In Scottish Gaelic, the word for 'cheers' is slà inte mhath, meaning 'good health'. It is pronounced as 'slaancha vaa'.
i BELIEVE IT MEANS "TOWN OF" OR "PLACE OF"
I think you mean McKenna.
"écossais" is Scottish in French.
People with a mix of Irish and Scottish heritage.
The origins are uncertain, Scottish Gaelic suggest Banbh meaning 'piglet'
It would be Slàinte mhath! in Scottish Gaelic.
Sláinte = cheers (Irish); Slàinte (Scottish).
Its Scottish Gaelic or Gàidhlig. It means "You are beautiful" (or pretty, or handsome depending on the context it is used). cheers bigears, bairnsangs
Slancha is an anglicisation. In Irish it's "Sláinte", it means "cheers"
cheers?
cheers = "na zdraví" and it actually means "on our health"
Cheers; Polish
cheers
they mean cheers
It is a toast, like cheers
If you mean cheers, as in a toast to fortune and good health, a common word is "salud."
Irish: Sláinte (mhaith) Scottish Gaelic: Slàinte mhath Manx: Welsh: Iechyd da Breton: Cornish: