Scoil: Achadh na Garron (Aughnagarron) (uimhir rolla 5603)
- Suíomh:
- Achadh na gCeathrún, Co. an Longfoirt
- Múinteoir: -
Sonraí oscailte
Ar fáil faoin gceadúnas Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International (CC BY 4.0)
- XML Scoil: Achadh na Garron (Aughnagarron)
- XML Leathanach 368
- XML “Buying and Selling”
- XML “Hidden Treasures”
Nóta: Ní fada go mbeidh Comhéadan Feidhmchláir XML dúchas.ie dímholta agus API úrnua cuimsitheach JSON ar fáil. Coimeád súil ar an suíomh seo le haghaidh breis eolais.
Ar an leathanach seo
- (ar lean ón leathanach roimhe)The words connected with buying and selling are tick, cant, boot change.
The word tick is used when a person goes to the shop for goods and has no money for to pay for them that person tells the shopkeeper for to give the goods to him or her on tick.Written by Anna Smyth, Aughnagarron, Granard, Co. Longford.
Told by Mrs William Smyth, Aughnagarron, Granard, Co. Longford. Age 45 - Once upon a time there was a man going into Granard by the Gortnawillian laane the byroad from the Aughnagarron road into Barrack Street in Granard and his name was James Reilly of Aughnagarron, Granard, Co. Longford.
When he had gone some distance in the lane he cut in across the fields known locally as the rockfields.
Those rocks lie at the back of James Finnegan's house of Grassyard, Granard Co. Longford and they are also in Berney Macken's fields of Barrack Street, Granard.(leanann ar an chéad leathanach eile)- Bailitheoir
- Anna Smyth
- Inscne
- Baineann
- Seoladh
- Achadh na gCeathrún, Co. an Longfoirt
- Faisnéiseoir
- Mrs Pat Kiernan
- Inscne
- Baineann
- Aois
- 58
- Seoladh
- Achadh na gCeathrún, Co. an Longfoirt