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Open Newsroom - COP27: What did we learn in Egypt?

Get on-the-ground, real-time analysis from the COP27 summit as it reaches its conclusion.

THIS FRIDAY AT 1pm, The Journal will host a free Open Newsroom panel discussion and Q&A offering an in-depth analysis of COP27, the core challenges facing those gathered in Egypt, and whether the summit has yielded the kind of action needed to prevent the worst effects of climate catastrophe.

Editor Sinéad O’Carroll will be joined by Lauren Boland, The Journal‘s climate reporter, who was on the ground at the World Leaders Summit during COP27′s opening week.

Also joining the panel is Nils Mollema of Action Aid, and Sadhbh O’Neill, a lecturer and member of the DCU Centre for Climate and Society, both of whom will be contributing from Sharm El Sheikh as COP27 reaches its conclusion.

The panel will look at core issues raised at this year’s conference, including loss and damage, the price being paid by developing nations for the emissions of the wealthy and powerful, and analysing what, if any, hope we can take from any agreements that are reached in the final days of the landmark summit. 

If you would like participate in our COP27 webinar, simply register for the event here

Over the past two weeks, The Journal has sent regular updates to subscribers of the Temperature Check newsletter, which you can read here.

Readers like you are keeping these stories free for everyone...
Our aim at The Journal is to produce reliable, meaningful, independent news and make it available to everyone. Our commitment to covering the climate crisis and what it means for all of us is an important part of that mission. We have built a dedicated climate action team who will be covering COP27 in Egypt this month. Their original and thoughtful reporting from Sharm El Sheikh will be free to everyone. This is intentional: we believe as many people as possible should be able to access accurate, insightful information on climate and environmental concerns.

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    Mute jamesdecay
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    May 12th 2019, 9:03 AM

    Excellent as always. The highlight of The Journal week.

    I wonder how the learned professor would have visualised that great Irish expression “I will in me hole”?

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    Mute John Kelly
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    May 12th 2019, 9:43 AM

    @jamesdecay: or you will in your arse

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    Mute Pseud O'Nym
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    May 12th 2019, 9:54 AM

    @John Kelly: or even just ” I will, yah”

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    Mute Brian Carroll
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    May 12th 2019, 7:01 PM

    @John Kelly: or better still “The high hole of me arse”

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    Mute David Stapleton
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    May 13th 2019, 3:40 PM

    @jamesdecay: I like to think he’d respond with “ask me bollix”…

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    Mute Ciarán FitzGerald
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    May 12th 2019, 10:17 AM

    Saw a poster for a play today called “colleen bawn”

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    Mute sean o'dhubhghaill
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    May 12th 2019, 1:10 PM

    @Ciarán FitzGerald: The Colleen Bawn by Dion Boucicault (what a name!). First produced in about 1870-80.

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    Mute Canny Jem
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    May 12th 2019, 8:58 PM

    The sad fact is that Gaelic languages are, like Latin, fast becoming classical ones.

    As anything modern arrives, a new word in Irish languages, based on English, needs to be invented. For example, while we had Irish for wheel (‘roth’), when the bicycle and motor car arrived, there were no Irish words for them… So we invented ‘Rothar’ and ‘Gluaisteán’, both of which have evolved into Hiberno/English as ‘bicical’ and carr mótar.
    Darragh wrote an interesting article a few weeks ago on Irish for computer terms.
    Béider go mór fada me a dhéin mé ar mo ‘vice-ical’. (“It might be better I ger’ on me bike”).

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    Mute Kieran Duffy
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    May 13th 2019, 4:19 PM

    @Canny Jem: Car is a word of Celtic origin, so no harm in using that.

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    Mute Joe Clery
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    May 12th 2019, 6:05 PM

    The tyranny of the Irish Education beat Gaeilge into us on one side and bet our local Hiberno English dialects out of them on the other

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    Mute Michael Kavanagh
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    May 12th 2019, 7:35 PM

    @Joe Clery:
    Can’t say that was my experience.
    The teachers we had over the years had every Hib dialect going – staff rooms must have been like Babel!

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    Mute Canny Jem
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    May 12th 2019, 10:33 PM

    @Joe Clery: I agree with Michael Kavanagh. Not my experience either. Despite being born in Dublin of my Dubliner parents not having but a smattering of Irish, I learned Irish quickly in infants school and developed it more in Primary School. It was not an all-Irish school, like Coláiste Mhuire in Parnell Sq was.
    I did most of my school exams in Irish (except for Physics, Chemistry, English, French and Latin classes) and spoke it very fluently with my fellow school pals daily in the schoolyard, on the sports fields and even on the streets. My highest score in Leaving Cert was in Irish, very nearly failed English, French and Latin!
    My wife was also a Dubliner, a fluent Irish speaker and her parents didn’t have much Irish either. We often spoke in Irish abroad on holidays together, like having a secret code language amongst foreign people.
    Sadly, after school I had little use for Irish and am now rusty on it, yet still can follow the news in Irish on radio and tv. BTW, TG4 has some of the best programmes that have English subtitles for “Engerlanders”.

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    Mute Ken Mccullagh
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    May 12th 2019, 11:19 PM

    What about that God-awful translation of ‘go n’eirigh an bothar leat’ to ‘ may the road rise with you’ so beloved of souvenir shops in places like Killarney?

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    Mute lisa duignan
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    May 13th 2019, 6:48 AM

    Just wait another 5 years or so for the next batch of immigrants planned coming from Sudan and Somalia. We will be hearing even less Hiberno English.

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