Celtic languages/Related Articles
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- See also changes related to Celtic languages, or pages that link to Celtic languages or to this page or whose text contains "Celtic languages".
Parent topics
- Indo-European languages [r]: A group of several hundred languages, including the majority of languages spoken in Europe, the Plateau of Iran and the subcontinent of India, that share a considerable common vocabulary and linguistic features. [e]
Subtopics
- Gaelic languages [r]: Add brief definition or description
- Irish Gaelic language [r]: Add brief definition or description
- Scottish Gaelic language [r]: A Goidelic Celtic language spoken in Scotland and Canada. [e]
- Manx language [r]: Add brief definition or description
- Brythonic languages [r]: Add brief definition or description also Britannic
- Breton language [r]: Celtic language spoken in Brittany. [e]
- Cornish language [r]: Celtic language spoken in Cornwall (southwest Britain). [e]
- Welsh language [r]: A Brythonic Celtic language spoken mainly in Wales and Patagonia, Argentina. [e]
- Aberystwyth [r]: Town on the central Welsh coast. [e]
- Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel [r]: (1770–1831) German idealist philosopher, most famous for writings on Geist and dialectic. [e]
- Illa de la Discòrdia [r]: Add brief definition or description
- Flash Gordon [r]: A long running series of comic strips as well as radio, movies television stories concerning the science fiction adventures of a heroic polo-playing Yale graduate transplanted from 20th century earth to a Space opera setting of interplanetary warlords and alien creatures. [e]
- Proto-Indo-Europeans [r]: Prehistoric people who spoke a language reconstructed as 'Proto-Indo-European', the ancestor of many modern European languages. [e]
- Nepali language [r]: Add brief definition or description
- Old English [r]: The English language as it was from about the middle of the fifth century until around the middle of the twelfth century (also known as Anglo-Saxon). [e]