[Opinions] In North America, yes at the moment
in reply to a message by Emily
Perhaps in the future it'll become popular enough for its pronunciation to be widely understood. But the future hasn't come quite yet for it.
Teague (TEEG, I think), the Anglicised form, sounds a little different from Tadhg (TIEG), but is still similar enough in sound to be a good substitute choice imo.
Teague (TEEG, I think), the Anglicised form, sounds a little different from Tadhg (TIEG), but is still similar enough in sound to be a good substitute choice imo.