Orthography of Irish: Difference between revisions

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[[Image:Irish script.gif|thumb|right|330px| A sample of Irish script.]]
{{Image|Irish script.gif|right|330px| A sample of Irish script.}}
The '''[[orthography]] of [[Irish language|Irish]]''' refers to the set of rules and [[grapheme]]-[[phoneme]] (sound-[[letter (alphabet)|letter]]) correspondences used to [[written language|write]] this [[Celtic languages|Celtic language]]. Irish today is written in a modified [[Latin alphabet]], but the earliest writings originating in [[Ireland]], of [[Primitive Irish]], are in the [[Ogam script]], developed around the fourth to fifth centuries). From around the seventh century, [[Old Irish]] began to be written in an insular [[Latin language|Latin]] script, which retained some Ogam features.<ref>Russell (2005: 414-420).</ref>
The '''[[orthography]] of [[Irish language|Irish]]''' refers to the set of rules and [[grapheme]]-[[phoneme]] (sound-[[letter (alphabet)|letter]]) correspondences used to [[written language|write]] this [[Celtic languages|Celtic language]]. Irish today is written in a modified [[Latin alphabet]], but the earliest writings originating in Ireland, of [[Primitive Irish]], are in the [[Ogam script]], developed around the fourth to fifth centuries). From around the seventh century, [[Old Irish]] began to be written in an insular [[Latin language|Latin]] script, which retained some Ogam features.<ref>Russell (2005: 414-420).</ref>


==Footnotes==
==Footnotes==
{{reflist|2}}
{{reflist|2}}[[Category:Suggestion Bot Tag]]

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A sample of Irish script.

The orthography of Irish refers to the set of rules and grapheme-phoneme (sound-letter) correspondences used to write this Celtic language. Irish today is written in a modified Latin alphabet, but the earliest writings originating in Ireland, of Primitive Irish, are in the Ogam script, developed around the fourth to fifth centuries). From around the seventh century, Old Irish began to be written in an insular Latin script, which retained some Ogam features.[1]

Footnotes

  1. Russell (2005: 414-420).