Sorry folks, I posted elsewhere, not having seen this thread for introductions.
My name is Àdhamh Ó Broin (Adam) and my mother's people were all from Caithness, while my father's are all Irish. I feel culturally very Scottish however and speak the first revitalised moribund Scottish Gaelic dialect, that of Cowal, with my four children. We speak no English whatsoever (although my wife does!) amongst ourselves.
I would like to pick up as much Nynorn as I can whenever I have time. I have retained most of what I learnt last night at least!
I speak Cowal Gaelic and English fluently, as well as a tolerable level of German which I grew up speaking and was once much better....
If there is any help I can offer, it is probably just in the comparitive sense of how I went about things with Cowal Gaelic, although as I said in the other thread, I had a lot to work with, as well as Nils Holmer's unpublished papers from his fieldwork in Mid-Argyll. My biggest challenge is a bit of a luxury in terms of Nynorn, and that's idiom! I am interviewing speakers of neighbouring dialects to glean what I can about Cowal and weeding out the responses which contain obviously non-Cowal forms.
I would like to ask about idiom though, with Nynorn. How extensively have the oldest surviving Shetlandic speakers of today been interviewed to examine their speech for Norn influence?
Comparitives, for example. In Gaelic you would say: cho geal ris an t-sneachd 'as white as the snow' as you would say in English. It would be interesting to find out if in Shetlandic, they had different objects which were used in this exemplary fashion to illustrate the quality of something else in the comparitive sense.
I noticed mention of the word 'nationlism' earlier and wanted to chip in my share. I think people get somewhat confused with this. You can't be a nationalist when you already have a state. It's impossible. People who call themselves nationalists when they already belong to a nation with a state are not nationalists, they are fascists. I do not think it is fair to group all of what people believe are 'nationalists' together, as those people are giving the rest of us a very bad name indeed. I will be a nationalist until Scotland is independent of Britain. After that, I will no longer be a nationalist because there will be no purpose for it!
There is nothing more irritating than this misconception, for a genuine nationalist who harbours no ill-will of any kind to anyone else because of where they, their parents or their ancestors came from! It is an entirely functional thing for me and when that function is served, it will naturally cease to be....