Page:English as we speak it in Ireland - Joyce.djvu/58

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CH. IV.]
IDIOMS FROM THE IRISH LANGUAGE.
43

In our Anglo-Irish dialect the expression at all is often duplicated for emphasis: ‘I'll grow no corn this year at all at all’: ‘I have no money at all at all.’ So prevalent is this among us that in a very good English grammar recently published (written by an Irishman) speakers and writers are warned against it. This is an importation from Irish. One of the Irish words for 'at all' is idir (always used after a negative), old forms itir and etir:—nir bo tol do Dubthach recc na cumaile etir, ‘Dubthach did not wish to sell the bondmaid at all.’ In the following old passage, and others like it, it is duplicated for emphasis Cid beac, itir itir, ges do obar: ‘however little it is forbidden to work, at all at all.’ (‘Prohibitions of beard,’ O'Looney.)

When it is a matter of indifference which of two things to choose, we usually say ‘It is equal to me’ (or ‘all one to me’), which is just a translation of is cuma liom (best rendered by ‘I don't care’). Both Irish and English expressions are very common in the respective languages. Lowry Looby says:—‘It is equal to me whether I walk ten or twenty miles.’ (Gerald Griffin.)

'I am a bold bachelor, airy and free,
Both cities and counties are equal to me.'

(Old Song.)

‘Do that out of the face,’ i.e. begin at the beginning and finish it out and out: a translation of deun sin as eudan.

‘The day is rising’ means the day is clearing up,—the rain, or snow, or wind is ceasing—the weather is becoming fine: a common saying in Ireland: a translation of the usual Irish expression tá an lá