- Classical Gaelic
-
Classical Gaelic Spoken in Scotland Extinct 18th century (replaced by Modern Gaelic) Language family Indo-European- Celtic
- Insular Celtic
- Goidelic
- Classical Gaelic
- Goidelic
- Insular Celtic
Writing system Latin Language codes ISO 639-3 ghc Classical Gaelic (Scottish Gaelic: Gàidhlig Chlasaigeach; Irish: Gaeilge Chlasaiceach) is the term used in Scotland for the shared literary form that was in use in Scotland and Ireland 13th to the 18th century.[1] The language is that of Early Modern Irish (also known as Classical Irish but not to be confused with Classical Old Irish). Although the first written signs of Scottish Gaelic having diverged from Early Modern Irish appear as far back as the 12th century annotations of the Book of Deer, Scottish Gaelic did not appear in writing or print on a significant scale until the 1767 translation of the New Testament into Scottish Gaelic.[2]
Encoding
Ethnologue gives the name "Hiberno-Scottish Gaelic" (and the ISO 639-3 code
ghc
) as a cover term for Classical Gaelic and Early Modern Irish.References
- ^ Ó Maolalaigh, R. Scottish Gaelic in Twelve Weeks (2008) Birlinn ISBN 978-1-84158-643-4
- ^ Thomson, D. (ed.) The Companion to Gaelic Scotland (1994) Gairm ISBN 1-871901-31-6
External links
Variants Primitive Irish · Old Irish · Middle Irish · Classical Gaelic · Scottish GaelicDialects Language Alphabet · Gaelic script · Orthography · Phonology · Grammar · Names · Dependent and independent verb formsCulture Categories:- Early Modern languages
- Scottish Gaelic language
- Celtic
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