, I told my general take that as long as other people are forced to do something in favour of Patrick Murphy, Patrick Murphy can also well have to stand that things are done in favour for other compatriots. To which degree this is the case in Ireland I don't know. I just said that this could be legit "molestation".
Now you bring up the next question whether the full re-introduction of Irish would be a reasonable aim. It's an understandable next question but I just want to point out that we now are far beyond what I initially commented on. This is no topic of mine and I think that the Irish society will have to decide what to do and likely they have done so in that sense as what is the current state. But they can change their mind, of course.
If I'd be an Irish I'd likely be positive to an effective preservation in the same way as the (re-)introduction of Nynorsk in Norway is a sympatethic idea to me. To me the different grown cultures are part of the richdom of the world and I find them often worth being effectively preserved. Not always and things are not black and white. F. i. I'd not support in Germany to ban High German in former Low German speaking areas in order to effectively preserve Low German. I consider the hurtful cultural loss of Low German a reasonable sacrifice for the unity of Germany.
I'm a German and I don't feel entitled to prescibe other people (ethnicities) what to do in such complicated questions. I just say as a foreigner and European that it after all would be nice to have at least one state left in the world that would care for and maintain a Celtic language as a fully functional and living language.
Latin was used across Europe to sing praise to God. Whether you were Irish, German, Italian, French, Spanish, etc.
Needless to say, the majority of people didn't know what they were singing, or understood mass in Latin. Yet, no one is claiming a lack of authenticity because a major part of these people's cultural world was done in a language they didn't even understand.
Sure, but to force it on people is wrong and nor does not speaking Gaelic make you less Irish. Finnegan's Wake is an Irish novel. That it's written in English instead of Gaelic doesn't make it any less authentically Irish. There are elements in the book that are uniquely Irish that an Englishman or someone who is ethnically Irish but raised outside of Ireland wouldn't have been influenced by if writing their own book because of living in a different environment.Quote:
Irish language deserves to be revived.
Anyway while I do have that including some sex toys doesn't mean Im into that daily only once in a while everything it's put away on a box.
For the right moment xD
One second your writing love letters to Budapest and the next you call it a living hell. Your answers sound schizophrenic and filled with contradiction so it has almost has no meaning. It's all about your mood and the person you are talking to. It's bad that you project your mental health and OWD on others. Get an interest other than TA because you waste tons of time on here. The funniest part is you're the best example I've ever seen of a mentally unhinged Balkanite, the very people you despise and want to disassociate yourself with. What a joke.