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The page as it exists now is inaccurate; Old Irish is no longer spoken - Old Irish is the common ancestor of Irish and Scots gaelic, but the language in use in Ireland today is most definitly "New Irish". -- Jim Regan 01:05, 8 Aug 2003 (UTC)
Plus: the article is superfluous, as it has the same subject as the Irish language page, which is more complete. Erwin 10:08, 8 Aug 2003 (UTC)
"Old Irish possesses much more inflection than its descendants and also employs drastically different phonetic and grammatical structures"
Yes, it is more inflectional; it depends on what you mean by 'drastically different' -both languages might still recognise each other if they met on the street, even if the modern one is 'simpler'.
However, I cannot agree with the idea of "drastically different phonetic structures". I bet natives speakers and those who can pronounce Irish, would be within an hour able to speak with the same blas as OI. In that area, it has (for older speakers, anyway) seen the least change. Apart from the dental fricatives (there were 4), one can find all other phones (/R'/ included, but that is not to say it is the same /R'/ as 1200 years ago). Given that the phonetic table only has meaning if one places phones in their appropriate boxes, and the modern langauge uses the same sounds, (apart from dental fricatives, and some alveolar r's and gemminated consonants, all of which survived into the 20th century in Donegal irish, altho the dental fricatives were in sandhi only), how can one make this spurious claim? —The preceding unsigned comment was added by 80.93.5.45 ( talk • contribs) 16:30, 19 January 2006 (UTC)
The page currently states that modern Irish had changed so much from proto-Celtic that it was not even recognized as Indo-European until the 19th century. For the sake of fairness, Indo-European studies didn't really get under way until the twilight years of the 18th century (with Jones' 1786 lecture on Sanskrit, Latin and Greek), and the term Indo-European didn't get introduced until 1813 ... the 19th century ( check it). I'm willing to believe that scholars were flummoxed, but could you provide a bit more clarification/sources on where this confusion was expressed? 150.135.165.27 ( talk) 23:35, 24 January 2019 (UTC)
that's fair enough -I am not knowledgeable yet to comment on phonotactics
The wording: "/N/, /Nʲ/, /L/, /Lʲ/, /R/, /Rʲ/ represent fortis sonorants whose precise articulation is unknown, but which were probably longer, tenser, and generally more strongly articulated" is not very clear. "Longer", yes, that is a clear, universally understood parameter --- and about the only one clearly stated, for example, in Stifter's new book. But "tenser", "stronger" --- these are at best ad hoc terms used with different meanings by different authors for different languages. If you want to go by modern Irish as a model, then you should use precise articulatory phonetic descriptions thereof (from the literature), otherwise, it might be better not to even include such terms unless you want to say: "by stronger, I actually mean that the unlenited forms were unmarked, and that the lenited ones were approximants", or, "by tenser, I mean that laryngeal constriction accompanied the articulation", or whatever. Jakob37 13:40, 14 April 2007 (UTC)
I know this page isn't edited much but I wanted to ask. There are some phonemes that are described as being uncertain, but ṽ isn't one of them. How do we know that the supposed phonemic /ṽ/ wasn't just /v/, spelled differently simply because of its etymology? Irish has a long tradition of doing things like that, and in fact they still spell mh separately today even though the pronunciation has been merged with bh for 1000 years. Is there an Old Irish pronunciation guide somewhere, written when the language was still alive, that says that it's /ṽ/? Are there misspellings? — Soap — 13:04, 8 January 2011 (UTC)
