Irish is well-known to be a threatened minority language, which has a number of under-researched features. This article presents an analysis of Irish orthography, based on the most frequent words in a corpus of children's literature in Irish. We identify both basic orthographic rules and a few phonological rules that systematically alter pronunciations from those expected based on the orthographic norms. While comparison of Irish spelling patterns with those in a similar corpus for English confirms a widespread belief that the orthography of Irish is more regular than that of English (the L1 of most beginning readers of Irish), this analysis refutes the commonly accepted corollary assumption that explicit decoding instruction in Irish is un...
As one of the Celtic languages, Irish is among the few languages in the world that employ word initi...
Irish traces can be found in many countries all over the world. Despite heavy emigration, Irish infl...
“Caint na ndaoine”. The Irish Language as a Precedent for StandardisationCritics of the standardisat...
Irish is well-known to be a threatened minority language, which has a number of under-researched fea...
Irish has significant State support, but lacks a research base to support the teaching of Irish read...
While Irish has State support in the Republic of Ireland, and is taught as a compulsory school subje...
For the majority of people in Ireland, Irish is a second language acquired primarily through the sch...
The focus of this handbook is to describe systematic patterns of spelling in Irish that can be expli...
Fluency and efficient word recognition have been identified as critical components of reading, and r...
The association of phonological and lexical-semantic processes with spelling ability in children has...
The association of phonological and lexical-semantic processes with spelling ability in children has...
Although traditional, unitary models of language standardisation have been prominent in minority lan...
The association of phonological and lexical-semantic processes with spelling ability in children has...
This dissertation investigates a typologically rare linguistic phenomenon found in Irish from three ...
The history of the English language in Ireland is long and complex; one which, until recently at lea...
As one of the Celtic languages, Irish is among the few languages in the world that employ word initi...
Irish traces can be found in many countries all over the world. Despite heavy emigration, Irish infl...
“Caint na ndaoine”. The Irish Language as a Precedent for StandardisationCritics of the standardisat...
Irish is well-known to be a threatened minority language, which has a number of under-researched fea...
Irish has significant State support, but lacks a research base to support the teaching of Irish read...
While Irish has State support in the Republic of Ireland, and is taught as a compulsory school subje...
For the majority of people in Ireland, Irish is a second language acquired primarily through the sch...
The focus of this handbook is to describe systematic patterns of spelling in Irish that can be expli...
Fluency and efficient word recognition have been identified as critical components of reading, and r...
The association of phonological and lexical-semantic processes with spelling ability in children has...
The association of phonological and lexical-semantic processes with spelling ability in children has...
Although traditional, unitary models of language standardisation have been prominent in minority lan...
The association of phonological and lexical-semantic processes with spelling ability in children has...
This dissertation investigates a typologically rare linguistic phenomenon found in Irish from three ...
The history of the English language in Ireland is long and complex; one which, until recently at lea...
As one of the Celtic languages, Irish is among the few languages in the world that employ word initi...
Irish traces can be found in many countries all over the world. Despite heavy emigration, Irish infl...
“Caint na ndaoine”. The Irish Language as a Precedent for StandardisationCritics of the standardisat...