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The Celtic Languages (Cambridge Language Surveys)

The Celtic Languages (Cambridge Language Surveys)

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Donald MacAulay
Cambridge University Press, 3/9/2009
EAN 9780521088916, ISBN10: 0521088917

Paperback, 488 pages, 22.9 x 15.2 x 3.1 cm
Language: English
Originally published in English

This volume describes the six modern Celtic languages. Four of these, Modern Irish, Scottish Gaelic, Welsh and Breton, are living community languages. The other two, Manx and Cornish, survived into the modern period, but are no longer extant as community languages, though they are the subject of enthusiastic revivals. The Celtic Languages sets them briefly in their Indo-European context, and states their general relationships within the broader Celtic language family. Individual linguistic studies are first placed in their sociolinguistic and sociohistorical context. A detailed synchronic account of each language then follows, including syntax, morphology, phonology, morphophonology, dialect variation and distribution. Each description is based on a common plan, thus facilitating comparison amongst the different languages. This latest volume in the Cambridge Language Surveys will be welcomed by all scholars of the Celtic languages, but has also been designed to be accessible to any reader with only a basic knowledge of linguistics. It is the only modern account to deal with all surviving Celtic languages in this detail.

1. Introduction
2. The Celtic languages
an overview
Part I. The Gaelic Languages
3. The Irish language
4. The Manx language
5. The Scottish Gaelic language
Part II. The Brittonic Languages
6. The Welsh language
7. The Cornish language
8. The Breton language.