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  1. nualeargais.ie › gnag › orthoIrish Orthography

    Irish Orthography (Litriú na Gaeilge) 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. One can just as well develop a ...

  2. Jan 5, 1997 · Irish Gaelic Dialects. by Panu Höglund. Roughly speaking we usually reckon there are three main dialect groupings. Munster in the south (the most important of these dialects today is probably the Irish of the Corca Dhuibhne peninsula in Kerry/ Ciarraí, near Dingle/ Daingean Uí Chúise ), Connacht in the west (the dialect of northern Connacht ...

  3. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › OrthographyOrthography - Wikipedia

    An orthography is a set of conventions for writing a language, including norms of spelling, hyphenation, capitalization, word boundaries, emphasis, and punctuation . Most transnational languages in the modern period have a writing system, [a] and most of these systems have undergone substantial standardization, thus exhibiting less dialect ...

  4. Celtic languages - Irish, Welsh, Gaelic: The history of Irish may be divided into four periods: that of the ogham inscriptions, probably ad 300–500; Old Irish, 600–900; Middle Irish, 900–1200; and Modern Irish, 1200 to the present. This division is necessarily arbitrary, and archaizing tendencies confuse the situation, especially during the period 1200–1600, when a highly standardized ...

  5. An Caighdeán Oifigiúil ( [ənˠ ˌkəidʲaːn̪ˠ ˈɛfʲɪɟuːlʲ], "The Official Standard"), often shortened to An Caighdeán, is the variety of the Irish language that is used as the standard or state norm for the spelling and the grammar of the language and is used in official publications and taught in most schools in the Republic of ...

  6. Irish Language - Orthography. Modern Irish typically uses the ISO basic Latin alphabet without the letters j,k,q,w,x,y,z, but with the addition of one diacritic sign, the acute accent ( á é í ó ú ), known in Irish as the síneadh fada "long mark", plural sínte fada. (The letter v has been naturalised into the language, although it is not ...

  7. Orthography is how a language is expressed in written form, including symbols, punctuation, decisions on where to break words and where to join them together, and so on. It draws from linguistics, literacy and education, and sociopolitics. Though orthographies of different languages may resemble each other, each language needs to have an orthography based on that particular language.