Hiberno English, is you’re not accustomed to it, is something to behold! This week’s curator of the @Ireland Twitter account, who describes himself as “Born in Lagos; Made in Dublin”, admitted that when he first arrived to Ireland he wasn’t quite sure we were speaking English at all.
Arra’ ah sure, we’ve a fierce quare way of talkin’ that’d confuse even the sharpest tool in the box!
Timi (27) has lived in Ireland for 13 years and is the founder of the photography blog, “Picture This Dublin,” now a nine person creative collective. Always out and about on his bike in the city that he loves, Timi says his motto is #EnjoyYourCity.
What are your most used #IrishColloquialisms? I need to know! It's for science damnit!
— Ireland / Timi (@ireland) January 7, 2015
It's grand. It'll be grand. Everything's grand. The first of many #IrishColloquialisms I've come to assimilate.
— Ireland / Timi (@ireland) January 8, 2015
@ireland "Would you go away out of that" #IrishColloquialisms #onlyinireland
— Majella O'Dea (@MajellaODea) January 7, 2015
Tiz fierce quiet. #Irishcolloquialisms
— The Bourgeois Pope (@RackFocussed) January 7, 2015
'She was wearing the face of yer man' @IrelandUncut #IrishColloquialisms
— John Barrington (@PhuckAllCraic) January 7, 2015
We have some of the best colloquialisms here. First time I heard "what's the craic" I was very worried for my safety. #IrishColloquialisms
— Ireland / Timi (@ireland) January 7, 2015
Biggest cop out phrase after someone tells you about their terrible situation... "sure this is it" #IrishColloquialisms
— Ireland / Timi (@ireland) January 7, 2015
I've never understood "c'mere t me" If I'm coming to where you are, am I not coming to you? #IrishColloquialisms
— Ireland / Timi (@ireland) January 7, 2015
...if the prognosis is hopeless, you've "gone to Dublin", usually said with eyes thrown to Heaven...;-) #IrishColloquialisms
— an cailín cainteach (@Trillian_01) December 3, 2010