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Manchán Magan 'Our perception of the world can change when we see things through the Irish language'

The author and broadcaster writes about researching his latest book on the Irish language and the many colourful words in it.

THERE’S A WORD in Irish to describe the luminous track of a boat through phosphorescence, tine ghealáin.

It can also refer to flashes of lightning and the mysterious light that is emitted from putrid fish or rotten wood.

It’s a good example of how old languages can have a certain luminance to them that can help shine light on the past, illuminating fading customs and beliefs.

I had explored a lot of these words in the book Thirty-Two Words For Field, but I hadn’t done justice to the sheer wealth of words that describe the natural world, and so I spent the second half of lockdown gathering the most insightful, cheeky and evocative words that describe the natural world and compiling them into a book with illustrations by Steve Doogan.

The result is a celebration of the wonderful linguistic legacy that we’ve inherited from our ancestors on this island. It’s called Tree Dogs, Banshee Fingers and other Irish Words for Nature.

We are the descendants of Bronze Age settlers who arrived on these rocky green shores over four thousand years ago, and ever since then we’ve survived almost exclusively by foraging from and tending to the land and harvesting the bounty of the sea and shore.

For the past two thousand, and possibly up to three thousand years, we have been speaking different forms of the Irish language, and so it’s no wonder that we’ve amassed a rich trove of words to describe every aspect of nature.

As you’d expect, there are many different words to describe bad weather. A cold blast of wind is fuarghaoth, while a sudden gust of wind is cuaifeach or saighneán or rua-ghaoth. Fleá means the same but often with rain in the gust. Those rare moments when a lull appears during a rainstorm are known as sámhnais, while a general easing of the wind is snag.

I was keen to capture incidents of words that make us see the world in different ways. Neuroscience tells us that a language can’t change our reality, but it can help us perceive things differently. This is clear from the distinction that Irish makes between colours, such as dearg and rua. Dearg is the word for a dark or vibrant red, as in red ink, blood, gore, fire, embers, hot iron or the lower layers of soil, while rua is a more brownish-red, like a fox pelt. This is why the Irish for fox is madra rua, not madra dearg.

It’s not a major difference, but your brain needs to adjust its optical sensitivity a little to take account of this and to differentiate between the different shades of red. It’s even more apparent with the words for green, glas and uaine. Glas refers to the green of grass, leaves, young plants and other natural things, while uaine is usually reserved for manufactured green things.

But glas can also mean the greeny-grey colour of the sea, and in this way has become a word to describe a horse or cow of a particular shade of muted grey. Other varieties of grey in horses and cattle are described as liath, which is the principal word for grey. But a grey squirrel is not an iora liath, but an iora glas.

Yet, in general, most shades of grey can be referred to as liath, just not the grey tints associated with a cold winter sky, or undyed wool, or iron. These are all referred to as being glas in colour. This does seem to suggest that our perception of the world does indeed change a little when we begin seeing things through the altered colour spectrum of the Irish language.

It’s only natural that over the course of such an extensive timespan we’ve developed detailed and idiosyncratic ways of describing the specifics of our surroundings, of our psychology, and of our hopes and fears, and also of the incredible complexity of the ecological biosphere that has sustained us almost exclusively for the majority of these past four or five millennia.

In the book I explore the six different words Irish has to delineate the stages of dawn, and the many words for mammals that seem to describe them in the same way that a child might upon seeing them for the first time ever, rather than the analytical description of a biologist. Words such as, sciathán leathair for a bat, which translates as ‘leather wings’, or máthair shúigh, a squid which literally means ‘sucking mother’, or gealóg bhuachair for a corn bunting, ‘little bright one of the cowpat’.

The principle aim of the book is to highlight the poetry, wisdom, divilment, and insight contained within our glorious old tongue. An teanga Gaeilge is our birth-right – something we should be immensely proud of, not only for its cultural wealth and its social and psychological subtlety, but also for the insights it offers into the flora and fauna, the climate patterns, the moon cycles, the ocean currents and the otherworldly dimensions of this, our island home. Whether we pass it on as a precious heirloom or let it dissipate and die is up to us. Is í ár dteanga í, agus beatha teanga í a labhairt.

