Medh Chêl: Difference between revisions
No edit summary Tags: Mobile edit Mobile web edit |
(→Todo) Tags: Mobile edit Mobile web edit |
||
(9 intermediate revisions by the same user not shown) | |||
Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
[[Medh Chêl/Fanaûcho|About Fanaûcho]] | [[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== | ==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== | ==Liturgical Medh Chêl vs Native Medh Chêl== | ||
Line 13: | Line 19: | ||
==Influences== | ==Influences== | ||
The primary Indo-European influence on Medh Chêl after the migration to Britain was | The primary Indo-European influence on Medh Chêl after the migration to Britain was Brythonic. |
Latest revision as of 14:08, 8 September 2021
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.