Northern Manx
Gaelg Hwoaie
Native toIsle of Man
EthnicityManx
Extinct1940s[1]
Early forms
Official status
Official language in
Isle of Man
Language codes
ISO 639-3
Approximate borders of the Manx dialects

Northern Manx (Manx: Gaelg Hwoaie) was a dialect of the Manx language, one of the three Goidelic languages.[2] It was spoken from Maughold to all the way to Peel.

Phonology

There were many noticeable differences that Northern Manx and Southern Manx had in pronunciations,[3] for example Northern Manx mostly preserved word-initial [ɡ] before [lʲ], but not Southern Manx. Some Northern Manx pronunciations often had long is, for example mee and nee.[4] Northern Manx's pronunciations were more similar to that of Scottish Gaelic.[5]

See also

References

  1. The Cambridge Encyclopedia of Language (David Crystal, editor); Cambridge University Press, 1987; p. 303: "The Isle of Man was wholly Manx-speaking until the 18th century... the last mother-tongue speakers died in the late 1940s"
  2. Broderick 1984–86, 1:xxvii–xxviii, 160
  3. Broderick, George (1 January 2019). "Recording the Last Native Manx Speakers 1909–1972". 10 (1): 1–46. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  4. Rhys, Sir John (1894). The Outlines of the Phonology of Manx Gaelic. Manx Society.
  5. Lewin, Christopher (15 January 2023). "Preocclusion in Manx". Journal of Celtic Linguistics. 24 (1): 125–166. doi:10.16922/jcl.24.5. S2CID 256967935.

Sources

  • Broderick, George (1984–1986). A Handbook of Late Spoken Manx (3 volumes). Tübingen, Germany: Niemeyer. ISBN 3-484-42903-8.


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