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Frost covers the ground and blades of grass this morning in the Pheonix Park, Dublin Sam Boal/RollingNews.ie

Last night was the coldest night of the year as temperatures plunged as low as -8.8 degrees

Tonight is due to be cold, with some wintry showers and icy patches in places.

LAST UPDATE | 16 Dec 2022

LAST NIGHT WAS officially the coldest night of the year so far as temperatures plunged as low as almost -9 degrees in some areas. 

The coldest temperature last night was recorded by Met Éireann as -8.8 degrees at Mount Dillon in Roscommon. 

Temperatures of -7.4 degrees were recorded at Markree Castle, Co Sligo and -7.1 degrees in Athenry, Co Galway.

A Status Orange low temperature/ice warning is in place for Carlow, Kildare, Kilkenny, Laois, Longford, Meath, Offaly, Westmeath, Cavan, Monaghan, Clare, Cork, Limerick, Tipperary, Galway and Roscommon until midday. 

A Status Yellow low temperature/ice warning is in place for the remaining counties until midday. 

Then, another Status Yellow ice warning will kick in for the whole country until midday tomorrow. 

Met Éireann warns there will be icy conditions in some areas today and tonight as showers gradually track southeastwards over the country. 

It says some of  the showers will be of freezing rain, sleet and possibly snow. 

Untreated roads and paths may be treacherous in places, the forecaster warns.

Looking at the general forecast, showers will extend southeastwards across Connacht and Ulster during this afternoon and evening, turning wintry in places. 

Tonight is due to be cold, with some wintry showers and icy patches in places. 

Temperatures will drop as low as 0 degrees tonight. 

Tomorrow is forecast to be another cold day with mist and fog in some areas. 

Plenty of dry weather is expected, but with a few showers, especially in southern and western coastal counties. 

Looking ahead, Met Éireann says the weather will be unsettled with some wet and windy conditions.

Tomorrow night is set to start off cold with some frost in the midlands and north at times. However, outbreaks of rain will spread from south overnight and it will turn less cold. The rain will be heavy in places and may be preceded by some mountain snow in Ulster. 

Temperatures will again drop as low as 0 degrees tomorrow night. 

Met Éireann says it will be rather windy on Sunday with outbreaks of rain or drizzle, most persistent in the south and west of the country. 

Sunday will also see milder conditions with highest temperatures ranging from 8 degrees over north Ulster to 12 or 13 degrees in the south. 

Sunday night is expected to be very mild with scattered outbreaks of rain or drizzle. Temperatures are forecast to not drop below 10 to 12 degrees nationwide. 

If you’ve snapped a particularly picturesque photo of this week’s ice, frost or snow, you can submit it here or to tips@thejournal.ie for the chance to have it featured on our site and social media channels.

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16 Comments
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    Mute SeekingUniverslTruth
    Favourite SeekingUniverslTruth
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    Aug 3rd 2014, 8:41 AM

    ” People still take English classes in US high schools up to senior year”

    eh. don;t we do that here?

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    Mute Owen Slattery
    Favourite Owen Slattery
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    Aug 3rd 2014, 9:33 AM

    Albeit with an emphasis on shite poetry

    72
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    Mute Stephen Downey
    Favourite Stephen Downey
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    Aug 3rd 2014, 10:50 AM

    Not really, by Leaving Cert you are not learning to speak and write English, you are studying the English language.
    In the US with huge diversity of cultures, English remains a barrier to some. In fact if I’m not mistaken, there are more people in the US who identify Spanish as their first language than any other language.

    Interesting article, might give some insight to those who think Irish is dead and why so many still support it.

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    Mute Paul FitzGerald
    Favourite Paul FitzGerald
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    Aug 3rd 2014, 9:08 AM

    You never really “get” a language until you live in a country that speaks it. The grammatical nuances, the regional accents, but above all the slang.

    After 10 years learning classroom French, the first conversation I had in France started with “avez-vous du fue?” ….do I have fire? Am I on fire? I was utterly unable to figure out what was going on. (I was being asked for a light for a cigarette!)

    I think we place too much emphasis on the classroom environment, rather than just doing conversational stuff. I was fortunate enough to go to Italy for six months years ago and all I got was a few lessons before hand and was thrown into a working Italian environment. I learnt pretty quickly as I had to. My limited Italian mightn’t be grammatically perfect, but on a practical level it’s pretty good at a spoken level.

    I’m currently trying to learn Portuguese, but the area I go to in the Algarve has the Portuguese equivalent of a Kerry accent. You won’t find it in a book, you have to learn it the hard way with the locals pissing themselves laughing at your pronunciation.

    83
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    Mute Conor Gallagher
    Favourite Conor Gallagher
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    Aug 3rd 2014, 8:58 AM

    Language as a part of one’s identity, that makes sense…Perhaps it properly explains why a minority of Irish people boast about knowing no Irish after 14 years of it being “rammed down their throats” but then correct a polish person who mispronounces a word when they learn a few phrases as gaeilge (many non Anglophones are multilingualists and enjoy learning a language for the sake of learning, even if it is outside the top 200 languages in the world.).

