Verse:Irta/Irish: Difference between revisions

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''a γGoēlge''; ''a γGoēlyngı'' (''an Ġoíḋealaıng'') in Cualand
''a γGoēlge''; ''a γGoēlyngı'' (''an Ġoíḋelaıng'') in Cualand


Spoken in unified Ireland, Britain, and parts of the Americas by 70 million people (Irta Canada's official languages are English, Irish and indigenous languages such as Inuit and Cree)
Spoken in unified Ireland, Britain, and parts of the Americas by 70 million people (Irta Canada's official languages are English, Irish and indigenous languages such as Inuit and Cree)
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* Trician Irish = conservative/quasi-Classical Munster Irish
* Trician Irish = conservative/quasi-Classical Munster Irish


Pre-reform orthography is the same as our timeline's pre-reform orthography. Irish undergoes a spelling reform in opposite directions in Irta and Tricin; Irta uses a phonetic orthography while the Trician spelling is more etymological than our Classical Irish orthography, reflecting lost Proto-Celtic consonants (øláṁ = hand, ıomṡaıġ = to turn, Aıḟıṡfe = Aoife, joıġear = ice)
Pre-reform orthography is the same as our timeline's pre-reform orthography. Irish undergoes a spelling reform in opposite directions in Irta and Tricin; Irta uses a phonetic orthography while the Trician spelling is more etymological than our Classical Irish orthography, reflecting lost Proto-Celtic consonants (øláṁ = hand, ıomṡaıġ = to turn, Aıḟıṡfe = Aoife, joıġer = ice)


English, Irish and Nithish are the main languages used in Irtan linguistics (in Crackfic Tricin, English and Netagin; in Canon Tricin, Eevo, Anbirese and Netagin)
English, Irish and Nithish are the main languages used in Irtan linguistics (in Crackfic Tricin, English and Netagin; in Canon Tricin, Eevo, Anbirese and Netagin)