No, Galician is spoken in a region of Spain. Scots generally speak English and some also speak Scottish Gaelic.
Yes it is? I had to research it for this test I'm taking online.
It's called A' Ghàidhlig in Scottish Gaelic.
Scottish Gaelic is a 'coimhead.Irish Gaelic is cuma.
In Irish the word for 'what' can be cad, céard, cén rud.In Scottish Gaelic the word is dè.
if you mean "Galician" the word for sin is. "Pecado"
"Bo dia fermoso" is not Gaelic; it is a phrase in Galician, a language spoken in northwestern Spain. It translates to "God is beautiful" in English.
No, Galician is spoken in a region of Spain. Scots generally speak English and some also speak Scottish Gaelic.
Yes it is? I had to research it for this test I'm taking online.
Galician is the language spoken in the Galicia region of Spain. It's closely related to Portuguese. Gaelic is no longer spoken in Galicia, but Galicians have a Celtic heritage and Galician has some Gaelic root words.Gaelic is an English word for any of three languages which form one half of the Celtic language family group. These three Gaelic languages are Irish Gaelic GaeilgeManx Gaelic GailckScottish Gaelic GàidhligThese three languages are spoken in Ireland, Man and Scotland. The Gaels are the peoples who speak these languages or did so in the past. Gaelic was in danger of being exterminated in many of the traditional Gaelic speaking areas, but now a Gaelic renaissance has slowed this trend if not yet reversed it.
In Galician 'I Matter' is 'Eu Tema'
It's called A' Ghàidhlig in Scottish Gaelic.
Farraige. (Another word is muir)
A paz galician
In Irish it's "dóighiúil"ANOTHER ANSWER:also 'dathúil'.
In Irish it's bruscar / dramhaíl ANOTHER ANSWER: truflais
toirtis (with a fada on the last 'i')Another answer:tortóis (Irish)