unattested spelling, or at least a spelling unattested in <span class="searchmatch">Old</span> <span class="searchmatch">Irish</span> (i.e. not attested until Middle <span class="searchmatch">Irish</span>). But in general the DIL will have had good reasons...
did read an article <span class="searchmatch">about</span> English/<span class="searchmatch">Irish</span> code-switching once that showed that when you insert fuckin’ into a noun phrase in <span class="searchmatch">Irish</span>, you insert it before...
As for *kattos > cath, that's Welsh. The <span class="searchmatch">Old</span> <span class="searchmatch">Irish</span> word for "cat" is catt /kat/. Or are you talking <span class="searchmatch">about</span> the "battle" word? In that case it's *katus...
Maltese and various other Arabic descendants Primitive <span class="searchmatch">Irish</span> to <span class="searchmatch">Old</span> <span class="searchmatch">Irish</span> to Middle <span class="searchmatch">Irish</span> to <span class="searchmatch">Irish</span> Vulgar Latin to the Romance languages This brings us...
Middle <span class="searchmatch">Irish</span> for anything up to ~1200 and then <span class="searchmatch">Irish</span> or Scottish Gaelic for anything later. The ghc language code is not treated as the ancestor of <span class="searchmatch">Irish</span> and...
of modern language usage and don't have to worry <span class="searchmatch">about</span> attestation. You might look into how <span class="searchmatch">Old</span> <span class="searchmatch">Irish</span> verbs are handled (see beirid and dobeir for examples);...
doesn't lend itself to this, because it covers <span class="searchmatch">Old</span> <span class="searchmatch">Irish</span> (sga), Middle <span class="searchmatch">Irish</span> (mga), and Early Modern <span class="searchmatch">Irish</span> (ga up to the 17th century or so). So I've never...
be removed from nesting, though; other <span class="searchmatch">Old</span> and Middle forms of languages are nested (<span class="searchmatch">Old</span> <span class="searchmatch">Irish</span> and Middle <span class="searchmatch">Irish</span> are listed under I, not under O and M)...
as {{<span class="searchmatch">Old</span> Latin|lang=la}} {{obsolete form of|sociis|sociīs|lang=la}} or as an inflected form? What if the lemma isn't citable? Also, what <span class="searchmatch">about</span> different...
became PC *ī. He also describes it as a Late Celtic change. According to w:<span class="searchmatch">Old</span> <span class="searchmatch">Irish</span>#Vowels this PC *ē became OI /e₁ː/ (as well as from Latin ē), which was...