According to the analysis of Old Irish phonology generally taught nowadays (which is, for example, mentioned here – in German, page 77 – and, for those who can't read German, in Stifter's textbook which the Kommentar refers to, Sengoidelc), internal short vowels following the place of the stress (the interpretation of pretonic vowels is less clear) only distinguished two values, a rounded value, usually interpreted as /u/, and an unrounded value, usually represented as schwa. Only in absolute final position, all five vowel qualities were distinguished in short vowels. Internally, the written short vowels i, e and a should absolutely not be taken as full vowels, but only as ways to represent the neutral vowel orthographically in the absence of more appropriate or specific vowel symbols. Note that from Middle Irish on, unstressed short vowels had collapsed (been neutralised) into a single vowel quality – schwa – in all positions, even in absolute final position, and the full short vowels seen in the written representation are all merely graphic. The practice to write i between slender consonants, a between broad consonants, ai between a broad and a slender consonant and e (in Modern Irish, ea) between a slender and a broad consonant, and in Modern Irish, a at the end of a word after a broad and e after a slender consonant should absolutely not be taken on face value, namely as representing true full vowels /i/, /e/ or /a/ or as diphthongs! Students of Old Irish are discouraged from this interpretation from the beginning on; it is considered a fundamental error. The practice of vowel writing in Irish is likely derived from the phonetic phenomenon that makes a central vowel between slender consonants sound /i/-coloured, between broad consonants /a/-coloured, etc., and that has phonemically irrelevant, automatic glides appear whenever a front vowel and a broad consonant or a back vowel and a slender consonant occur in sequence. In fact, the orthography (the Modern Irish spelling even slightly more so than the Old Irish system) approximates the phonetic vocalic and diphthongal qualities quite closely and nicely and is therefore easy to understand (and helpful for one's reading and pronunciation once this fact is understood). The misconception that these phonetic vowels have phonological relevance, too, however, should absolutely not be propagated in Wikipedia. Currently, the article is not at all clear on this point. The transcriptions also need adaptation. While it is OK to write [ɪ] and [ɐ] in phonetic notation, correct phonological notation may only recognise these as automatic allophones of /ə/. -- Florian Blaschke ( talk) 19:50, 11 April 2012 (UTC)
Presumably /p/ /t/ /k/ in the table are phonetic [ph] etc
I think it might be worth mentioning that very briefly, for several reasons. What do you think?
CecilWard ( talk) 08:50, 11 June 2014 (UTC)
Tony, Ill wirte something substantial on htese points and oost it shirtly when imget my ducks inna row, have been realky ill in recent years somthings are a bit skow CecilWard ( talk) 23:46, 13 June 2014 (UTC)
The superdot is NOT used on just f and s - it's used in manuscripts for any lenition. Ch/ph/th are modern developments. It is also used frequently on b, d, and g, depending on the manuscript. It's often left off as well. As to the nasals - it is also used irregularly, but when it is used, it indicates lenition. I have no sources at the moment (other than the standard thurneysen's grammar) , but this is what I was taught as a graduate student in Old Irish. I will try to look it up this week.
/info/en/?search=Old_Irish#Notable_characteristics
This section here strikes me as wrong. I know a tiny bit of Hebrew, Ugaritic, Phoenician, etc.
A system of conjugated prepositions that is unusual in Indo-European languages (although found in many Semitic languages, e.g. Arabic), e.g. dím "from me", dít "from you", de "from him", di "from her", diib "from them" (basic preposition di "from"). There is a great deal of allomorphy here as well.
This is wrong I think. West Semitic, (Hebrew, Aramaic, Arabic, etc) uses the word Min to mean 'from.' In Hebrew, m'efo means 'from where.'
HeirOfSumer ( talk) 17:24, 19 June 2015 (UTC)
The article claims: "Initial consonant mutation must have been present in at least late Common Celtic (Proto-Celtic) because this distinguishing feature has survived with grammatical significance in both modern Welsh and Breton, and the extinct Cornish language also featured. Because the languages belong to the Brittonic branch of the Celtic language group (so-called "P-Celtic"), initial mutation must predate the split in the development paths of the Brittonic and Goidelic languages. No mutations are, however, attested in Gaulish material so a parallel evolution of the phenomenon in the neo-Celtic languages is also possible. Much of the complex allomorphy has been lost, but the rich sound system has been maintained, with little change, in the modern languages."