Tree Dogs, Banshee Fingers and other Irish Words for Nature by Manchán Magan, with illustrations by Steve Doogan is published by Gill Books. It’s nominated in The Journal’s category of Best Irish Published Book in this year’s An Post Irish Book Awards. The awards will take place virtually on 23 November – to find out more and see all the nominees, visit the awards website.

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17 Comments
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    Mute Kavsie
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    Oct 1st 2020, 6:37 AM

    “It emerged yesterday that two errors were found in the code responsible for calculating the grades of this year’s Leaving Cert students”.

    what the Journal is not saying is that the minister kept it secret from the Cabinet meeting last Tuesday
    and they sprinkle it with the costs and expenditure just to deflect more

    the error was well known before privately before yesterday

    No penalty for Norma though in not disclosing the

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    Mute David Corrigan
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    Oct 1st 2020, 6:59 AM

    @Kavsie: I am sure she is a nice lady but I honestly believe she has no idea whats going on from the time she wakes up in the morning to the time she goes back to sleep at night. She seems to be way out of her depth.

    142
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    Mute Mary Walshe
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    Oct 1st 2020, 10:45 AM

    @David Corrigan:
    The Monochrome Minister!

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    Mute Thomas Sheridan
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    Oct 1st 2020, 7:51 AM

    All the IT and software expertise in this country and we get a Canadian company to provide this fairly basic software utility.
    Class action lawsuit anyone?

    101
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    Mute Seán Kinsella
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    Oct 1st 2020, 9:57 AM

    @Thomas Sheridan: That is exactly what people should be asking. Why a Canadian company? A quick google for ‘how many software companies in Ireland’ returned 900. Shop Local, Stay Local, Travel Local…the economy is suffering… but pay a Canadian company 75k to develop software which clearly wasn’t tested. The requirement was to take the best 2 subjects, and they took the worst 2 …

    36
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    Mute Forest Hump
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    Oct 1st 2020, 9:58 AM

    @Thomas Sheridan: procurement is transparently sourced in public service, it’s part of being in EU. Irish companies likely bid themselves out of it by charging higher rates, I’ve seen it before.

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    Mute Seán Kinsella
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    Oct 1st 2020, 10:24 AM

    @Forest Hump: Could well have been the case .. perhaps they included testing in their proposal? ;)

    16
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    Mute Brian Cunningham
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    Oct 1st 2020, 10:54 AM

    @Thomas Sheridan: Not defending the government in any way, but perhaps they went abroad to remove any possibility being accused of bias. As has been stated there are hundreds of IT firms in Ireland and guaranteed that most people in them will know someone doing the leaving cert this year…

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    Mute ed w
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    Oct 1st 2020, 11:04 AM

    @Brian Cunningham: they would have gone with the lowest quote. I doubt many companies in Ireland would have the capacity to do this sort of work in the timeframes that were required.

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    Mute Craic_a_tower
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    Oct 1st 2020, 11:29 AM

    @Brian Cunningham: you obviously don’t understand there are rules for tenders. You can’t randomly add a factor like the Irish companies will have staff effected by this. Can you imagine if the banks or social welfare insisted no Irish residents worked in IT because they may help out friends and family.

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    Mute Craic_a_tower
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    Oct 1st 2020, 11:32 AM

    @ed w: no there is a whole host of criteria and prices is just one. Everybody knows that cheapest isn’t best. Will have to look up the tender to see why they won rather than random “theories” without any knowledge of actual processes

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    Mute Forest Hump
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    Oct 1st 2020, 8:42 PM

    @Craic_a_tower: it’s worth 40/50% in some cases

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    Mute Barry
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    Oct 1st 2020, 6:39 AM

    The problem was with the DATA, provided by the Dept? It was bottom 2 not top 2? Pretty important. Check the baseline data, if you check anything.

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    Mute ed o brien
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    Oct 1st 2020, 6:42 AM

    She reminds me of Mrs Doyle, “Would you like a cup of tea Father?”

    Nothing surprising here, was a fiasco from start to whenever this will finish.

