| Once |
| Gael |
| Celt |
| Celtic |
| Gaelic. |
| Pinnacle |
| Old Irish |
| Irish ___ |
| Skye talk |
| Additional |
| Highlander |
| Old Gaelic |
| Old tongue |
| In the past |
| Scots Irish |
| Scottish __ |
| Cork tongue |
| Manx tongue |
| Scots-Gaelic |
| Old language |
| Irish tongue |
| Gaelic tongue |
| An old tongue |
| Ancient Irish |
| Irish Gaelic. |
| Skye writing? |
| Scotch Gaelic |
| Scots' tongue |
| Manx relative |
| Certain Scots |
| Gael's tongue |
| Celtic tongue |
| Cousin of Manx |
| Irish relative |
| Limerick words |
| Irish offshoot |
| Ancient tongue |
| Celtic dialect |
| Irish language |
| Goidelic tongue |
| Goldelic tongue |
| Highland Gaelic |
| Manx's relative |
| Whiskey" source |
| Highlander talk |
| Gael's language |
| European tongue |
| Hebrides tongue |
| Scottish tongue |
| Scot's language |
| Highland tongue |
| Celtic language |
| Gaelic language |
| Anagram for seer |
| Hibernian tongue |
| Highlands Gaelic |
| Of the Highlands |
| Old Irish tongue |
| Padraig's tongue |
| Scottish Gaelic. |
| What Scots speak |
| Highland dialect |
| Relative of Manx |
| Hebrides dialect |
| Highlands tongue |
| A Celtic language |
| Goldelic language |
| Talk of the Gaels |
| Caledonian tongue |
| Goidelic language |
| Highlands dialect |
| Highland language |
| Scottish language |
| Limerick language |
| Hebrides language |
| European language |
| Highlands language |
| A foreign language |
| Early Irish tongue |
| Old Irish language |
| Scots Gaelic, e.g. |
| The Irish language |
| Old World language |
| Talk of the Gaelic |
| An old Irish tongue |
| Celts' old language |
| Irish Gaelic tongue |
| Tam-wearer's tongue |
| Language of Ireland |
| Highlander's tongue |
| Irregularly notched |
| Ancient Irish tongue |
| Highlands vernacular |
| Scot's language, say |
| Language of Scotland |
| British Isles tongue |
| Highlanders' language |
| Irish Gaelic language |
| Language of the Celts |
| Old tongue of Ireland |
| Tongue for Brian Boru |
| What some Irish speak |
| Language of the Gaels |
| Emerald Isle language |
| Ancient Irish language |
| A language of Scotland |
| Language in "persecute |
| The language Gàidhlig |
| Slogan" derives from it |
| Highlander's old tongue |
| Language of old Ireland |
| Certain Celtic language |
| Gaelic anagram for seer |
| Irish language offshoot |
| Center of fuller's earth |
| Language related to Manx |
| It's spoken in Stornoway |
| Certain Goidelic language |
| Language in "scatter seed |
| Robert the Bruce's tongue |
| Enya sometimes sings in it |
| Source of the word "galore |
| Ancient language of Ireland |
| Language of ancient Ireland |
| Language spoken in Dingwall |
| Language spoken in Limerick |
| Language that gave us "bard |
| One of the Celtic languages |
| Language that gave us "clan |
| It's heard in the Highlands |
| Old name for Scottish Gaelic |
| Source of the word "trousers |
| Language spoken in Stornoway |
| Language that gave us "plaid |
| Language of the British Isles |
| A language spoken in Scotland |
| Goidelic language of Scotland |
| Language that gave us "hubbub |
| Language that gave us "galore |
| It's heard up in the Highlands |
| Language in "another serving"? |
| Language that gives us "whiskey |
| It may be heard in the Highlands |
| Language from which "clan" comes |
| Language spoken around Loch Ness |
| Plaid" and "spunk" derive from it |
| Traditional language of the Irish |
| Celtic tongue of the British Isles |
| Language from which "galore" comes |
| Language from which "hubbub" comes |
| Language that gave us "smithereens |
| Language of the Scotch Highlanders. |
| Language from which "whiskey" comes |
| Language heard on Cape Breton Island |
| Language heard in the Outer Hebrides |
| Dialect also called the Ulster accent |
| Language from which "spunk" is derived |
| Language that gave us the word "whisky |
| Gaelic language from which "plaid" comes |
| Language which gives us "clan" and "bard |
| Language of some Aer Lingus announcements |
| Language of some Dublin Airport announcements |
| It may be heard on the NPR show "The Thistle & Shamrock |
| Language that gave us "slogan," originally meaning "battle cry |