Accusative
Accusative case
Acute accent
Alexander Macbain
Alphabet
Alveolar consonant
Approximant
Auraicept na n-Éces
BBC Alba
Back vowel
Book of Armagh
Book of Leinster
Cambrai Homily
Canadian Gaelic
Celtic languages
Classical Gaelic
Close vowel
Co-occurrence
Conditional mood
Connacht Irish
Consonant
Consonant mutation
D. A. Binchy
Dative
Dative case
Dental consonant
Dependent and independent verb forms
Diacritic
Dictionary of the Irish Language
Digraph (orthography)
Diphthong
Dot (diacritic)
Dual (grammatical number)
Early Irish literature
Extinct language
Flap consonant
Fortis and lenis
Fricative
Fricative consonant
Front vowel
Future tense
Gaelic type
Galwegian Gaelic
Genitive
Genitive case
Gloss (margin text)
Glottal consonant
Goidelic languages
Goidelic substrate hypothesis
Grammar
Grammatical conjugation
Grammatical gender
Grammatical gender#Morphological marking on nouns
Grammatical mood
Grammatical number
Grammatical person
Grammatical tense
Grammatical voice
Great Britain
Hiberno-Scottish mission
Highland games
History of the Irish language
ISO 639-1
ISO 639-2
ISO 639-3
Imperative mood
Imperfect
Indicative mood
Indo-European languages
Infinitive
Insular Celtic languages
Interlinear gloss
International Standard Book Number
Ireland
Irish conjugation
Irish declension
Irish grammar
Irish initial mutations
Irish language
Irish name
Irish orthography
Irish phonology
Irish syntax
Isle of Man
Karlsruhe
Labial consonant
Language family
Lateral consonant
Latin
Latin alphabet
Lebor na hUidre
Lenition
Letter (alphabet)
Linguasphere Observatory
List of Irish-language given names
Main Page
Manuscript
Manuscripts
Manx language
Mid vowel
Accusative case
Acute accent
Alexander Macbain
Alphabet
Alveolar consonant
Approximant
Auraicept na n-Éces
BBC Alba
Back vowel
Book of Armagh
Book of Leinster
Cambrai Homily
Canadian Gaelic
Celtic languages
Classical Gaelic
Close vowel
Co-occurrence
Conditional mood
Connacht Irish
Consonant
Consonant mutation
D. A. Binchy
Dative
Dative case
Dental consonant
Dependent and independent verb forms
Diacritic
Dictionary of the Irish Language
Digraph (orthography)
Diphthong
Dot (diacritic)
Dual (grammatical number)
Early Irish literature
Extinct language
Flap consonant
Fortis and lenis
Fricative
Fricative consonant
Front vowel
Future tense
Gaelic type
Galwegian Gaelic
Genitive
Genitive case
Gloss (margin text)
Glottal consonant
Goidelic languages
Goidelic substrate hypothesis
Grammar
Grammatical conjugation
Grammatical gender
Grammatical gender#Morphological marking on nouns
Grammatical mood
Grammatical number
Grammatical person
Grammatical tense
Grammatical voice
Great Britain
Hiberno-Scottish mission
Highland games
History of the Irish language
ISO 639-1
ISO 639-2
ISO 639-3
Imperative mood
Imperfect
Indicative mood
Indo-European languages
Infinitive
Insular Celtic languages
Interlinear gloss
International Standard Book Number
Ireland
Irish conjugation
Irish declension
Irish grammar
Irish initial mutations
Irish language
Irish name
Irish orthography
Irish phonology
Irish syntax
Isle of Man
Karlsruhe
Labial consonant
Language family
Lateral consonant
Latin
Latin alphabet
Lebor na hUidre
Lenition
Letter (alphabet)
Linguasphere Observatory
List of Irish-language given names
Main Page
Manuscript
Manuscripts
Manx language
Mid vowel
Old Irish
Goídelc
Pronunciation
[ˈɡoiðʲelɡ]
Spoken in
Ireland, Isle of Man, western coast of Great Britain
Language extinction
Evolved into Middle Irish about the 10th century
Language family
Indo-European
Celtic
Insular Celtic
Goidelic
Old Irish
Writing system
Latin
Language codes
ISO 639-1
None
ISO 639-2
sga
ISO 639-3
sga
Linguasphere
–
Note: This page may contain IPA phonetic symbols in Unicode.