    65
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    Mute Dave Byrne
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    Oct 1st 2020, 6:54 AM

    Where did they get this Minister from ? Never heard of her compared to the old reliables of Mc grath Collins calleary etc

    36
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    Mute Paul Potts
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    Oct 1st 2020, 7:31 AM

    @Dave Byrne: It’s called gender balance, not who’s best for the job. I’m all for best for the job, let them be a man or woman. She’s clearly out of her depth. A first time TD propelled to a Ministerial job immediately.

    95
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    Mute Kavsie
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    Oct 1st 2020, 6:37 AM

    “It emerged yesterday that two errors were found in the code responsible for calculating the grades of this year’s Leaving Cert students”.

    what the Journal is not saying is that the minister kept it secret from the Cabinet meeting last Tuesday
    and they sprinkle it with the costs and expenditure just to deflect more

    the error was well known privately before yesterday

    31
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    Mute Collitov
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    Oct 1st 2020, 8:18 AM

    To be fair she is not responsible for this clusterf**ck. Why did they not go ahead with the exams with all the spare capacity in schools with no Junior Cert and all the spare room in Community Centres, Hotels etc. The Government should know that leaving it to technology is frought with danger as the electronic voting fiasco demonstrates.

    34
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    Mute Craic_a_tower
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    Oct 1st 2020, 10:11 AM

    Having worked in software for over 20 years I can say the majority of faults are a result of the business not clearly defining their requirements. Standard practice is to put in a low bid on the work being defined knowing the business will change their mind and then charging heavily for that additional work. It is next to impossible to prove an IT company didn’t deliver what was requested as there is a sign off process where the business sign off on what was delivered. If you produce software and the business test it and find no problems how can you say the software company didn’t deliver what the business wanted? The business has to give all the details and scenarios And that is where you cannot blame the software company. No penalties will be paid if the software company challenges.

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    Mute Conall
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    Oct 1st 2020, 7:48 AM

    There are different approaches to coding and programming – in this the “quick and dirty” approach may have been used. Appropriate if the programme is for a one-off use (which it was) and the cost of failure is low (which it wasn’t). To be fair to the minister – she would not make the decisions at this level. It may be a case of “wrong place at wrong time” from her perspective. That doesn’t mean I’m saying she knows what she’s doing – it just wouldn’t have made a difference if she did.

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    Mute Daney Howard
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    Oct 1st 2020, 7:57 AM

    @Conall: Mistakes will inevitably appear in new systems but surely this should have been caught by running some test scenarios and comparing the actual results to the predicted results?

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    Mute Rory J Leonard
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    Oct 1st 2020, 8:23 AM

    @Conall:

    There were only a few variables for inclusion in overall Calculated Grades mix from Junior Cert Grades database for students: best two of English, Irish, Maths, and exclude Civil, Social and Political Education (CSPE) grades from the calcs altogether!

    Instead, lowest two of EIM were included, and CSPE grades were factored in for overall search check for highest two.

    It beggars belief that so many highly paid officials and advisors to The Department of Education missed this in advance cross-checks with that Canadian Service provider, confirming that the process would actually deliver correct and accurate results for the students.

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    Mute Aidan Conway
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    Oct 1st 2020, 8:44 AM

    Arent checks better than penalties? Why wasnt it tested by tge deprt? Or independantly?
    Typical ofvstate funded projects no one with expertise overseeing projects.

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    Mute Fachtna Roe
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    Oct 1st 2020, 10:28 AM

    @Aidan Conway: Syntax error in statement 1. Unrecognised identifier(s) in statement 2. Unrecognised identifier(s) in statement 4.

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    Mute Stanley Marsh
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    Oct 1st 2020, 10:00 AM

    I’ll be amazed if there’s only 2 errors found given the short amount of time given to develop this code.

    Companies often spend longer testing their code than the time given to produce this one and there are often still lingering bugs found well after release.

    This whole saga has been a no-win situation from the start with students, parents, teachers, civil servants and politicians going to be on the wrong side no matter what was decided.

    You could run every scenario possible on a supercomputer from going ahead with the LC in June to calculated grades and still not come up with a solution that would please all.

    The pathetic thing from my point of view is the amount of people with no skin in the game desperate to jump in and knife whoever in the back for their own pleasure / gain.

    7
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