Medh Chêl: Difference between revisions

735 bytes added ,  8 September 2021
(Created page with "'''Medh Chêl''' is a Finnic language historically spoken in Lõis's East of England. Today it has very few native speakers; it's predominantly a liturgical language of a...")
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'''Medh Chêl''' is a Finnic language historically spoken in [[Lõis]]'s East of England. Today it has very few native speakers; it's predominantly a liturgical language of a form of Druidism.
[[Medh Chêl/Fanaûcho|About Fanaûcho]]
 
an Iranian language historically spoken in [[Lõis]]'s East of England. Today it has very few native speakers; it's predominantly a liturgical language of a Druidic religion with adherents all over the world but most commonly in the United States, Australia, and Mexico.
 
==Todo==
 
"far west Iranian" branch (shouldn't be Finnic)
 
phonological changes: Brythonic-ish consonant shift eventually turning into Grimm's law?
 
==History==
 
Medh Chêl is the language of Iranian speaking nomads in Britain who arrived after the Romans but before the Angles and Saxons.
 
==Liturgical Medh Chêl vs Native Medh Chêl==
• a deliberate avoidance of English loanwords in the former
 
• Liturgical Medh Chêl became a thing in the 19th century? started by a Iolo Morganwg-like figure
 
==Influences==
The primary Indo-European influence on Medh Chêl after the migration to Britain was Brythonic.
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