Old Irish is the name given to the oldest form of the Goidelic languages for which extensive written texts are extant. It was used from the 6th to the 10th centuries, by which time it had developed into Middle Irish.
Contemporary Old Irish scholarship is still greatly influenced by the works of a small number of scholars active in the late 19th and early 20th centuries, among them Rudolf Thurneysen (1857–1940) and Osborn Bergin (1873–1950). Their books are viewed as required material for any enthusiast of Old Irish even today.
Contents
1 Classification
2 Sources
3 Phonology
3.1 Consonants
3.2 Vowels
3.3 Phonological history
4 Orthography
5 Syntax
6 Morphology
6.1 Nouns
6.2 Verbs
7 See also
8 Notes
9 References
10 External links
//
Classification
A still older form of Irish is known as Primitive Irish. Fragments of Primitive Irish, mainly personal names, are known from inscriptions on stone written in the Ogham alphabet. These inscriptions date from about the 4th to the 6th centuries. Primitive Irish is still very close to Common Celtic, the ancestor of all Celtic languages.
Old Irish is the ancestor of Modern Irish, Scottish Gaelic, and Manx (spoken on the Isle of Man). Broadly speaking, the grammar and sound systems of the modern languages are simpler than those of Old Irish.
Sources
Relatively little survives in the way of strictly contemporary sources. These are mainly represented by shorter or longer glosses on the margins or between the lines of religious Latin manuscripts, most of them preserved in monasteries in Switzerland, Germany, France and Italy, having been taken there by early Irish missionaries. Whereas in Ireland, many of the older manuscripts appear to have been worn out through extended and heavy use, their counterparts on the Continent were much less prone to the same risk, because once they ceased to be understood, they were rarely consulted.1
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Old Irish - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Old Irish is the name given to the oldest form of the Goidelic languages for which ... Contemporary Old Irish scholarship is still greatly influenced by the works of a ...
The earliest Old Irish passages may be the transcripts found in the Book of Armagh and the Cambrai Homily, both of which are thought to belong to the early 8th century. Important Continental collections of glosses from the 8th and 9th century include the Würzburg Glosses (mainly) on the Pauline Epistles, the Milan Glosses on a commentary to the Psalms and the St Gall Glosses on Priscian's Grammar. Further examples are found at Karlsruhe (Germany), Paris (France), Milan, Florence and Turin (Italy). A late 9th-century manuscript from Reichenau, now in St. Paul in Carinthia (Austria), contains a spell and four Old Irish poems. The Liber Hymnorum and the Stowe Missal date from about 900 to 1050.
In addition to contemporary witnesses, the vast majority of Old Irish texts are attested in manuscripts of a variety of later dates. Manuscripts of the later Middle Irish period, for instance, such as the Lebor na hUidre and the Book of Leinster, contain texts which are thought to derive from written exemplars in Old Irish now lost and retain enough of their original form to merit classification as Old Irish. The preservation of certain linguistic forms which were current in the Old Irish period may provide reason to assume that an Old Irish original directly or indirectly underlies the transmitted text or texts.
Phonology
Consonants
The consonant inventory of Old Irish is shown in the chart below. /N/, /Nʲ/, /L/, /Lʲ/, /R/, /Rʲ/ represent fortis sonorants whose precise articulation is unknown, but which were probably longer, tenser, and generally more strongly articulated than their lenis counterparts /n/, /nʲ/, /l/, /lʲ/, /r/, /rʲ/. Like Modern Irish, Old Irish exhibits contrasts between "broad" (velarized) and "slender" (palatalized) consonants.
Labial
Dental
Alveolar
Velar
Glottal
Nasal
broad
m
N n
ŋ
slender
mʲ
Nʲ nʲ
ŋʲ
Plosive
broad
p b
t d
k ɡ
slender
pʲ bʲ
tʲ dʲ
kʲ ɡʲ
Fricative
broad
f v
θ ð
s
x ɣ
h
slender
fʲ vʲ
θʲ ðʲ
sʲ
xʲ ɣʲ
hʲ
Nasalized
fricative
broad
ṽ
slender
ṽʲ
Approximant
broad
R r
slender
Rʲ rʲ
Lateral
broad
L l
slender
Lʲ lʲ
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Some details of Old Irish phonetics are not known. /sʲ/ may have been pronounced [ɕ] or [ʃ], as in Modern Irish. /hʲ/ may have been the same sound as /h/ and/or /xʲ/. /Nʲ/ and /Lʲ/ may have been pronounced [ɲ] and [ʎ] respectively. The difference between /R(ʲ)/ and /r(ʲ)/ may have been that the former were trills while the latter were flaps.
