Verse:Irta/Judeo-Anbirese: Difference between revisions

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'''Al-Qayljiyyah''' (the Arabic name for the language; the native name is ''a Ᵹaeidhliᵹ'' /ə 'gəɪlʲɪc/) is a descendant of Old Irish that has been heavily influenced by Arabic. It is written using the Arabic script. '''Qaylji''' may be used in English as the related adjective. It has lost mutations and grammatical gender; this happened after many mutating function words were replaced with non-mutating Arabic words.
'''Al-Qayljiyyah''' (the Arabic name for the language; the native name is ''a Ᵹaeidhliᵹ'' /ə 'gəɪlʲɪc/) is a descendant of Old Irish that has been heavily influenced by Arabic. It is written using the Arabic script. '''Qaylji''' may be used in English as the related adjective. It has lost mutations and grammatical gender; this happened after many mutating function words were replaced with non-mutating Arabic words.


Idea: "Contact with Arabic makes Irish more even more of a Russian gib"
Idea: "Contact with Arabic makes Irish even more of a Russian gib"
== A Ᵹiumhúirie Ᵹaedhlaċ Isleámaċ ==
== A Ᵹiumhúirie Ᵹaedhlaċ Isleámaċ ==
The '''Gaelic Islamic Republic''' (''a Ᵹiumhúirie Ᵹaedhlaċ Isleámaċ'' /ə ɟʊmˈhuːrʲjə ˈgeːlˠəχ/) is a Goidelic-speaking, historically Muslim country comprising the northern part of Iberia. It's often shortened to ''an Ᵹiumhúirie'' by its inhabitants. The indigenous Celtic speaking peoples converted to Islam around 11th century AD.
The '''Gaelic Islamic Republic''' (''a Ᵹiumhúirie Ᵹaedhlaċ Isleámaċ'' /ə ɟʊmˈhuːrʲjə ˈgeːlˠəχ/) is a Goidelic-speaking, historically Muslim country comprising the northern part of Iberia. It's often shortened to ''an Ᵹiumhúirie'' by its inhabitants. The indigenous Celtic speaking peoples converted to Islam around 11th century AD.
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