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Insular Celtic languages : ウィキペディア英語版
Insular Celtic languages

Insular Celtic languages are those Celtic languages that originated in the British Isles, in contrast to the Continental Celtic languages of mainland Europe and Anatolia. All surviving Celtic languages are from the Insular Celtic group; the Continental Celtic languages are extinct. The six Insular Celtic languages of modern times can be divided into:
* the Goidelic languages: Irish, Manx, and Scottish Gaelic
* the Brittonic languages: Breton, Cornish, and Welsh (another language or dialect, Cumbric, is extinct).
==Insular Celtic hypothesis==
The "Insular Celtic hypothesis" is a theory that the Brythonic and Goidelic languages evolved together in those islands, having a common ancestor more recent than any shared with the Continental Celtic languages such as Celtiberian, Gaulish, Galatian and Lepontic, among others, all of which are long extinct.
The proponents of the Insular Celtic hypothesis (such as Cowgill 1975; McCone 1991, 1992; and Schrijver 1995) point to shared innovations among Insular Celtic languages, including inflected prepositions, shared use of certain verbal particles, VSO word order, and the differentiation of absolute and conjunct verb endings as found extensively in Old Irish and to a small extent in Middle Welsh (see Morphology of the Proto-Celtic language). They assert that a partition that lumps the Brythonic languages and Gaulish (P-Celtic) on one side and the Goidelic languages with Celtiberian (Q-Celtic) on the other may be a superficial one (i.e. owing to a language contact phenomenon), as the identical sound shift ( to ) could have occurred independently in the predecessors of Gaulish and Brythonic, or have spread through language contact between those two groups.
The family tree of the Insular Celtic languages is thus as follows:
*Insular Celtic
*
*Goidelic
*
*
*Primitive Irish, ancestral to:
*
*
*
*Old Irish, ancestral to:
*
*
*
*
*Middle Irish, ancestral to:
*
*
*
*
*
*Irish
*
*
*
*
*
*Scottish Gaelic
*
*
*
*
*
*Manx
*
*Brythonic
*
*
*Pictish (probably)
*
*
*British
*
*
*
*Cumbric (extinct)
*
*
*
*Old Welsh, ancestral to
*
*
*
*
*Middle Welsh, ancestral to:
*
*
*
*
*
*Welsh
*
*
*
*Southwestern Brythonic, ancestral to:
*
*
*
*
*Breton
*
*
*
*
*Cornish
The following table lists cognates showing the development of Proto-Celtic to in Gaulish and the Brythonic languages but to in the Goidelic languages.
A significant difference between Goidelic and Brythonic languages is the transformation of
*''an, am'' to a denasalised vowel with lengthening, ''é'', before an originally voiceless stop or fricative, cf. Old Irish ''éc'' "death", ''écath'' "fish hook", ''dét'' "tooth", ''cét'' "hundred" vs. Welsh ''angau'', ''angad'', ''dant'', and ''cant''. Otherwise:
* the nasal is retained before a vowel, (unicode:''i̯''), ''w'', ''m'', and a liquid:
*
* Old Irish ''ben'' "woman" (<
*benā)
*
* Old Irish ''gainethar'' "he/she is born" (<
*gan-i̯e-tor)
*
* Old Irish ''ainb'' "ignorant" (<
*anwiss)
* the nasal passes to ''en'' before another ''n'':
*
* Old Irish ''benn'' "peak" (<
*banno) (vs. Welsh ''bann'')
*
* Middle Irish ''ro-geinn'' "finds a place" (<
*ganne) (vs. Welsh ''gannaf'')
* the nasal passes to ''in, im'' before a voiced stop
*
* Old Irish ''imb'' "butter" (vs. Breton ''aman(en)n'', Cornish ''amanyn'')
*
* Old Irish ''ingen'' "nail" (vs. Old Welsh ''eguin'')
*
* Old Irish ''tengae'' "tongue" (vs. Welsh ''tafod'')
*
* Old Irish ''ing'' "strait" (vs. Middle Welsh ''eh-ang'' "wide")

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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