Considering the different sound changes that brought about mutations in the two branches, isn't this a bit misleading? I find it dubious that t>th tt>t could be in parallel with t>d tt>th, as in Old Irish vs Welsh.
Source on Welsh: http://people.ds.cam.ac.uk/dwew2/old_and_middle_welsh.pdf
A discussion is taking place to address the redirect Goidelic. The discussion will occur at Wikipedia:Redirects for discussion/Log/2020 May 31#Goidelic until a consensus is reached, and readers of this page are welcome to contribute to the discussion. Soumya-8974 talk contribs subpages 06:35, 31 May 2020 (UTC)
A discussion is taking place to address the redirect Goidel. The discussion will occur at Wikipedia:Redirects for discussion/Log/2020 July 3#Goidel until a consensus is reached, and readers of this page are welcome to contribute to the discussion. Soumya-8974 talk contribs subpages 17:51, 3 July 2020 (UTC)
There is a lot of confusion regarding titles, this article should aim to interlink with factual un-bias history & corresponding wiki pages.
The exhausting issue with Wikipedia is factual history & accuracy.
The English word Irish did not exist pre-1800s, nor did Ireland, so Middle-Irish does not exist, Old Irish does not exist unless you are using the modern name to make reference only, and if those terms are to be used, then factual equivalents should be included.
When referring to Ireland in a selected period, the "correct" reference name(s) should be used for that period in time also.
From the mid 300s, and especially circa 500a.d, Ireland was named Scotia, land of Scots officially & internationally, the Scoti people or (Gaels) spoke Old Gaelic, so factually, Irish Gaelic descends from Old Gaelic or old Scots Gaelic.
Scots Gaelic if not extinct would have become modern Irish with evolution.
As we know the people were called Scots, the name for all Gaels, this accurately aligns Old Gaelic and Old Scots Gaelic, so using an accurate name would simply be Old Gaelic, Middle Gaelic, modern Irish.
If an Irish person is referring to their language, it's acceptable to use old Irish, however as I said if you say Ireland in the 1200s, then the correct name should be included.
Ireland officially ceased being called Scotia (Scotland) in the 1500s.
Rf: University of Dublin.
Old Gaelic would be acceptably neutral. 2A00:23C8:8586:9C00:B896:E401:AD36:FED4 ( talk) 19:53, 3 December 2020 (UTC)DD
@ Kolwing: you changed western coast of Great Britain to Wales in the region part of the infobox. IMO that’s wrong, the western part here denotes both parts of Wales and of Scotland. And as for Old Irish specifically – is it even attested in writing from Wales (later than the 5th–6th century ogham stones, any of them contemporary with Old Irish? ie. 7th–8th centuries?)? It surely was used in (parts of) Scotland (and attested at least in early Middle Irish manuscripts), which now isn’t in any way included in the infobox. Silmethule ( talk) 13:10, 14 January 2022 (UTC)
Text and/or other creative content from Old Irish was copied or moved into Phonological history of Old Irish on August 17, 2022. The former page's history now serves to provide attribution for that content in the latter page, and it must not be deleted as long as the latter page exists. |
As the subsection heading says, content formerly in the history subsection of the article has been moved to Phonological history of Old Irish. Midnight-Blue766 ( talk) 23:32, 18 August 2022 (UTC)
I’m guessing <v> was chosen as it would be more reliably displayed in browsers with a tilde (ṽ/β̃), but isn’t it a little misleading? A mention of this being a bilabial (not labio-dental) sound would seem like a good idea. ⚜ Moilleadóir ✍ 07:14, 5 August 2023 (UTC)
Do we really need to write ⟨e₁ː e₂ː o₁ː o₂ː⟩? If "it is generally thought that /e₁ː/ was higher than /e₂ː/" then surely we can just use a proper IPA transcription ⟨eː ɛː⟩ instead?! By analogy, ⟨oː ɔː⟩ can be used for their back counterparts. Sol505000 ( talk) 11:15, 2 May 2024 (UTC)