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how do you say and spell: Kaylee Elizabeth Cranston in irish gaelic??

2006-11-30 11:59:06 · 9 answers · asked by Kaylee C 1 in Travel Ireland Other - Ireland

9 answers

To my knowledge there is no Irish form of Kaylee, so you would keep that , but spell it phonetically in Irish "Célí",
the second name is "Eilís" in Irish, and is pronounced "Ay-liSH", (even in Munster!)
and the surname is "Ní Cranston" (ní is pronounced "nee") if you are not married, or "Beán MacCranston" (beán sounds like "bawn") if you are, because your family name also has no Irish equivalent, as far as I know.

And !"*& Sean should know that it's spelled "Níl FHíos agam" if you don't know anything.

2006-12-02 12:02:16 · answer #1 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

You can't translate Kaylee Cranston into Irish Gaelic because there's no literal translation. You could try to translate it phonetically but you would need to know the language really well for that.


But I know Elizabeth in Irish is Eilís

:)

2006-11-30 12:15:39 · answer #2 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Im not sure, i dont think there is gaelic for elizabeth or cranston i would guess the lee part of kaylee would be leigh

2006-11-30 12:01:35 · answer #3 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Irish Gaelic got here first. Irish Gaelic and Scottish Gaelic are 2 of the various languages spoken throughout the time of Europe and as a techniques east as India, that hint their descent from Indo-ecu, a hypothetical ancestor-language idea to were spoklen better than 4,500 years in the past. Irish Gaelic and Scottish Gaelic belong to the Celtic branch of the Indo-ecu family contributors. They and three different contributors of this branch -- Welsh, Manx and Breton -- are immediately alive as community languages. the kind of Celtic that became to develop into Irish became presented to eire by the invading Gaels -- about three hundred BC, in accordance to three students. Later it spread to Scotland and the Isle of guy. Scottish Gaelic and Manx gradually separated from Irish (and extra slowly from one yet another), and they are commonly idea-about as distinct languages from the seventeenth century onwards. The time period "Gaelic" might want to correctly be used to point all 3.

2016-11-29 23:58:45 · answer #4 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

Kayleigh Eilis Cranston

Dont think thier is an irish word for Cranston

2006-12-01 03:50:16 · answer #5 · answered by OMG 3 · 0 0

There is no way to translate some names!
Although as others said Elizabeth is 'Eilís'

To sat your whole name in Irish (or gealic, whatever ya want 2 call it) you would say, - Eilís { L-is {prolong the 'i')} then before you say Cranston, place 'Ní' before it!

So it's "Eilís Ní Cranston"

2006-12-02 09:19:51 · answer #6 · answered by Ripsrod 2 · 1 1

Elizabeth=Eilis (a fada over second i)

2006-12-01 01:11:19 · answer #7 · answered by Shiv 4 · 1 0

how to spell "max" in gaelic?

2013-10-26 10:49:54 · answer #8 · answered by niamh 1 · 0 0

nil ios agam

2006-12-01 06:00:08 · answer #9 · answered by Sean G 2 · 0 1

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