139,285
edits
mNo edit summary Tags: Mobile edit Mobile web edit |
|||
Line 5: | Line 5: | ||
Essentially the same as our timeline's Munster and Connemara Irish but with fewer English loans; Northern Ireland speaks Connemara and Southern Ireland speaks Munster | Essentially the same as our timeline's Munster and Connemara Irish but with fewer English loans; Northern Ireland speaks Connemara and Southern Ireland speaks Munster | ||
* Irtan Standard | * Irtan Standard Irish = our timeline's 1970s Cork Irish (but with labiodental f and v and no nasal vowels) | ||
* Trician Irish = conservative/quasi-Classical Munster Irish | |||
* Trician Irish = conservative/quasi-Classical Munster | |||
Irish undergoes a spelling reform in opposite directions in Irta and Tricin; Irta uses a phonetic orthography while the Trician spelling is more etymological than our Classical Irish orthography (ølámh = hand, iomshaigh = to turn, Afhishfe = Aoife) | Irish undergoes a spelling reform in opposite directions in Irta and Tricin; Irta uses a phonetic orthography while the Trician spelling is more etymological than our Classical Irish orthography (ølámh = hand, iomshaigh = to turn, Afhishfe = Aoife) |
edits