Why Learn Scottish Gaelic?

Scottish Gaelic — Gàidhlig — is a Celtic language spoken mainly in the Scottish Highlands and Hebrides islands. With approximately 57,000 native speakers, it is classified as critically endangered by UNESCO, but is experiencing a remarkable revival.

Since Duolingo added Scottish Gaelic in 2019, over 1 million people have enrolled in the course — proof of massive interest driven by the global Scottish diaspora (50+ million people of Scottish ancestry) and Celtic culture enthusiasts.

Scottish Gaelic is closely related to Irish (they share the Goidelic branch) and cousin to Welsh and Breton (Brythonic branch).

History

Scottish Gaelic arrived in Scotland from Ireland in the 5th century with settlers from the kingdom of Dál Riata. It became the dominant language of medieval Scotland, spoken by kings and clans.

From the 11th century, English and Scots gained ground. The Highland Clearances (1750-1860) — mass evictions of Gaelic-speaking populations — dealt a devastating blow. The Education Act of 1872 banned Gaelic in schools.

Revival began in the 20th century. Bòrd na Gàidhlig was established in 2005. BBC Alba has been broadcasting in Gaelic since 2008. Gaelic-medium schools are multiplying across Scotland.

Alphabet and Pronunciation

Scottish Gaelic uses 18 Latin letters: a, b, c, d, e, f, g, h, i, l, m, n, o, p, r, s, t, u.

Vowels

Grave accents lengthen vowels: à, è, ì, ò, ù (unlike Irish which uses acute accents).

Lenition

Like Irish, Scottish Gaelic has lenition (adding h):

  • (cow) → a' bhò — bh = [v]
  • cata' chat — ch = [x]

Distinctive sounds

  • The guttural ch (as in Scottish loch)
  • Pre-aspirated consonants: unique to Scottish Gaelic
  • Rolled r, more prominent than in English

Basic Grammar

VSO word order

  • Tha Calum a' leughadh = Is Calum reading = "Calum is reading"

No "yes" or "no"

Scottish Gaelic has NO words for "yes" and "no". You answer by repeating the verb:

  • "An toil leat cofaidh?" → Is toil (I like) / Cha toil (I don't)

Numbers 1-10

Number Scottish Gaelic
1 aon
2
3 trì
4 ceithir
5 còig
6 sia
7 seachd
8 ochd
9 naoi
10 deich

Essential Phrases

Gaelic Pronunciation English
Halò halo Hello
Ciamar a tha thu? kimar a ha oo How are you?
Tha gu math ha goo ma I'm well
Tapadh leat tapa lat Thank you
Mar sin leat mar shin lat Goodbye
Dè an t-ainm a th' ort? djay an tanim a horsht What's your name?
Is mise ... iss misha I am ...
Tha gaol agam ort ha geul agam orsht I love you
Slàinte mhath! slancha va Cheers!
Oidhche mhath oy-hya va Good night
Madainn mhath matin va Good morning

Scottish Gaelic Culture

The Hebrides

The Outer Hebrides (Lewis, Harris, Uist, Barra) are the heartland of Scottish Gaelic. On Lewis, over 60% speak Gaelic.

The Cèilidh

A cèilidh ("kaylee") is an evening of traditional music, dance and storytelling. The pìob mhòr (Highland bagpipe), fiddle, clàrsach (Celtic harp) and bodhrán are the key instruments.

The Mòd

The Royal National Mòd is the annual Scottish Gaelic festival — singing, poetry, drama and literature competitions.

Outlander

The TV series Outlander (2014-) brought worldwide visibility to Scottish Gaelic with authentic Gàidhlig dialogue.

Learn with Targumi

Targumi is the FIRST platform to offer learning for 106+ rare and minority languages. Scottish Gaelic, with its pre-aspirated consonants and absence of "yes/no", is a fascinating linguistic challenge.

Mar sin leat, agus bi ag ionnsachadh Gàidhlig!


Sources

Further reading