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11th July 14, 11:43 PM
#1
 Originally Posted by sailortats
I, for one, do not like this idea. Yes, this is the Gaelic forum but if we start speaking something other than English here, what is to stop a Frenchman from wanting a french language forum or a Welshman from wanting a Welsh language forum? You can always speak whichever language you like in PMs.
Yes sailortats,
That is another thing. If I'm not mistaken, Steve has said it well enough that this a forum dedicated to the "kilt", not language learning. As you can see, the kilt is a far reaching subject and quite overwhelming at times, though it is only one aspect of Scots culture. I think the OP wants Gaelic spoken more than just the occasional phrase with translation. And I thought I had this site figured out. Now I may have to learn an ancient language too. 
Cheers,
KC
"Never rise to speak till you have something to say; and when you have said it, cease."-John Knox Witherspoon
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The Following User Says 'Aye' to KentuckyCeltophile For This Useful Post:
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12th July 14, 01:30 AM
#2
I want to learn Welsh,not easy at my age and living in Spain where I have only mastered a basic level but although I respect your desire to keep the ancient tongue and promote it, I don't think this is really the right place unless you had a dedicated spot. For those of us unfortunate enough not to have any known Scottish ancestry, but perhaps lucky enough that other Celtic nations have adopted the kilt, this forum can be a little daunting if not unfriendly at times. I think this could be a bit alienating. Just my feelings on the matter.
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The Following User Says 'Aye' to Mel1721L For This Useful Post:
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12th July 14, 06:26 AM
#3
I didn't come here to teach Gaelic, but I'm not in a forum of kimono wearers, where Japanese would be respected. It's not my/our intention to write always in Gaelic, but I thought that here, and in particular in the Gaelic sub-forum, we could have the right to use it.
Gaelic is not just a language, it's a culture, and the kilt belongs to this Celtic culture. Some people started wearing the kilt because they have surnames like Macdonald or Maclean, and they give tribute to their ancestors, being proud of their roots, but just with an external appearance, not with a culture, and that's what I couldn't understand. As far as I'm concerned there was a period when kilts, bagpipes and Gaelic were il·legal in Scotland, because they all represented the same culture and identity.
Now I think this thread could be closed, I understand that Gaelic is not permitted. Nevertheless I will continue in this forum, and I offer my ability to anyone interested in clandestine Gaelic conversations about the Highland dress, or whatever.
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The Following 2 Users say 'Aye' to Mairsial MacÙr'ille For This Useful Post:
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12th July 14, 06:48 AM
#4
Thread closed at request of OP.
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