@zlf

posting random stuff
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hi

  • 16

  • male

  • dundee, scotland

i speak english fluently and im learning scottish gaelic 🏴󠁧󠁢󠁳󠁣󠁴󠁿

it would be really cool and funny if you follow me

Oct 16, 2023, 7:16 PM
12 0 2

EVIL JEFFALO BE LIKE: “money well spent”

alright after a little trolling i quit blaze now

ok i decided to sign up to blaze

i thought it wouldnt be that bad but it is genuinely one of the worst websites i have ever laid my eyes upon

ok i decided to sign up to blaze

i thought it wouldnt be that bad but it is genuinely one of the worst websites i have ever laid my eyes upon

old pfp returns!

nvm did end up sleeping just got 4 hours of sleep

nighty morning! its 1am rn

cant get to sleep but its a friday tomorrow so who cares, might as well pull an all nighter listening to music or something

nighty morning! its 1am rn

cant get to sleep but its a friday tomorrow so who cares, might as well pull an all nighter listening to music or something

every zlf post usually has some crazy lore behind it

for some reason i am incapable of enjoying music thats in english

but if its in any other language i like it for some reason

💀

and sometimes, we fail at our trolling 😔

we do a little trolling

we do a little trolling

why do random people online who you’ll never meet have to be 100x better than actual people you know????

rishi sunak is built like a pixar character

i LOVE dialectal differences in the scottish gaelic language!!!

i am currently reading a gaelic novel called “hiort”, by iain f. macleòid, who comes from the north end of the western isles, however… the previous novels i read (the constabal murdo books by aonghas pàdraig caimbeul) were written by an author from the south end of the western isles, and you can really see all the different words they used

one thing that i noticed today is that the word for “(a) while” was written as “treis” in hiort, but in constabal murdo, it was “greis”, i prefer greis plus its more widely used anyway, but faclair.com’s map implies that “treis” is a more southern term, which is interesting considering macleòid came from the north of the gaelic speaking world

another small difference is the word for “awful/horrible/very (awfully)”, macleòid spelt it as “uabhasach”, while caimbeul spelt it as “uamhasach”, they’re both pronounced the same but “uabhasach”’s spelling just makes more sense to me, plus i was taught it was uabhasach

I KEEP SEEING THE SAME ADS ON YOUTUBE ALL THE TIME AND IM TIRED OF IT