Page:English as we speak it in Ireland - Joyce.djvu/62

CH. IV.] common form of phrase. ‘Is herself [i.e. the mistress] at home Jenny?’ ‘I'm afraid himself [the master of the house] will be very angry when he hears about the accident to the mare.’ This is an Irish idiom. The Irish chiefs, when signing their names to any document, always wrote the name in this form, Misi O'Neill, i.e. ‘Myself O'Neill.’

A usual expression is ‘I have no Irish,’ i.e. I do not know or speak Irish. This is exactly the way of saying it in Irish, of which the above is a translation:—Ní’l Gaodhlainn agum.

To let on is to pretend, and in this sense is used everywhere in Ireland. ‘Oh your father is very angry’: ‘Not at all, he's only letting on.’ ‘If you meet James don't let on you saw me,’ is really a positive, not a negative request: equivalent to—‘If you meet James, let on (pretend) that you didn't see me.’ A Dublin working-man recently writing in a newspaper says, ‘they passed me on the bridge (Cork), and never let on to see me’ (i.e. ‘they let on not to see me’).

‘He is all as one as recovered now’; he is nearly the same as recovered.

At the proper season you will often see auctioneers’ posters:—‘To be sold by auction 20 acres of splendid meadow on foot,’ &c. This term on foot, which is applied in Ireland to growing crops of all kinds—corn, flax, meadow, &c.—is derived from the Irish language, in which it is used in the oldest documents as well as in the everyday spoken modern Irish; the usual word cos for 'foot' being used. Thus in the Brehon Laws we are told that a wife's share of the flax is one-ninth if it be on foot (for a cois,