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    Mute john stewart
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    Aug 3rd 2014, 9:21 AM

    Tir gan teanga, Tir gan anam

    61
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    Mute Chris Kubik
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    Aug 3rd 2014, 9:34 AM

    I’m native German but was always very good at English. I’ve been living in Ireland for 8 years now, married to an Irish woman. My second language has now become my first and I tend to struggle with my German these days.

    59
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    Mute Niall O Dochartaigh
    Favourite Niall O Dochartaigh
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    Aug 3rd 2014, 9:44 AM

    I can speak,Irish, English and Swedish,does this make me a Cunning Lingquist or is that just a slip of the tongue ?

    36
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    Mute Lily Signoret
    Favourite Lily Signoret
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    Aug 3rd 2014, 11:05 AM

    I’m French but speak English fluently, and have spent the last 10 years in different English-speaking countries (I’m 30). I always found English easy to learn and improve, easier to play around with than French. Speaking English has definitely helped built the person I am today. It just suits me as a language and I love writing in English. I’m ashamed to say I sometimes struggle finding my words in French… But French is such a beautiful language, the imagery can be breathtaking, and I still get moved listening to songs or readings books in my native language.

    35
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    Mute Ciaran De Bhal
    Favourite Ciaran De Bhal
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    Aug 3rd 2014, 9:10 AM

    Many people would be better off learning their first language correctly before attempting a second.

    33
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    Mute John O Sullivan
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    Aug 3rd 2014, 12:30 PM

    Maybe learn a 2nd language first, and then revisit your opinion.

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    Mute Ciaran De Bhal
    Favourite Ciaran De Bhal
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    Aug 3rd 2014, 1:15 PM

    Have done. Four languages in total. French, Spanish, Irish as well as English.

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    Mute Mark Sweetman
    Favourite Mark Sweetman
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    Aug 3rd 2014, 8:53 AM

    Ja naturlich!

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    Mute Catherine Sims
    Favourite Catherine Sims
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    Aug 3rd 2014, 10:18 AM

    I have always thought I would be terrible at languages. Learning French at school was a nightmare. The teacher was either drunk or severely hung over. It wasn’t uncommon to get hit by the books she threw at the students when she wanted their attention. It’s soured me for sure. Then in her late thirties my sister decided to do a degree in German . She had no previous experience of the language and had the same teachers as I had in secondary school. I thought she was crazy but not only did she complete it she did fantastically well. I am actually thinking of trying to learn a language again now as a result. Maybe not French but Spanish or German.

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    Mute SeekingUniverslTruth
    Favourite SeekingUniverslTruth
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    Aug 3rd 2014, 11:44 AM

    Sounds like the makings of a tribunal

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    Mute Michael Fagan
    Favourite Michael Fagan
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    Aug 3rd 2014, 11:54 AM

    Learning a second language is easy, when your living in a country where the second language is all around you TV, radio, newspapers,public signposts, etc,
    just travel around Europe, almost everyone speaks English to visitors, and their own language among themselves,
    Businessmen say they get a great advantage in international negotiating, with side remarks in their own language
    Such a pity that the people of Ireland (in general) don’t know how to speak their own language

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    Mute Nibbler Dibbler
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    Aug 3rd 2014, 4:11 PM

    Met an elderly gentleman in Denmark suffering from dementia. In his native tongue he could not remember anything not even if I had said yes when he offered me tea or coffee. However, remembering that he could speak excellent English when I had first met him ten years earlier, I switched the conversation into English. Amazing to discover that the dementia was gone and he was completely normal when using his second language!

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    Mute John Stafford
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    Aug 3rd 2014, 3:42 PM

    Learning a language is all about repetition and trying not be lethargic. Simple

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    Mute Amy Wallis
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    Aug 6th 2014, 10:40 AM

    I don’t agree with learning a language changes you as a person, your identity. If you’re learning in the country of the language (ie a foreign country) then you most likely – hopefully! – will grow and change, but not because of the language itself, but because of the experiences you have, something which has been happening to is all our lives to make us who we are today. Those experiences of living in a different country (or even simply the experiences had in a language class in your own country) send you down a different path than not doing so would, because it’s something new and strange, and you do new and differen things, meet new and different people. I would be a completely different person today, and would think of myself in a different way had I never moved to Italy, and stayed in Ireland.

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    Mute Fatima Anwar
    Favourite Fatima Anwar
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    Oct 5th 2014, 2:48 PM

    English language learning classes or learn English as a second language is now easier for ESL students with the help of online integrated English course

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    Mute Konrad Bobrzecki
    Favourite Konrad Bobrzecki
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    Dec 14th 2014, 10:42 AM

    Not that long time ago I’ve tried http://www.bellsenglishonline.com/ ,since I’m not a beginner I started with Intermidiate package of their process,just to see if it will give me anything.Whole course is very intuitive and enjoyable.I think Bellsenglishonline is a worthwhile addition to anything else you might be using for your English learning.

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