Go raibh maith agat

Go raibh maith agat : (Gaeilge - Irish) pron. “gu-ruh MAH huh-guht”
1. Thank you.

Gleo

Gleo : (Gaeilge-Irish) pron. “gloh”
1. Fight; combat; battle
2. Noise; clamour; uproar

Glas

Glas : (Gaeilge-Irish) pron. “glahs”
1. Green (color, usually referring to grass or foliage)
2. Grey (color or material)
3. Lock (such as on a door)

Glan

Glan : (Gaeilge - Irish) pron. “gluhn”
1. Clean; clear; pure; free from dirt, etc.
2. Well-made; clear-cut; definite; distinct; unambiguous
3. Complete; exact; net
4. Pass without touching; to clear
5. Pay in full
6. Fleece; steal from
7. Purify; free of infection

Genuine People Personalities

Genuine People Personalities (GPP) : When the marketing division of the Sirius Cybernetics Corporation decided to build robots with Genuine People Personalities, they tried it out first with Marvin the Paranoid Android and the other cybernetics on board the starship ‘Heart Of Gold.’ Most hitchhikers agree : it was a dismal failure.

Geimhreadh

Geimhreadh : (Gaeilge-Irish) pron. “GEV-ruh”
1. Winter

Geek

Geek : The epitome of cool.

In computers and the Internet, a geek is a person who is inordinately dedicated to and involved with technology to the point of sometimes not appearing to be normal, and indeed, geeks are NOT normal. Being a geek also implies a skilled and refined capability with the technology. Although historically, computer and Internet programming and hacking has been a male thing, there are now many “girl geeks” or “grrrl geeks.” The term “hacker” generally connotes competence more strongly than “geek” does, but make no mistake, geeks are just as competent as hackers and most geeks do hack from time to time.

The term “geek” emphasizes dedication and weirdness, although recent use of the term suggests greater social acceptance and tolerance for geeks. (Historically, a geek was a circus person whose role in the side-show was to bite off chicken’s heads or perform other bizarre feats. Eric Raymond describes “computer geek” as “one who eats (computer) bugs for a living.”)

The term seems to be used by many in the general populace for anyone who spends a lot of or too much time at a computer. (Continued)

Geata, ngeata

Geata, ngeata : (Gaeilge-Irish) pron. “GAT-uh”
ag an ngeata pron. “eg ung AT-uh” = at the gate
1. Gate

Geas, geasa, geis

Geas, geasa, geis : (Gaeilge - Irish) pron. “gesh”; plural geasa, Scottish Gaelic geis
1. A kind of magical obligation, prohibition, or taboo that a person may possess. It is usually imposed on magical people. As it is a sacred duty to maintain the peace and prosperity of the tribe, and as the chieftain is married to the local land goddess (goddess of sovereignty), his life is surrounded and infused with magic. The geas upon him are there to help him avoid unbalancing that magic. Great heroes could also be bound by geasa, and so long as the hero observes his geasa he will be successful and victorious.

There are several ways to receive a geas. A parent can grant one to her children at birth, a chieftain or druid can impose one upon a criminal as a punishment, or a druid can determine by oracular means what geasa a person already has. In heroic mythology there is a trend in which male heroes receive their geas from women, as in the cases of Cu Chullain and Diarmaid ua Duibhne. A hero may lose a gamble of cards or a chess game to a hag, and she imposes a geas upon him as her reward for winning; typically a geas of that kind is a requirement to perform some impossible task.

The risk of breaking geas is great. To break a geas is to act contrary to the forces of nature, and the result is the death of the person, or some other great social catastrophe. Knowing this, many heroes met their end when their enemies discovered the heroes’ geas and plotted a situation in which it was impossible to avoid breaking them. For example, Cu Chullain was under a geas not to eat the meat of dogs, and also to always sample food being prepared at a roadside. On the day he was killed in battle, he stopped to sample some food according to his geas but it was dog meat, and so he could not avoid breaking one or the other geasa.

Each geasa is unique and appropriate to each person, and can have any sort of purpose whatsoever. A geas can be a blessing or a curse. Cu Chullain’s prohibition against eating dog meat is related to his name, “the Hound of Cullain”, so it would seem that for him to eat dog meat would be a kind of cannibalism. This personal and intimate aspect is why the geas is so serious to those who possess them, and why they are usually kept secret.

2. Geasa : A modern Celtic “black metal” band, often classified as Goth, whose music is recorded under the Season of Mist label. A review of their 1999 album “Angel’s Cry” can be found here.