Mithich domh triall gu tigh Pharais"--"It is time for me to go up unto the House of Paradise.
They took her to the moat or ditch then remaining below Flowerdale House, in the midst of which the old Tigh Dige had formerly stood, and dragged her many times backwards and forwards through the water of the moat.
When it became dark he went to the Tigh Dige, and through an opening he saw by the firelight the boys' little shirts hanging up.
They stripped the blood-stained shirts from the bodies as proofs that the boys were dead, and took them with them to the Tigh Dige.
At last Mr Fraser persuaded him to go; and there were two other passengers, Murdo M'Iver from Tigh na faoilinn, who was going to be a Gaelic teacher in a parish near Stornoway, and Kirstie Mackenzie from Croft.
The Tigh Dige itself was, as its name implies, a house in a ditch or moat.
Hector, unwilling alone to face three of his foes, ran quickly towards the Tigh Dige.
So tha 'n tigh 'g a thogail, the house is in building.
The above list will hopefully give you a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "tigh" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this word.