Tergetian vernaculars: Difference between revisions
Jump to navigation
Jump to search
mNo edit summary |
mNo edit summary |
||
Line 3: | Line 3: | ||
== Romanized spelling == | == Romanized spelling == | ||
* In Arabic loans, final consonant is always slender unless laryngeal, /r/ or emphatic (This is because of the genitive ending ''-i'') | * In Arabic loans, final consonant is always slender unless laryngeal, /r/ or emphatic (This is because of the genitive ending ''-i'') | ||
* Iotation from Arabic is spelled with a doubled ''i'': ''gium'húirie'' 'republic'. | |||
== Gaelic maqam (''macáim'') == | == Gaelic maqam (''macáim'') == | ||
''Macáim Għaigeim'' should be based on Dorian | ''Macáim Għaigeim'' should be based on Dorian | ||
[[Category:Celtic languages]][[Category:Goidelic languages]][[Category:Indo-European languages]] | [[Category:Celtic languages]][[Category:Goidelic languages]][[Category:Indo-European languages]] |
Revision as of 00:25, 15 August 2021
Al-Qayljiyyah (the Arabic name for the language) is a descendant of Old Irish that has been heavily influenced by Arabic.
Romanized spelling
- In Arabic loans, final consonant is always slender unless laryngeal, /r/ or emphatic (This is because of the genitive ending -i)
- Iotation from Arabic is spelled with a doubled i: gium'húirie 'republic'.
Gaelic maqam (macáim)
Macáim Għaigeim should be based on Dorian