Historical Evolution
Old Irish texts date to the 4th century; medieval monastic scholarship produced Europe's earliest vernacular literature outside Greek and Latin. Cromwellian plantations, the Famine, and compulsory English education collapsed the speaker base. Independence revived constitutional status; modern revitalization relies on schools (Gaelscoileanna), media (TG4), and the Official Languages Act.
Phonology
Irish consonants exhibit broad/slender pairs (velarized vs palatalized). Vowel quality interacts with consonant environment (caol le caol, leathan le leathan rule). Initial consonant mutations (lenition, eclipsis, h-prothesis) are pervasive and grammatically conditioned.
Syntax
Irish is VSO: verb initial in main clauses (Tá sé ann). Two verb classes (synthetic and analytic) persist. Prepositional pronouns fuse forms (agam, leat); genitive constructions use complex case marking. The copula (is) contrasts with existential bí in ways alien to English.
Attributes
| Total Speakers | 2.1 M |
|---|---|
| L1 Native Speakers | 80 K |
| Number of Countries | 1 countries |
| Language Vitality Index | 3 scale |
| Web Domain Share (%) | 0.01 % |
| Language Family | Indo-European / Celtic / Goidelic |
| Standard Script | Latin (Irish alphabet) |
| Grammatical Typology | VSO, Fusional |
| UNESCO Risk Category | Definitely Endangered |