Verse:Irta/Cualand: Difference between revisions

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=== Cualand Irish ===
=== Cualand Irish ===
A slightly more archaic stage of Irta Irish with Ăn Yidiș loans (including Hebrew and Hivantish words) and some Hebrew influence; it has very little influence from English or from Trician languages. It also keeps the distinction between dependent and independent present forms, like our Early Modern Irish: ''molann sé'' 'he praises', ''ní mhol sé'' 'he does not praise'. Like literary Ăn Yidiș(*), Literary Cualand Irish is often influenced by literary Hebrew syntax, for example using ''iolaigh'' ('to VERB a lot', from OIr ''ilaigidir'' 'to increase') and other verbs as auxiliaries, and using morphological verbing (for verbing nouns and forming causatives) more frequently than Irta Irish.
"What if An Yidish had Hebraized syntax instead of Hebraized vocabulary"
 
A slightly more archaic stage of Irta Irish with Ăn Yidiș loans (including Hebrew and Hivantish words) and some Hebrew influence; it has very little influence from English or from Trician languages. It also keeps the distinction between dependent and independent present forms, like our Early Modern Irish: ''molann sé'' 'he praises', ''ní mhol sé'' 'he does not praise'. Like literary Ăn Yidiș(*), Literary Cualand Irish is often influenced by literary Hebrew syntax, for example using ''iolaigh'' ('to VERB a lot', from OIr ''ilaigidir'' 'to increase') and other verbs as auxiliaries, and using morphological verbing with ''-aigh'' and ''-áil'' (for verbing nouns and forming causatives) more frequently than Irta Irish.
* {{Gael|Is beannaithe Tú, a Thiaꞃna, a neach tꞃócaiꞃeach a iolaíonn a mhaitheamh.}} ({{Heb|ברוך אתה ה' חנון המרבה לסלוח}}) 'Blessed are You, O Lord, compassionate one who is oft-forgiving.'
* {{Gael|Is beannaithe Tú, a Thiaꞃna, a neach tꞃócaiꞃeach a iolaíonn a mhaitheamh.}} ({{Heb|ברוך אתה ה' חנון המרבה לסלוח}}) 'Blessed are You, O Lord, compassionate one who is oft-forgiving.'
* ''Choiscinn é sular iomarcódh sé a dhul.'' 'I would have stopped him before he went too far.' (lit. I would have blocked him before he would have excessed to go)
* ''Choiscinn é sular iomarcálfadh sé a dhul.'' 'I would have stopped him before he went too far.' (lit. I would have blocked him before he would have excessed to go)


Today, Cualand Irish is written in a much more phonetic orthography, introduced by Alastair Mac Léivigh, based on similar principles to Cyrillic. The older orthography, identical to our post-reform Irish orthography but written in Gaelic type, was used in Ádhamh Binn-Fíona's times.
Today, Cualand Irish is written in a much more phonetic orthography, introduced by Alastair Mac Léivigh, based on similar principles to Cyrillic. The older orthography, identical to our post-reform Irish orthography but written in Gaelic type, was used in Ádhamh Binn-Fíona's times.
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