How do you say surprise in Gaelic?

How do you say surprise in Gaelic?

sərˈpraɪz, sə-sur·prise.

What is the Scottish word for surprise?

scottish expression of surprise (3)
Scottish expression of surprise (3)
OOH
Scottish expression of surprise (3)
OCH

What is the word Brae?

Brae is the Lowland Scots word for the slope or brow of a hill. The word ‘Brae’ in Shetland dialect has a different meaning; it may come from the Old Norse word breiðr meaning broad.

What does the name Brae mean?

Brae as a boy’s name is of Middle English and Old French origin meaning “cry out or borderland”.

Is Brae a boy or girl name?

The name Brae is a girl’s name. A newly hatched cousin of Bree and Brea.

What is Bree in Gaelic?

“Bree” is apparently a Scots Gaelic word that means “a disturbance.” That’s pretty much how I saw Brianna when she first appeared on the show.

What does Brae mean in Cornish?

hill; borderland

What do the Cornish Call tourists?

Emmet

What is Cornish for Grandma?

Words for family members and other relatives in Cornish, a Brythonic Celtic language spoken mainly in Cornwall in the the southwest of Britain….Family words in Cornish (Kernewek)

Cornish (Kernewek)
grandfather keugh sira-wynn
grandmother dama-wynn henvamm mamm-wynn
grandchildren floghwyn
grandson mab-gwynn

Is Pengelly a Cornish name?

Pengelly (Cornish: Penn-gelli) is a hamlet in north Cornwall, England, United Kingdom, part of the village of Delabole in the civil parish of St Teath. There are also places called Pengelly in the parishes of Breage, Crowan and St Ewe; the meaning of Pengelly is “end/top of a grove”.

Where does the name Pengelly come from?

This interesting surname is of Cornish origin, and is a locational name from any of the thirteen places called Pengelly in Cornwall. The placename derives from the Cornish “pen”, head, top, end, with “kelly”, copse, grove; hence “a copse at the top or end of a piece of land”.

What does the surname Pengelly mean?

Cornish: habitational name from any of the places (in thirteen parishes) named with Cornish pen ‘head’, ‘top’, ‘end’ + kelly (lenited form gelly) ‘copse’, ‘grove’.