This is a reply within a larger thread: view the whole thread

Re: Gaelic - is it Galic or Gaylic please help
There is a prn difference between Scottish and Irish Gaelic. AFAIK it's Scots Gal-ick, at least that's how it was prn in my (Irish)college. Admittedly, the only speakers of Scots Gaelic I know are Irish who studied it at university level but they spent time in Scotland.It is Irish Gay-lic but Irish people rarely(more or less never) say Gaelic for our language - we say Gaeilge(Gayl-ga) - which is simply the Irish for Irish - or more commonly we just say Irish. So - Scots Gall-ick and Irish Gay-lick.
vote up1vote down

Replies

AgreedI agree with Speranza, Scottish - GAL-ic, and Irish - GAY-lic.I am originally from the north of Scotland and my grandfather (from the Western Isles) was a Gaelic speaker. My family, and most of the people we know say GAL-ic. Now I live further south, I have come across a lot more people who pronounce it GAY-lic.
vote up1vote down
That is interesting. I suppose the Southerners are influenced by Sassenach prn.? What is the Scots Gaelic for Gaelic?
vote up1vote down
That is possible. Gàidhlig is the Scots Gaelic for Gaelic, and from the link belowhttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Scottish_Gaelic_languageGàidhlig is pronounced GAL-ic
vote up1vote down