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<a-href="https://tuairiscie"-class="credit-tuairisc"-target="-blank"-rel="noopener-noreferrer"></a>-‘prime-minister-is-his-official-title-in-english.-he’s-not-royalty’-–-achrann-faoin-taoiseach-agus-comhfhreagrai-an-bbc

‘Prime Minister is his official title in English. He’s not royalty’ – achrann faoin Taoiseach agus comhfhreagraí an BBC

| Tuairisc.ie | ,

Tá raic tarraingthe ar na meáin shóisialta ag Emma Vardy, comhfhreagraí Éireannach Nuacht BBC, mar gheall ar chosaint a dhéanamh ar úsáid an téarma Prime Minister seachas Taoiseach.

Bhí Vardy ag tagairt do scéal a craoladh ar an BBC aréir faoi Leo Varadkar agus cuairt Phríomh-Aire na Breataine Boris Johnston ar Bhaile Átha Cliath.

Chosain Emma Vardy úsáid an fhocail Prime Minister agus dúirt nach pearsa ríoga a bhí ann. Dúirt sí ar Twitter go raibh sé deacair go leor a bheith ag iarraidh an Breatimeacht a mhíniú don phobal sa Ríocht Aontaithe gan a bheith ag úsáid ‘non-understandable terms’.

Why? Prime Minister is his official title in English. He’s not royalty, he’s someone GB viewers need to know about, especially right now. Brexit’s bad enough with non-understandable terms as it is. https://t.co/ZuyOFc9qVv

— Emma Vardy (@EmmaVardyTV) September 9, 2019

Is beag glacadh a bhí ag roinnt daoine ar Twitter leis an seasamh sin. Mhínigh duine amháin gurb é Taoiseach an leagan oifigiúil ar an bpost i mBéarla agus i nGaeilge agus nach é Prime Minister an t-aistriúchán ceart a bhí ar an bhfocal sin.

An Taoiseach is the official title in both Irish and English.  Moreover, it is not a literal translation of Prime Minister.

— Grainne Murphy (@stonegatemum) September 9, 2019

Níor ghéill Emma Vardy don argóint sin, áfach. Mhaígh sí gurbh fhearr a thuigfeadh pobal na Breataine ‘Irish Prime Minister’ seachas Taoiseach. Bhainfeadh sí úsáid as an bhfocal Taoiseach i dtuairiscí fada nuachta ach ní fheilfeadh sin i gcás ceannlínte, a dúirt sí.  

I didn’t say it was the literal translation. But Irish Prime Minister is a term that more UK viewers will understand. As I keep saying, in longer pieces you’ll hear Taoiseach too, but in short headlines/tweets for a primarily UK audience it’s generally Irish PM

— Emma Vardy (@EmmaVardyTV) September 9, 2019

Is beag glacadh a bhí leis an míniú sin ach oiread agus mhéadaigh ar an aighneas faoin Taoiseach.

She’s the Irish political correspondent for BBC! What a disgraceful attitude for her to take.

— Aisling (@Aisling_Pash) September 9, 2019

Am taken aback by her attitude TBH.  Am thinking she’s disinclined to go outside her UK specific comfort zone

— Iseult (@Dogbowl31Medb) September 9, 2019

In fairness. We are constantly referring to your monarchy by their full title and we’re a republic opposed to monarchy. It’s a respect thing. It’s one word in a language indigenous to these islands. I’m sure your audience can handle it. It’d probably do them some good tbh.

— Derek Conlon (@derekconlon) September 9, 2019

Ní fada go raibh ceist bhunreachtúil déanta den easaontas agus cuireadh an mhír chuí as Bunreacht na hÉireann ar fáil i mBéarla.

pic.twitter.com/n3P8L8MIYJ

— James Love (@james__love) September 9, 2019

Bhí míniú níos iomláine ar stádas an bunreachtúil an fhocail ag Trevor Herbert a dúirt go raibh 52 tagairt don bhfocal sa bhunreacht agus go raibh an focal ‘prime minister’ ann mar shainmhíniú seachas mar aistriúchán. 

The constitution uses Taoiseach when referring to the office 52 times. It only uses prime minister to help define it (not to translate it to English).

— Trevor Herbert (@riadach) September 9, 2019

Nocht Eoin O’Malley, eolaí sóisialta in Ollscoil Chathair Bhaile Átha Cliath, a thuairim féin ar stádas bunreachtúil an fhocail.

No it isn’t. The official title in English and the vernacular is to say Taoiseach. pic.twitter.com/eiCMmqVG53

— Eoin O’Malley (@AnMailleach) September 10, 2019

Mheabhraigh duine eile gur bhain Banríon Shasana féin úsáid as an ‘gcúpla focal’ le linn di a bheith in Éirinn.

When Queen Elizabeth visited Ireland,  she made the effort to address a formal banquet in Irish…it was very much appreciated.  It fostered goodwill.

— Iseult (@Dogbowl31Medb) September 9, 2019

Bhí Louise Ní Riagáin an-mhíshásta gur cheap comhfhreagraí an BBC go raibh an focal Taoiseach ‘non-understandable’. Mhol sí do chomhfhreagraí Nuachta an BBC ‘oideachas a chur uirthi féin’ faoin bhfocal agus teideal ceart Leo Varadkar a úsáid;

Non-understandable terms? That’s pathetic. Educate yourself and use the correct title.

— Louise Ní Ríagáin (@louiseneeree) September 9, 2019

Thug iriseoir idirnáisiúnta amháin tacaíocht do sheasamh Emma Vardy. Mheabhraigh Jon Stone, comhfhreagraí Eorpach ag an nuachtán Sasanach The Independent, gur nós é teideal poist a aistriú go Béarla. An cleachtas a bheadh aige féin ná an focal Taoiseach a úsáid an dara huair in alt ina luafaí é.

i tend to use ‘the irish prime minister’ too, we tend to translate the job title for all languages. I often put taoiseach for second mention once it’s been established who he is, but as emma says, a lot of readers just won’t know what it means

— Jon Stone (@joncstone) September 9, 2019

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