Vowels
The inventory of Old Irish monophthongs is:
Short
Long
Close
i
u
iː
uː
Mid
e
o
eː
oː
Open
a
aː
The distribution of short vowels in unstressed syllables is a little complicated. All short vowels may appear in unstressed final open syllables (an open syllable is one with no coda consonant), after both broad and slender consonants. The front vowels /e/ and /i/ are often spelled ae and ai after broad consonants, which might indicate a retracted pronunciation here, perhaps something like [ɘ] and [ɨ]. All ten possibilities are shown in the following examples:
Old Irish
Pronunciation
English
Annotations
marba
/ˈmarva/
kill
1
sg. subj.
léicea
/ˈLʲeːɡʲa/
leave
1
sg. subj.
marbae
/ˈmarve/ or /ˈmarvɘ/
kill
2
sg. subj.
léice
/ˈLʲeːɡʲe/
leave
2
sg. subj.
marbai
/ˈmarvi/ or /ˈmarvɨ/
kill
2
sg. indic.
léici
/ˈlʲeːɡʲi/
leave
2
sg. indic.
súlo
/ˈsuːlo/
eye
gen.
doirseo
/ˈdoRʲsʲo/
door
gen.
marbu
/ˈmarvu/
kill
1
sg. indic.
léiciu
/ˈLʲeːɡʲu/
leave
1
sg. indic.
In unstressed closed syllables (that is, those with a syllable coda), the quality of a short vowel is almost entirely predictable by whether the surrounding consonants are broad or slender. Between two broad consonants, the vowel is /a/, as in dígal /ˈdʲiːɣal/ "vengeance" (nom.). Between a slender and a broad consonant the vowel is /e/, as in dliged /ˈdʲlʲiɣʲeð/ "law" (nom./acc.). Before a slender consonant the vowel is /i/, as in dígail /ˈdʲiːɣilʲ/ "vengeance" (acc./dat.), and dligid /ˈdʲlʲiɣʲiðʲ/ "law" (gen.). The chief exceptions to this pattern are that /u/ frequently appears when the following syllable contained an *ū in Proto-Celtic (for example, dligud /ˈdʲlʲiɣuð/ "law" (dat.) < PC *dligedū), and that /o/ or /u/ frequently appears after a broad labial (for example, lebor /ˈLʲevor/ "book"; domun /ˈdoṽun/ "world").
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The inventory of Old Irish diphthongs is shown in this chart:
Long (bimoraic)
Short (monomoraic)
ai
ia
ui
au
ĭu
ău
oi
ua
iu
eu
ou
ĕu
Phonological history
The following is a summary of the phonological changes yielding (written) Old Irish forms from Proto-Celtic stated by Alexander Macbain.2 (The order is not chronological.)
Intervocalic consonants are lenited: *s is lost, stops become fricatives (only written for ph th ch), *l *n *r become lax (unwritten).
Geminate consonants resist lenition and become single.
*φ is lost with compensatory lengthening of a preceding vowel.
*j is lost in all positions, with slenderisation of a preceding consonant, except that before a dropped final vowel it survives as e.
*kʷ *gʷ lose their labialisation (yielding c g).
Initial *w becomes f. Intervocalic *w is lost with vowel colouring. *w is lost after *t *s and sometimes *d (always when initial), and becomes b after a voiced coronal.
*t *d drop out before *b *s which are retained as p s. *d is lost in *ndw > nb.
*ld and *ll can both be reflected as either ld or ll, and similarly for *nd and *nn. *ln yields ll.
Medial *s assimilates to a following sonorant.
Medial *st yields s.
*zg yields dg.
*rs yields rr.
*x is lost before *s (and survives before *t, written ch).
Medial *tr *br *dr yield tha(i)r ba(i)r da(i)r respectively.
The first element of medial clusters *nt *nk *φm, or any medial cluster formed of *φ *t *k *b *d *g plus *l *n *r excepting *tr *br *dr, is lost with compensatory lengthening of any preceding vowel. Compensatorily lengthened vowels develop as original long vowels (below). Such clusters after *s still lose their first member but cause no lengthening.
Consonants before *e *i *j, excepting the *k in *nk, become slender. If the consonant is not initial this is indicated by a preceding i in spelling (unless the preceding vowel is already i or í).
