[Regia-NA] Re: Celt was Fashions/Cory

Kathy list-regia-na@lig.net
Fri, 14 Nov 2003 14:49:45 -0800 (PST)


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Thanks Cory    will add this email to the others on the same subject.. (Oh woe to my mailbox!)
kathy

Cory Nielsen <cnielsen@connect2.com> wrote:
Kathy writes: 

> Umm Oswald.. you state that they (the Celts)are related linguistically.... i was under the impression that the Irish, the Welsh, the Manx and the Scottish Celts all spoke their own version of Gaelic... or are you speaking of the early days of the Celt tribes.. 
> Did they not also originate in a small Austrian town, called ..oh dang.. senior moment.. word means Salt...
> Kathy

Irish Gaelic, Manx, and Scottish Gaelic (though not Scots) are Gaelic 
languages, sometimes called "Q-Celtic" or Goidelic. 

Welsh (along with Breton and Cornish) is not a Gaelic tongue. It is in the 
group sometimes called "P-Celtic" or Brythonic. 

The Celtic languages that used to be spoken on the Continent (like Gaulish) 
are another branch of Celtic altogether. 

The large language family that includes all of the Celtic, Germanic, Slavic, 
and Italic tongues (among others) is called Indo-European. According to most 
of what I've read, the Indo-Europeans seem to have migrated into Europe from 
Asia. 

Cory 
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<DIV>Thanks Cory&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; will add this email to the others on the same subject.. (Oh woe to my mailbox!)</DIV>
<DIV>kathy<BR><BR><B><I>Cory Nielsen &lt;cnielsen@connect2.com&gt;</I></B> wrote:</DIV>
<BLOCKQUOTE class=replbq style="PADDING-LEFT: 5px; MARGIN-LEFT: 5px; BORDER-LEFT: #1010ff 2px solid">Kathy writes: <BR><BR>&gt; Umm Oswald.. you state that they (the Celts)are related linguistically.... i was under the impression that the Irish, the Welsh, the Manx and the Scottish Celts all spoke their own version of Gaelic... or are you speaking of the early days of the Celt tribes.. <BR>&gt; Did they not also originate in a small Austrian town, called ..oh dang.. senior moment.. word means Salt...<BR>&gt; Kathy<BR><BR>Irish Gaelic, Manx, and Scottish Gaelic (though not Scots) are Gaelic <BR>languages, sometimes called "Q-Celtic" or Goidelic. <BR><BR>Welsh (along with Breton and Cornish) is not a Gaelic tongue. It is in the <BR>group sometimes called "P-Celtic" or Brythonic. <BR><BR>The Celtic languages that used to be spoken on the Continent (like Gaulish) <BR>are another branch of Celtic altogether. <BR><BR>The large language family that includes all of the Celtic, Germanic,
 Slavic, <BR>and Italic tongues (among others) is called Indo-European. According to most <BR>of what I've read, the Indo-Europeans seem to have migrated into Europe from <BR>Asia. <BR><BR>Cory <BR>_______________________________________________<BR>list-regia-na mailing list<BR>list-regia-na@lig.net<BR>http://www.lig.net/mailman/listinfo/list-regia-na</BLOCKQUOTE><p><hr SIZE=1>
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