Redwolf wrote:
Deghebh wrote:
Redwolf wrote:
Someone asked this question on Eoin's Bitey Shamrock forum, and I'm not finding an easy answer in Baldy, so I figured I'd ask here. How does one express negative numbers in Irish?
For example, in English I might say "It's 10 degrees outside, but it feels like -10." Or "3 - 5 = -3"
GRMA,
Redwolf
If I remember correctly, the idiom you are looking for is, for 'it is minus ten', use 'there is a want of ten'.
That is the Hiberno English, I do not know the Irish.
Deghebh.
I know what the term is in English, Dave. It is my native language, after all.
Redwolf
A Machtíre Rua, a chara,
American English is your native DIALECT.
I am talking about the DIALECT of HibernoEnglish, which is the common NATIVE DIALECT of many regions of Ireland.
This DIALECT, and its variants use mostly the English vocabulary, but contains many words of true Irish, and a very large amount of Irish idioms.
Many of these idioms are necessary because the Irish vocabulary lacks the concepts which they need to convey.
When you understand these idioms, you can see how the Irish get around these missing concepts.
Negative quantities are expressed traditionally, according to my recollection, by expressing a need or want of a quantity.
Indeed, that is what the Latin word, from which we derive 'minus' means.
So, you can either import an English word into Irish, or you can try to restore the traditional idiomatic expression.
In Irish, you say 'Tá leabhar uaim', to mean 'I want a book', or 'I am missing a book'.
I would suggest that the negative temperature might then be expressed in this idiom as:
'Tá 10°C uaidh', 'It is lacking 10°C'.
Le meas,
Deghebh.
I'll have to study hard to get the cloigeann round some of this LOL...