ī, and *ē from compensatory lengthening, both yield either é or í, and similarly for *ū and *ō. The corresponding short vowels also can exchange before a consonant plus optional *j and a back vowel.
*e *i before a consonant plus *(j)u can additionally yield iu. *ō *ū before a velar plus *(j)u can additionally yield úa.
Nonfinally, the outcomes of *ei are é ía; of *ai and *oi are áe ái óe ói; of *eu and *ou is úa; of *au are áu ó.
*iwo gives eó or ía; *ewo gives eó; *eiwi gives é; *eiwo gives ía; *awi gives á or ó; *awo gives ó; *owi gives úa.
*e *i can yield respectively eu iu after *wl.
Orthography
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As with most medieval languages, the orthography of Old Irish is not fixed, so the following statements are to be taken as generalizations only. Individual manuscripts may vary greatly from these guidelines.
The Old Irish alphabet consists of the following eighteen letters of the Latin alphabet:
a, b, c, d, e, f, g, h, i, l, m, n, o, p, r, s, t, u
In addition, the acute accent and the superdot are used as diacritics with certain letters:
The acute accent indicates a long vowel. The following are long vowels: á, é, í, ó, ú.
The superdot indicates the lenition of f and s: ḟ is silent, ṡ is pronounced /h/
The superdot is also sometimes used on m and n with no change in pronunciation, when these letters are used to mark the nasalization mutation: ṁ, ṅ.
A number of digraphs are also used:
The letter i is placed after a vowel letter to indicate that the following consonant was slender: ai, ei, oi, ui; ái, éi, ói, úi
The letter h is placed after c, t, p to indicate a fricative: ch, th, ph
The diphthongs are also indicated by digraphs: áe/aí, ía, uí, áu, óe/oí, úa, éu, óu, iu, au, eu
In word-initial position, when no initial consonant mutation has applied, the consonant letters have the following values; they are broad before back vowels (a, o, u) and slender before front vowels (e, i):
Consonant
When no initial consonant mutation has applied in word-initial position before a, o, u
When no initial consonant mutation has applied in word-initial position before e, i
b
/b/
/bʲ/
c
/k/
/kʲ/
d
/d/
/dʲ/
f
/f/
/fʲ/
g
/ɡ/
/ɡʲ/
h
See discussion below
l
/L/
/Lʲ/
m
/m/
/mʲ/
n
/N/
/Nʲ/
p
/p/
/pʲ/
r
/R/
/Rʲ/
s
/s/
/ʃ/
t
/t/
/tʲ/
Although Old Irish has both a sound /h/ and a letter h, there is no consistent relationship between the two. Vowel-initial words are sometimes written with an unpronounced h, especially if they are very short (the preposition i "in" was sometimes written hi) or if they need to be emphasized (the name of Ireland, Ériu, was sometimes written Hériu). On the other hand, words that begin with the sound /h/ are usually written without it, for example a ór /a hoːr/ "her gold". If the sound and the spelling cooccur, it is by coincidence, as ní hed /Nʲiː heð/ "it is not".
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After a vowel or l, n, or r the letters c, p, t can stand for either voiced or voiceless stops; they can also be written double with either value:
Old Irish
Pronunciation
English
mac or macc
/mak/
son
bec or becc
/bʲeɡ/
small
op or opp
/ob/
refuse
brat or bratt
/brat/
mantle
brot or brott
/brod/
goad
derc
/dʲerk/
hole
derc
/dʲerɡ/
red
daltae
/daLte/
fosterling
celtae
/kʲeLde/
who hide
anta
/aNta/
of remaining
antae
/aNde/
who remain
After a vowel the letters b, d, g stand for the fricatives /v, ð, ɣ/ or their slender equivalents:
Old Irish
Pronunciation
English
dub
/duv/
black
mod
/moð/
work
mug
/muɣ/
slave
claideb
/klaðʲev/
sword
claidib
/klaðʲivʲ/
swords
After m, b is a stop, but after d, l and r it is a fricative:
Old Irish
Pronunciation
English
imb
/imʲbʲ/
butter
odb
/oðv/
knot (in a tree)
delb
/dʲelv/
image
marb
/marv/
dead
After n and r, d is a stop
Old Irish
Pronunciation
English
bind
/bʲiNʲdʲ/
melodious
cerd
/kʲeRd/
"art, skill"
After n, l, and r, g is usually a stop, but it is a fricative in a few words:
Old Irish
Pronunciation
English
long
/Loŋɡ/
ship
delg or delc
/dʲelɡ/
thorn
argat or arggat
/arɡad/
silver
ingen
/inʲɣʲen/
daughter
bairgen
/barʲɣʲen/
loaf of bread
After vowels m is usually a fricative, but sometimes a (nasal) stop, in which case it is also often written double:
Old Irish
Pronunciation
English
dám
/daːṽ/
company
lom or lomm
/Lom/
bare
The digraphs ch, ph, th do not occur in word-initial position except under lenition, but wherever they occur they are pronounced /x/, /f/, /θ/.
