Verse:Irta/Irish
an Ghaelainn /ˈɡeːl̪ˠən̠ʲ/; in Ăn Yidiș ăn Eřiņiș or ă Ghełiņ. Sometimes jokingly called ă Ghoyliģ "Goylic" by Ăn Yidiș speakers
Spoken in unified Ireland, parts of Canada and parts of Central and South America by 20 million people (Irta Canada's official languages are English and Irish)
Essentially the same as our timeline's Munster and Connemara Irish; lots of opportunities to re-etymologize
Standard Irish should be "Munster Irish with a Connemara accent" (whatever maximizes the difference from Ăn Yidiș)
Loans from Hebrew follow Ăn Yidiș consonantisms (e.g. Gabaile for Kabbalah)
Most commonly written in a very different, more Catalan/Ronanian/Polish-ish Roman orthography (influenced by in-universe French orthography); a Devanagari orthography is also proposed which is a cipher of our timeline's post-reform Irish orthography
Dia dhuitse (said by some non-Catholics as a reply to Dia dhuit); Haileo (non-theistic greeting)
Orthography
word initially lenition is marked with a dot; non-initially unlenited consonants are
- p ıp t tz c cz for /b b' d d' g g'/ and pp ıpp tt ttz cc ccz for /p p' t t' k k'/
cz, dz, gz, rz, sz, tz for slender c d g r s t
ch czh th for /x ç h/
gn for slender ng
m̃ m b for m mh bh
ım̃ ıpp ıp ıb ım for word final slender labials
l n r for broad l n r; ll ny rz for slender l n r (they have our Connemara Irish l l' n n' r r' system for liquids; R' > broad r)
Vowels are written more phonetically than in our Irish, diphthongs written out with aij au for /aj aw/ etc.
- â ê î ô û îa ûa for long vowels
- schwa is æ word-finally