Verse:Irta/Judeo-Mandarin: Difference between revisions
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* The Gaelic Haskalah or the Judeo-Gaelic Enlightenment (JG אן השכּלה (קֿעל'אך) ''ăn Hăscolă (Ghełăch)'', Heb. ההשכּלה הקלית ''haHaskoló haGélis'') was focused on discovering and consciously borrowing from an older Gentile Goidelic literary tradition and seeking out older Goidelic and other Celtic sources for new Ăn Yidiș words, mainly "cognatizations" or hypothetical Ăn Yidiș descendants and cognates of words in Old Irish and other Celtic languages. (Gentile Goidelic varieties were already extinct by this time.) This helped Jews become literate in the Celtic literature that was part of the Gentile literary canon. The publication of a grammar of Old Irish in Ăn Yidiș and Hebrew created a boom of Gaelic-inspired literary activity in this period. Gaelic Haskalah writers even rederived hypothetical synthetic verb forms which were long since lost in Judeo-Gaelic, to streamline their Ăn Yidiș poetry and to consciously imitate older Gaelic, though these forms never caught on in common speech; this register is called אן השכּליש ''ăn Hăscoliș''. Among the best-known Ăn Yidiș works from this phase is ___ by Mănachăm mac Ățîni, a very long satirical "bardic poem" about society (both religious-Jewish and Gentile) at the time. | * The Gaelic Haskalah or the Judeo-Gaelic Enlightenment (JG אן השכּלה (קֿעל'אך) ''ăn Hăscolă (Ghełăch)'', Heb. ההשכּלה הקלית ''haHaskoló haGélis'') was focused on discovering and consciously borrowing from an older Gentile Goidelic literary tradition and seeking out older Goidelic and other Celtic sources for new Ăn Yidiș words, mainly "cognatizations" or hypothetical Ăn Yidiș descendants and cognates of words in Old Irish and other Celtic languages. (Gentile Goidelic varieties were already extinct by this time.) This helped Jews become literate in the Celtic literature that was part of the Gentile literary canon. The publication of a grammar of Old Irish in Ăn Yidiș and Hebrew created a boom of Gaelic-inspired literary activity in this period. Gaelic Haskalah writers even rederived hypothetical synthetic verb forms which were long since lost in Judeo-Gaelic, to streamline their Ăn Yidiș poetry and to consciously imitate older Gaelic, though these forms never caught on in common speech; this register is called אן השכּליש ''ăn Hăscoliș''. Among the best-known Ăn Yidiș works from this phase is ___ by Mănachăm mac Ățîni, a very long satirical "bardic poem" about society (both religious-Jewish and Gentile) at the time. | ||
* Post-Gaelic-Haskalah writers, as well as traditionally religious Gaelic Jews, criticized the new Gaelic loans as not being authentically Ăn Yidiș. Some used coinages from newly revived Hebrew, further enriching Ăn Yidiș vocabulary. | * Post-Gaelic-Haskalah writers, as well as traditionally religious Gaelic Jews, criticized the new Gaelic loans as not being authentically Ăn Yidiș. Some used coinages from newly revived Hebrew, further enriching Ăn Yidiș vocabulary. | ||
** ___ a series of quasi-Lovecraftian sci-fi works, often read as a warning to Jews who depart from religious Judaism; uses flowery exaggerated Hăscoliș for effect | ** ___ a series of quasi-Lovecraftian sci-fi works, often read as a warning to Jews who depart from religious Judaism and live by pure human rationality; uses flowery exaggerated Hăscoliș for effect | ||
==Names== | ==Names== | ||