In alphabetical order (not chronological):
Breton
British
Brythonic
Celtiberian
Cornish
Cumbric
Galatian
Gallaecian
Gaulish
Goidelic
Insular Celtic
Irish
Lepontic
Manx
Middle Irish
Middle Welsh
Noric
Old Irish
Old Welsh
Pictish
Primitive Irish
Scottish Gaelic
Southwestern Brythonic
Tartessian
Welsh
Celtic: In Britain, this one came first; French in 1300: Considered "noble"; English: A mixture of several languages; and Latin: Brought by the Romans.
There is no single language called 'Celtic' it is a language family of six different languages.
There is no single language called 'Celtic' it is a language family of six different languages.
Six Celtic languages are spoken in Great Britain and Northern Ireland:Ireland (Irish)Scotland (Scottish Gaelic)Isle of Man (Manx)Wales (Welsh)Cornwall (Cornish)Brittany (Breton)
This is the Celtic family of languages. The modern Celtic languages are:IrishScottish GaelicWelshManxBretonCornish
The Celtic language was spoken by the ancients in the regon, but the language spoken in Britain is not known. It was not recorded.
Europe has the most speakers of Celtic languages.
There's actually no such language as "Celtic". Celtic refers to a group of dozens of languages, six of which are spoken today:BretonCornishIrish GaelicManxScottish GaelicWelsh
Prior to the Roman invasion Britain was inhabited by Celtic peoples who had several different kingdoms
Celtic is not a language. It is a group of languages. You would have specify which of the 6 living Celtic languages you want a translation for:BretonCornishManxIrish GaelicScottish GaelicWelsh
There are six distinct Celtic languages.
David Malcolme has written: 'An essay on the antiquities of Great Britain & Ireland' -- subject(s): Celtic languages