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  1. Irish orthography is the set of conventions used to write Irish. A spelling reform in the mid-20th century led to An Caighdeán Oifigiúil, the modern standard written form used by the Government of Ireland, which regulates both spelling and grammar. [1]

    • Translations
    • Dictionaries
    • Old Spellings
    • Election/Constitution
    • Reviews
    • Grammar
    • Dialects
    • Current Irish

    The first Irish translation of The New Testament begun by Nicholas Walsh, Bishop of Ossory until his demise in 1587. It was continued by his assistant John Kearney with Dr. Nehemiah Donnellan, Archbishop of Tuam. Finally completed by Uiliam Ó ‘Domhnaill (who had succeeded Bishop Donnellan) then published during 1602. The work of the translation of ...

    Several dictionaries were published over the years: from The Royal Dictionary of 1699 & 1729 by Abel Boyer to The English-Irish Dictionary of Begley & Mc Curtain in 1732. John O ‘ Brien published Foclóir Gaoidhilge-sags-béarla Or during 1768. An English-Irish edition of 1814 by Thaddaeus Connellan was produced. During 1855 an English-Irish edition ...

    The following old spellings were criticized by T. F. O ‘Reilly with their simplifications from old spelling to new spelling: Beirbhiughadh toBeiriú, Imthighthe toImithe, FIrish Dialects past & present; with chapters on Scottish & Manx 1932 (Brown & Nolan Dublin) waaghbháil toFáil, Urradhas toUrrús also Filidheacht toFilíocht.His publication ‘s expa...

    Eamon de Valera, President of the Executive Council from the 1932 Election insisted that policy reverted to older spelling which was then used for the 1937 Constitution. During 1941 he decided to publish a ‘popular’ edition of the Constitution. De Valera also established an expert committee that failed to agree to recommendations; instead the Oirea...

    The Oireachtas’s own translation service during 1945 printed a booklet Litiúna Gailge: Lámhleabhar an Chaighdeain Oifigiúil. (Published in Early Modern History 1500-1700 issue 5 September-October 2012 vol 20) That booklet was expanded during 1947 then republished as An Caighdheán Oifigiúi in 1959, combined with a standard ‘graminer ‘ of 1953. Durin...

    The grammar of early modern Irish was initially presented in a series of grammatical tracts. Edited & published by Osborn Bergin as a supplement to Éiru between 1916-1955. [xxii] Irish has a case system like Latin or German. It has four cases showing functions of nouns or pronouns in a sentence. In phonology it exhibits initial ‘sandi ’ in which th...

    Presently there are three main dialects in the Irish language: Munster (An Mhumháin ), Connnacht (Connachta) also Ulster (Ulaidh) The Munster dialect is spoken mainly in Kerry (Ciarraí) & Muskerry (Múscraí) in the western part of Cork (Contae Chorcai) Connacht dialect is spoken mainly in Connamara (Conamara), the Aran Islands (Oiléain) also in Tour...

    In modern Irish just a few sounds are not found in English dialects. It has an unique spelling system. Although it may appear complicated it is in fact more regular that English spelling. With the exception of a few common words: that have an unstressed prefix-all words are sharply accented on the final syllable. [xxv] Gaelic Irish type today with ...

  2. Irish orthography is within the scope of WikiProject Celts, a collaborative effort to improve Wikipedia's coverage of the ancient Celts and the modern day Celtic nations.

  3. The way that Irish orthography relates to the pronunciation of Irish is not straightforward. This is in part because the orthography represents a fairly abstract level of Irish phonology, as will become clear below. Here we describe the basics of the orthography and how it connects to the phonology/phonetics of the Ulster (Donegal) dialect. 1.

  4. Jul 26, 2016 · While comparison of Irish spelling patterns with those in a similar corpus for English confirms a widespread belief that the orthography of Irish is more regular than that of English (the L1 of most beginning readers of Irish), this analysis refutes the commonly accepted corollary assumption that explicit decoding instruction in Irish is unneces...

    • Nancy Stenson, Tina M. Hickey
    • 2016
  5. Jul 26, 2016 · While comparison of Irish spelling patterns with those in a similar corpus for English confirms a widespread belief that the orthography of Irish is more regular than that of English (the L1...

  6. The standard is based on the three Gaeltacht dialects: Connacht Irish, Munster Irish and Ulster Irish. In Northern Ireland and County Donegal, the Ulster dialect (Gaedhilg Uladh) is used extensively alongside the standard form as the spoken language in primary and secondary schools.

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