The two main brances are Brythonic (Welsh and Breton), and Goidelic (Irish and Scottish Gaelic). Which branch is generally considered to have more simplified grammar? In my brief study of the languages, Welsh morphology seems more similar to English than Irish morphology.
Which branch of the Celtic languages is easiest?
Easier for English speakers or amongst themselves?
What happened to Manx and Cornish?
Written or Spoken?
Either way I don't know.
What happened to Manx and Cornish?
Written or Spoken?
Either way I don't know.
<<What happened to Manx and Cornish? >>
I only deal with real languages.
I only deal with real languages.
Hebrew is also a fake language? Or has it 'become' real again? What if millions of people would become native speakers of Klingon. I guess the point to which makes a language 'real' is the fact their spoken as a first language and Manx and Cornish are only spoken as secondary languages.
Taw lucyfer melegas
in gollan del os tha gothys
rag skon ty a tha baynes
heb redempcyon thyma creys
sure thymo creys
oll tha splandar ha tectar
y trayle skon theis tha hacter
ha mer vtheck byllen[y]
myghale pryns ow chyvalry
han elath an order nawe
an rebellyans ma deffry
than doer ganso mergh ha mawe
the effarn hager trygva
ena tregans yn paynes
ha golarowe mere pub pryes
yn pur serten rag nefra
in gollan del os tha gothys
rag skon ty a tha baynes
heb redempcyon thyma creys
sure thymo creys
oll tha splandar ha tectar
y trayle skon theis tha hacter
ha mer vtheck byllen[y]
myghale pryns ow chyvalry
han elath an order nawe
an rebellyans ma deffry
than doer ganso mergh ha mawe
the effarn hager trygva
ena tregans yn paynes
ha golarowe mere pub pryes
yn pur serten rag nefra