dictionnaire gaélique - Anglais

Gàidhlig - English

ionadail Anglais:

1. local


If you can't visit a country where they speak the language you are learning, find a local bar where native speakers of that language hang out and start hanging out there.
local food
Every sunday, I drive to my local Buddhist temple. I drive really fast, with loud music on.
Mr Pryor collapsed with a subarachnoid haemorrhage when rehearsing for a performance in Paris. He was taken to local hospital but passed away at 4:23 pm.
A grouping of local businesses held a canned food drive for the homeless this past Saturday.
Much of the riots' coverage was taken from the cell phones of passersby, saving local news outlets valuable film which they would later use for banal "human" "interest" "stories."
One receives unforgettable impressions of scenery and local life.
This shopping district is the only high street in the local area; it stocks the whole line-up from products for daily life to school study equipment.
During the holidays, some university students go to Africa as volunteers and help to perfect local wildlife conservation.
Well the son of that shop's family, seems it's come about that he's to have a shot-gun wedding with a local girl.
Not to be taken lightly, local amusement parks. Couples, families, as far as can be seen people, people, people.
It has happened that people sleeping with the fan on have experienced a freezing of the stomach, as well as a local air pressure stress leading them to feel unwell.
Nowadays UNESCO recommends that everybody should use three languages: the mother tongue, the language of local communication and the international language.
Local industry flourished throughout the land in the Edo period thanks to the promotional efforts by each clan.