In this lesson and several succeeding lessons, we will review the grammar and vocabulary that you have learned up to now. The review will be through conversation. The translations, in the right column, are literal, not quite as you would speak in English. This is done here to make the Irish forms more understandable from the viewpoint of grammar.
The sentences are broken into phrases by dashes. Read and pronounce phrase by phrase at first, until you can repeat the entire sentence. It will help if you have someone to speak with, of course.
Comhrá (KOH*-raw*), conversation
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Hello, Brendan. | |
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Hello, Donald. How are you today? | |
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Oh, I am fairly well today. How are you yourself on this fine day? | |
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Excellent. Don't you like this weather? | |
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I like it, but I prefer the spring. The spring is better than the fall. | |
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You are right (you have right). The spring is better than the fall. The days be colder now. | |
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Do you think that it will be putting snow soon? I myself doubt it. | |
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I don't know. I heard that the weather will be cloudy tonight. | |
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I don't hear the weather report often.
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It is heard nearly every hour. | |
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Was it heard last night about eight o'clock? | |
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It was heard at that time, certainly. | |
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It wasn't heard in my house. I wasn't listening to the radio. I don't listen to the radio often. | |
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If you listen to the radio tonight, you will hear the weather report. | |
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We will hear it, if we listen to it. I will listen to it, at least. | |
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By the way, did you listen to the concert yesterday? | |
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We listened to part of it, but then I had to go to the store. My wife didn't have to go with me, and she was able to listen to it. | |
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I heard that there was another concert last night. | |
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What kind of concert was it? | |
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Concert of the cats. They were howling from suppertime until midnight. | |
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They will be ready for the big program on the radio, then. | |
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