Ní bheantar a hainm don bhairíghin.
Ní bheantar a hainm don bhairíghin.
(not * is taken * its * name * from the * loaf)
One must call a loaf of bread a loaf of bread.
The meaning here is that even a poor loaf of bread is still a loaf of bread. In other words, a spade is a spade and you cannot not call a spade a spade.
Aodh Mac Cathmhaoil, also known as Aodh Mac Aingil, used this proverb in “Scáthán Shacramuinte na hAithridhe” (1618) to argue that for the purposes of confession, a priest is a priest and the nearest one to hand is as good as any other:
“Ní bheantar a hainm don bhairíghin. As lór ceann ⁊ cosa do bheith ar an sagart ⁊ lámh do chur ós ceann na muinnteire si dochum a rádha go ndérnadar a bhfaoisidin ’s go bhfuil eagla Dé ⁊ grádh a ccreidimh aca.”
A modern version of the saying in the imperative makes it an exact equivalent to “Call a spade a spade”:
Ná baintear an t-ainm den bhairín.
Topics: Proverbial Sayings