Old Irish
Pronunciation
English
ech
/ex/
horse
oíph
/oif/
beauty
áth
/aːθ/
ford
The letters l, n, and r are written double when they indicate the tense sonorants, single when they indicate the lax sonorants. (But the tense sonorants are usually written single in word-initial position.)
Old Irish
Pronunciation
English
corr
/koR/
crane
cor
/kor/
putting
coll
/koL/
hazel
col
/kol/
sin
sonn
/soN/
stake
son
/son/
sound
Syntax
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Old Irish follows the typical VSO (verb-subject-object) structure shared by most Insular Celtic languages (even though other orders are possible, especially under Bergin's Law). Verbs are all fully conjugated, and have most of the forms typical of Indo-European languages, i.e. present, imperfect, past, future and preterite tenses, indicative, subjunctive, conditional and imperative moods, and active and passive voices. The only verbal form lacking in Old Irish is the infinitive, this covered, as in the modern Gaelic languages, by the verbal noun. Personal pronouns, when used as direct objects, are prefixed to the verb with which they are associated (after other prefxes, and therefore are often referred to as infixes). Prepositions have the same status as the Latin prepositions, including the property of being verb prefixes.
Morphology
Nouns
Old Irish had three genders, namely, masculine, feminine and neuter; three numbers, namely, singular, dual and plural, with the dual being attested only to a limited degree with somewhat distinct forms, though it is almost always preceded by the cardinal dá, meaning "two" (and as such has been retained in the modern Gaelic languages); and five cases (nominative, vocative, accusative, genitive and dative). Thurneysen had fourteen classes of noun, defined by the morphological marking on the stem, with seven vocalic stems and seven consonantal stems (including one class of irregular and indeclinable nouns).
Feminine ā-stems
Singular
Dual
Plural
Nominative/Vocative
túath
túaith
túatha
Accusative
túaith
Genitive
túaithe
túath
Dative
túaith
túathaib
Masculine o-stems
Singular
Dual
Plural
Nominative
fer
fir
Vocative
fir
fer
firu
Accusative
fer
firu
Genitive
fir
fer
Dative
fiur
feraib
Verbs
Verbs stand initially in the sentence (preceded only by some particles, forming a "verbal complex", and very few adverbs). Most verbs have, in addition to the tenses, voices, and moods named above, two sets of forms: a conjunct form, and an absolute form. The conjunct form typically consists of one or more preverbs (particles, some of which are prepositions in origin; compare a-, e-, in-, etc. in Latin verbs), followed by a verb stem, which can be either suffixed for tense, person, mood and aspect (often portmanteau suffixes), or where these can be shown by vowel changes in the stem (e.g. as·beir present "says", as·rubart past "said", as·béra future "will say"). Personal pronouns as direct objects are infixed between the preverb and the verbal stem. Before this core "verb phrase" are placed various other particles that modify the verb's meaning (including the negative) or indicate certain special sentence structures. The absolute form is used when no infixes are necessary, and any other necessary elements are given in another part of the sentence. In an overall sense, the verb structure is agglutinative. A single verb can stand as an entire sentence in Old Irish, in which case emphatic particles such as -sa and -se are affixed to the end of the verb.
See also
Early Irish literature
Dictionary of the Irish Language
Auraicept na n-Éces
Goidelic substrate hypothesis
Notes
^ Thurneysen, A Grammar of Old Irish, p. 4.
^ Pages x-xxxi of An etymological dictionary of the Gaelic language by Alexander Macbain, first published 1896.
References
Green, Antony (1995). Old Irish Verbs and Vocabulary. Somerville, Massachusetts: Cascadilla Press. ISBN 1-57473-003-7.
Lehmann, R. P. M.; W. P. Lehmann (1975). An Introduction to Old Irish. New York: Modern Language Association of America. ISBN 0873522893.
