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  1. The grammar and vocabulary of these languages are quite similar, but the spelling and pronunciation are different, especially Manx spelling. Irish is distantly related to Welsh ( Cymraeg ), Cornish ( Kernewek) and Breton ( Brezhoneg ), which form the Brythonic branch of the Celtic languages, also known as P-Celtic.

  2. Irish does not graphemically distinguish dotted i and dotless ı, i.e. they are not different letters as they are in, e.g. Turkish and Azeri. Punctuation Íoc ⁊ Taispeáin ("Pay & Display") sign in Dublin with the Tironian et for agus "and". Irish punctuation is similar to English.

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  4. nualeargais.ie › gnag › orthoIrish Orthography

    The orthography of Irish is at first a bit confusing. In addition, the pronunciation and written Irish are not identical, especially the pronunciation varies from dialect to dialect. Although, the order in which letters appear is not random, but follows specific rules.

  5. Jul 18, 2012 · Step 1: Avoid written phonetic renderings. The first and most important step to learning correct Irish pronunciation is not to depend too heavily on written phonetic renderings. There are several reasons for this: Written phonics can only give you an approximation. Irish has sounds that English doesn’t have (and vice versa).

  6. What are the Differences in Pronunciation Between Irish and English? In Irish, there are combinations of letters that make different sounds. They can even differ across different dialects of Irish too. For example; bh is pronounced like the letter 'v' in 'an bhean' [on van] meaning 'the woman'.

  7. Aug 4, 2009 · The Pronunciation and Spelling of Modern Irish. Some initial observations: Spoken Irish has only a few sounds not found in some dialect of English. Irish has a unique spelling system, quite different from the English one. Irish spelling, although complicated, is actually much more regular than English spelling (!).

  8. Most of the Gaelic letters are pronounced somewhat similarly to their English equivalent. However, one influence from Gaelic is the way many Irish people pronounce the letter 'a'. In Irish it's pronounced as 'ah' or as the 'a' in 'cat'. Many Irish people pronounce it this way in English. It is important to remember also the elongated forms of ...