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    4 commenti

    1. ItsWormAllTheWayDown on

      I thought it was already the case for Gaelic and that’s why we have bilingual government signage and such

    2. andreirublov1 on

      Utterly pointless. It’s like giving sandcastles official status when the tide is coming in (well, one sandcastle, and one nothing, because Scots isn’t a language). The reality is, most Scots couldn’t even pronounce those few words on the signboard. This has nothing to do with language or culture, and everything to do with nationalism. The SNP loves cheap gestures that are of no real benefit to anyone, except bureaucrats.

      Chan eil mi toilichte 🙁

    3. Krabsandwich on

      The SNP doing some student politics good lord never seen that before, whatever next going to the UN claiming Scotland is a colony…. oh hang on.

    4. OO-MA-LIDDI on

      I don’t speak gaelic myself, however, I don’t think this goes far enough. Native gaelic speakers are still worse off than their counterparts in Wales.

      While the ability to form a company in Gaelic may be of marginal benefit and is, anyway, a reserved matter, the Scottish Parliament does have the authority to allow Gaelic to be used to give evidence in court and end centuries of discrimination. Everybody should have the right to use their native tongue to give evidence in court.

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