Browsing Gaeilge by Title
Now showing items 35-54 of 86
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The Irish language in County Meath, 1700-1900
(Geography Publications, 2015-12)[No abstract available] -
Irish pirate radio 1978-1988: How political stasis allowed unlicensed radio to flourish and innovate
(Taylor & Francis (Routledge), 2020-10-12)The history of pirate radio in Ireland remains understudied by comparison with other countries with histories of unlicensed broadcasting. This is surprising given the extent and longevity of a large pirate radio scene ... -
Is mé go déanach i mBaile Sheáin: Donnchadh Rua Mac Conmara i dTalamh an Éisc
(Cumann Léann na Litríochta, 2009)[No abstract available] -
Leathscéal ag na Mná – An greann agus an inscne i scéal le Bab Feiritéar / Humor and gender in ‘The Woman’s Excuse’ as told by Bab Feiritéar
(2016)Discussion of the interplay of gender in humour in a telling of the tale ATU 'The Enchanted Pear Tree' by the Kerry storyteller Cáit (An Bhab) Feiritéar. -
The life and work of Cúán ua Lothcháin
(Meath Archaeological & Historical Society, 2008)[No abstract available] -
Literature and learning in early medieval Meath
(Geography Publications, 2015)[No abstract available] -
Logainmneacha agus an dinnseanchas
(Comhar, 2022-03)San alt gairid seo, féachfar le léargas ginearálta a thabhairt ar an nasc atá idir logainmneacha na hÉireann agus traidisiún liteartha agus scéalaíochta an dinnseanchais. -
Logainmneacha na hÉireann III: Cluain i logainmneacha Co. Thiobraid Árann. Pádraig Ó Cearbhaill. Oifig an tSoláthair, Baile Átha Cliath. 2010. xxiv + 250 lgh + Dlúthdhiosca
(National University of Ireland, 2013)[No abstract available] -
'Máire' agus an L.F.M.
(2001) -
Murder in a meadow: Environmental and cultural extinction in Cathal Ó Searcaigh's "Scrúdú Coinsiasa Roimh Dhul Chun Suain"
(Brill, 2017-11)An ecocritical reading of a poem by Cathal Ó Searcaigh -
National identity and belonging among gay ‘new speakers’ of Irish
(John Benjamins Publishing, 2019-03)New speakers refer to people who use a language regularly but are not traditional native speakers of that language. Although this discussion has been going on for some time in other sub-disciplines of linguistics, it ... -
National identity and local ethnicity: the case of the Gaelic League's Oireachtas sean-nós singing competitions
A discussion of traditional singing as a cultural phenomenon in contemporary Ireland, together with a brief historical overview. -
New speakers of Irish and identities
(Routledge, 2020-03-03)This chapter examines the links between the Irish language and identity in the discourses of new speakers. Despite the strong historical association of Irish with national ethnocultural identity, the chapter identifies a ... -
New speakers of Irish: shifting boundaries across time and space
(De Gruyter Open, 2014-12-18)While traditional Irish-speaking communities continue to decline, the number of second-language speakers outside of the Gaeltacht has increased. Of the more than one and half million speakers of Irish just over 66,000 now ... -
‘New speakers’ of Irish in the United States: practices and motivations
(De Gruyter, 2015-05-28)This paper examines the experiences and motivations of 'new speakers' of Irish in the United States. 'New speakers' of Irish refer to those whose first language is not Irish but who use the language regularly and fluently. ... -
‘New speakers’ on Irish language community radio: new understandings of linguistic variation on Raidió na Life
(Routledge, 2021-07-19)This article examines the use of Irish on the community radio station Raidió na Life which has broadcast to Dublin since 1993. By admitting and indirectly valorising a variety of linguistic styles, Raidió na Life can be ... -
Old names for the River Suck and associated sites
(Dublin Institute of Advanced Studies, 2020)This paper examines the evidence indicating that the names Bré and Dubainn Bré (and variants thereof) may be regarded as older, alternative names for the river Suck. It also considers textual references to some other ... -
On the meaning of 'baile (buile)', and the interpretation of the poem beginning 'Rop tú mo baile'
(National University of Ireland, 2016)[No abstract available]