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Goidelic languages - Other Celtic languages | A Wisdom Archive on Goidelic languages - Other Celtic languages |  | Goidelic languages - Other Celtic languages A selection of articles related to Goidelic languages - Other Celtic languages |  |
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More material related to Goidelic Languages can be found here:
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Goidelic languages, Goidelic languages - Classification, Goidelic languages - History and range, Goidelic languages - Irish, Goidelic languages - Manx, Goidelic languages - Nomenclature, Goidelic languages - Other Celtic languages, Goidelic languages - Scottish Gaelic, Canadian Gaelic, Gaelicization, Highland Clearances, Highland Land League, Irish Land League
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ARTICLES RELATED TO Goidelic languages - Other Celtic languages |  |  |  | Goidelic languages - Other Celtic languages: Encyclopedia II - Goidelic languages - Other Celtic languagesAll the other living Celtic languages belong to the Brythonic branch of Celtic, which includes Welsh (Cymraeg), Breton (Brezhoneg), and Cornish (Kernowek). Pictish was the ancient language of much of modern day Scotland, but it is not clear that Pictish was a Celtic language. These are sometimes incorrectly referred to as "Gaelic". For extinct Celtic languages of the European mainland, see Continental Celtic languages.
There are also two mixed languages that are not specifically Goidelic languages as such, but hav ...
See also:Goidelic languages, Goidelic languages - Nomenclature, Goidelic languages - Classification, Goidelic languages - History and range, Goidelic languages - Irish, Goidelic languages - Scottish Gaelic, Goidelic languages - Manx, Goidelic languages - Other Celtic languages Read more here: » Goidelic languages: Encyclopedia II - Goidelic languages - Other Celtic languages |
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 |  |  | Goidelic languages - Other Celtic languages: Encyclopedia II - Goidelic languages - Scottish GaelicSome people in the north and west of Scotland and the Hebrides still speak Scottish Gaelic, but because of its minimal official recognition and because of large-scale emigration from those parts of Scotland, the language has been in decline. There are now believed to be approximately 1,000 native speakers of Scottish Gaelic in Nova Scotia and 60,000 in Scotland.
Its historical range was much larger. For example, it was the everyday language of most of the rest of the Highlands until little more than a century ago. Galloway had also be ...
See also:Goidelic languages, Goidelic languages - Nomenclature, Goidelic languages - Classification, Goidelic languages - History and range, Goidelic languages - Irish, Goidelic languages - Scottish Gaelic, Goidelic languages - Manx, Goidelic languages - Other Celtic languages Read more here: » Goidelic languages: Encyclopedia II - Goidelic languages - Scottish Gaelic |
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 |  |  | Goidelic languages - Other Celtic languages: Encyclopedia II - Goidelic languages - IrishIrish is one of Ireland's two official languages (along with English) and is still fairly widely spoken in the south, west and north west of Ireland. The legally defined Irish-speaking areas are called the Gaeltacht. At present, Irish is primarily spoken in Counties Cork, Donegal, Mayo, Galway, Kerry and, to a lesser extent, in Waterford and Meath. Irish is also spoken by a few people in Northern Ireland and has been accorded some legal status there under the 1998 Belfast Agreement. Approximately 260,000 people in the Republic of Ireland can ...
See also:Goidelic languages, Goidelic languages - Nomenclature, Goidelic languages - Classification, Goidelic languages - History and range, Goidelic languages - Irish, Goidelic languages - Scottish Gaelic, Goidelic languages - Manx, Goidelic languages - Other Celtic languages Read more here: » Goidelic languages: Encyclopedia II - Goidelic languages - Irish |
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 |  |  | Goidelic languages - Other Celtic languages: Encyclopedia II - Goidelic languages - History and rangeGoidelic languages were once restricted to Ireland, but sometime between the 3rd century and the 6th century a group of the Irish Celts known to the Romans as Scoti began migrating from Ireland to what is now Scotland and eventually assimilated the Picts (a group of peoples who may have originally spoken a Brythonic language) who lived there. Manx, the former common language of the Isle of Man, is closely akin to the Gaelic spoken in north east Ireland and the now extinct Gaelic of Galloway (in southwest Scotland), with heavy influenc ...
See also:Goidelic languages, Goidelic languages - Nomenclature, Goidelic languages - Classification, Goidelic languages - History and range, Goidelic languages - Irish, Goidelic languages - Scottish Gaelic, Goidelic languages - Manx, Goidelic languages - Other Celtic languages Read more here: » Goidelic languages: Encyclopedia II - Goidelic languages - History and range |
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More material related to Goidelic Languages can be found here:
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