It's the Word of the Day podcast for March 17th.
Today's word is Erin Gobrah, also pronounced Erin Gobrah,
and spelled as three words, capital E-R-I-N-G-O-B-R-A-G-H.
Erin Gobrah is an Irish phrase that means Ireland forever.
Here's the word used in a sentence from the Worcester Telegram and Gazette.
Dressed in full Irish regalia, Fitzgerald rode his horse,
Jack, through the streets of Clinton every St.
Patrick's Day.
Jack was also dressed for the occasion with green ribbons on his mane and a green blanket with gold lettering,
Erin Gobra.
March 17th is the feast day of the patron saint of Ireland, St.
Patrick.
In the United States, it's also the day of shamrocks,
leprechauns, and green beer, and green everything else.
Blue was once the color traditionally associated with St.
Patrick, but the color green has several links to Ireland,
including its use on Ireland's flag in the form of a stripe,
its symbolism of Irish nationalism, and the country's religious history,
and its connections to Ireland's nickname, the Emerald Isle.
On St.