McCone, Kim (1987). The Early Irish Verb. Maynooth: An Sagart. ISBN 1-870684-00-1.
McCone, Kim (2005). A First Old Irish Grammar and Reader. Maynooth: Department of Old and Middle Irish, National University of Ireland. ISBN 0-901519-36-7.
O’Connell, Frederick William (1912). A Grammar of Old Irish. Belfast: Mayne, Boyd & Son. http://www.archive.org/details/grammaroldirish00oconuoft.
Quin, E. G. (1975). Old-Irish Workbook. Dublin: Royal Irish Academy. ISBN 0-901714-08-9.
Stifter, David (2006). Sengoidelc: Old Irish for Beginners. Syracuse, New York: Syracuse University Press. ISBN 0-8156-3072-7.
Strachan, John (1949). Old-Irish Paradigms and Selections from the Old-Irish Glosses. Revised by Osborn Bergin (Fourth ed.). Dublin: Royal Irish Academy. ISBN 0-901714-35-6. http://www.archive.org/details/oldirishparadigm00strauoft.
Thurneysen, Rudolf (1993) [1946]. A Grammar of Old Irish. Translated by D. A. Binchy and Osborn Bergin. Dublin: Dublin Institute for Advanced Studies. ISBN 1-85500-161-6.
Tigges, Wim; Feargal Ó Béarra (2006). An Old Irish Primer. Nijmegen: Stichting Uitgeverij de Keltische Draak. ISBN 90-806863-5-2.
External links
An Etymological Dictionary of the Gaelic Language MacBain, Alexander Gairm Publications, 1982
Old Irish dictionary
Old Irish Online from the University of Texas at Austin.
eDIL (digital edition of the Dictionary of the Irish Language)
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Sociolinguistics
Connacht Irish · Munster Irish · Newfoundland Irish · Ulster Irish · Status of the language
Grammar
Initial mutations · Declension · Conjugation · Dependent and independent forms · Phonology · Syntax
Writing
Orthography · Ogham · Gaelic type · Early literature · Modern literature
Names
Personal and family names · List of personal names
v · d · eScottish Gaelic linguistics
Variants
Primitive Irish · Old Irish · Middle Irish · Classical Gaelic · Scottish Gaelic
Dialects
Canadian Gaelic · Galwegian (Galloway) Gaelic
Language
Alphabet · Orthography · Phonology · Grammar · Names · Dependent and independent verb forms
Culture
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v · d · eManx linguistics
Hockey: Pegasus close to IHL semi spot
Pegasus took another massive step towards qualification for the semi-finals of the ESB Irish Hockey League yesterday when they beat old rivals Hermes 3-1 at Queen's. Related Stories Cricket: Morgan’s World hopes hit by unlucky break In Pictures: Super Bowl - Green Bay Packers win NFL Super Bowl XLV In Pictures: Green Bay Packers win NFL Super Bowl XLV Belfast Giants closing in on big prize ...
Old Irish Online: Series Introduction
This series covers Old Irish texts, ca. 7th - 12th centuries A.D. ... Irish is one of the so-called Celtic languages, a sub-family of Indo-European. ...
Primitive Irish · Old Irish · Middle Irish · Manx language
Labour pledges to invest in economy
The Labour Party has pledged to drive investment in the Irish economy with almost three billion euro from State-owned pension reserves. Related Stories Candidates face battle for votes 19-year-old driver dies in crash Probe as man dies at garda station New campaign to tackle homelessness Fianna Fail backs agri-food growth
ireland pictures - irish gifts - political images from irish ...
Journey back a hundred years or so, view these Irish pictures and see how your Irish ancestors lived... from the pleasure you experience seeing historical photographs ...
Primitive Irish · Old Irish · Middle Irish · Manx language
Ward retains title and eyes senior glory
JOE WARD, the 2009 and 2010 AIBA World Junior and World Youth champion, claimed his second Irish Open Youth Championships title in a row at the National Stadium in Dublin on Saturday night.
Irish Gaelic: Definition from Answers.com
Irish Gaelic n. The Goidelic language of Ireland. Also called Erse , Irish. ... Old and Middle Irish are the vehicles of a rich literature of prose tales and verse. ...
Primitive Irish · Old Irish · Middle Irish · Manx language
Old, young, new dogs meet at Westminster show in NY
Old English Sheepdogs are groomed during the first day of the 2010 Westminster Dog Show in New York February 15, 2010.










