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  1. ブリソン諸語 (ブリソンしょご、 英: Brythonic languages )、もしくは ブリトン諸語 (ブリトンしょご、 英: Brittonic languages 、 British languages )とは、 島嶼ケルト語 からの分岐語族の一つ。. もう一方の分岐は ゲール語 [2] 。. ブリソニック(Brythonic)の表記は ...

  2. The Brittonic languages: Breton, Cornish, and Welsh (another language, Cumbric, is extinct). Brittonic Celtic is also called "P-Celtic" because of the use of the letter P. By the 4th century BC most people in the British Isles spoke a Celtic language. When the Irish abbot and missionary Columba met the Pictish king Bruide they needed a translator.

  3. Since little material has been preserved of any of the Continental Celtic languages, historical linguistic analysis based on the comparative method is difficult to perform. Meanwhile, under the P/Q hypothesis, other researchers see the Brittonic languages and Gaulish as forming part of a subgroup of the Celtic languages that is known as P-Celtic.

  4. Cumbric language. Brythonic languages, one of two groups of the modern Celtic languages, the other being Goidelic. The Brythonic languages (from Welsh brython, “Briton”) are or were spoken on the island of Great Britain and consist of Welsh, Cornish, and Breton. They are distinguished from the Goidelic group by the presence of the sound p ...

  5. Las lenguas britónicas o britonas forman una de las dos subramas de las lenguas celtas insulares, siendo la otra las goidélicas. Incluye lenguas actuales, como el galés y el bretón, y otras extintas, como el córnico (revivido en el siglo XX) y el cúmbrico. El nombre ( brythonic en inglés) fue creado por John Rhys como derivación de la ...

  6. Cagwinn ( talk) 15:11, 19 June 2013 (UTC) Brittonic and Brythonic are the most common names for the language family, but the barely attested language discussed here is actually commonly called British. It's called British by both Jackson and Schrijver, for example.

  7. Breton is a Brittonic Celtic language in the Indo-European family, and its grammar has many traits in common with these languages. Like most Indo-European languages it has grammatical gender, grammatical number, articles and inflections and, like the other Celtic languages, Breton has mutations. In addition to the singular–plural system, it ...