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  2. Chronicles of Eri - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chronicles_of_Eri

    The title page of the Chronicles of Eri. The Chronicles of Eri; Being the History of the Gaal Sciot Iber: or, the Irish People; Translated from the Original Manuscripts in the Phoenician Dialect of the Scythian Language is an 1822 book in two volumes by Roger O'Connor (1762–1834), purporting to detail the history of the Irish from the creation of the world.

  3. Idalion Temple inscriptions - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Idalion_Temple_inscriptions

    The Idalion Temple inscriptions are six Phoenician inscriptions found by Robert Hamilton Lang in his excavations at the Temple of Idalium (modern Dali, Cyprus) in 1869, [1] whose work there had been inspired by the discovery of the Idalion Tablet in 1850. [2] [3] The most famous of these inscriptions is known as the Idalion bilingual.

  4. Scripturae Linguaeque Phoeniciae - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Scripturae_Linguaeque...

    Scripturae Linguaeque Phoeniciae (in English: "The writing and language of Phoenicia"), also known as Phoeniciae Monumenta (in English: "Phoenician remains") was an important study of the Phoenician language by German scholar Wilhelm Gesenius. It was written in three volumes, combined in later editions. [1]

  5. Phonological history of Old Irish - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Phonological_history_of...

    During the Old Irish period, geminates are reduced to simple consonants, occurring earliest when adjacent to a consonant. By the end of the Old Irish period, written ll mm nn rr are repurposed to indicate the non-lenited sounds /L m N R/ when occurring after a vowel and not before a consonant. Cluster reduction involving *n:

  6. History of the Irish language - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_the_Irish_language

    It is characterized by an increased amount of linguistic variation compared to the relatively uniform writing of Old Irish. In Middle Irish texts. writers blended together contemporary and older linguistic forms in the same text. [11] Middle Irish is the language of a large amount of literature, including the entire Ulster Cycle.

  7. Irish phonology - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Irish_phonology

    Title page of Die araner mundart. Ein beitrag zur erforschung des westirischen ('The Aran dialect. A contribution to the study of West Irish') ().Until the end of the 19th century, linguistic discussions of Irish focused either on the traditional grammar (issues like the inflection of nouns, verbs and adjectives) or on the historical development of sounds from Proto-Indo-European through Proto ...

  8. Goidelic substrate hypothesis - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Goidelic_substrate_hypothesis

    Old Irish molt 'wether', Middle Welsh mollt 'ram, wether', Gaulish Moltus (name) and *multon-(borrowed into French as mouton, from which to English as mutton) The Old Irish word for "horn", adarc , is also listed as a potential Basque loanword; in Basque the word is adar .

  9. Ogham - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ogham

    Ogham (also ogam and ogom, [4] / ˈ ɒ ɡ əm / OG-əm, [5] Modern Irish: [ˈoː(ə)mˠ]; Middle Irish: ogum, ogom, later ogam [ˈɔɣəmˠ] [6] [7]) is an Early Medieval alphabet used primarily to write the early Irish language (in the "orthodox" inscriptions, 4th to 6th centuries AD), and later the Old Irish language (scholastic ogham, 6th to 9th centuries).