In the Scottish Highland and Islands, in areas of SW, West and NW Ireland, as a revived language, in the Isle of Man. These languages were also taken by emigrants to other countries, most notably Nova Scotia, where Scottish Gaelic was preserved until recently.
No, Galician is a language spoken in the region of Galicia in Spain, while Gaelic refers to a group of Celtic languages spoken in Ireland and Scotland, including Irish Gaelic and Scottish Gaelic. These are distinct languages with different origins and linguistic characteristics.
Gaelic refers to a group of related languages spoken predominantly in Ireland and Scotland. The main Gaelic languages are Irish Gaelic (Gaeilge) spoken in Ireland and Scottish Gaelic (GΓ idhlig) spoken in Scotland. These languages belong to the Celtic language family.
The main languages spoken in Great Britain are English, Welsh (in Wales), and Scottish Gaelic (in parts of Scotland). In addition, languages such as Cornish and Irish are also spoken in certain regions.
AnswerThe Celts originated somewhere in France and the different languages sprung from their language. Gaeilge is what is spoken in Ireland, Scots Gaelic is spoken in Scotland and Welsh is spoken in Wales.
There's actually no such language as "Celtic". Celtic refers to a group of dozens of languages, six of which are spoken today (along with their locations):Breton (England)Cornish (England)Irish Gaelic (Ireland)Manx (England)Scottish Gaelic (Scotland)Welsh (Wales)
No, Galician is a language spoken in the region of Galicia in Spain, while Gaelic refers to a group of Celtic languages spoken in Ireland and Scotland, including Irish Gaelic and Scottish Gaelic. These are distinct languages with different origins and linguistic characteristics.
English and Gaelic.
There is no such nationality as British. This is just the name of a state 'Britain'. The languages spoken within the British Isles are 1/ English 2/ Welsh 3/ Gaelic
Cornish, Manx, Scottish Gaelic.
Irish Gaelic, Scots Gaelic, and Welsh are all Celtic-Gaelic languages that are still widely spoken today. There are also Cornish and Manx which are now mostly dead.
Yes, Gaelic is still spoken in parts of Ireland and Scotland. In Ireland, the language is known as Irish Gaelic or simply Irish, and in Scotland, it is known as Scottish Gaelic. However, its usage has declined over the years.
AnswerThe Celts originated somewhere in France and the different languages sprung from their language. Gaeilge is what is spoken in Ireland, Scots Gaelic is spoken in Scotland and Welsh is spoken in Wales.
AnswerThe Celts originated somewhere in France and the different languages sprung from their language. Gaeilge is what is spoken in Ireland, Scots Gaelic is spoken in Scotland and Welsh is spoken in Wales.
Galician is the language spoken in the Galicia region of Spain. It's closely related to Portuguese. Gaelic is no longer spoken in Galicia, but Galicians have a Celtic heritage and Galician has some Gaelic root words.Gaelic is an English word for any of three languages which form one half of the Celtic language family group. These three Gaelic languages are Irish Gaelic GaeilgeManx Gaelic GailckScottish Gaelic GàidhligThese three languages are spoken in Ireland, Man and Scotland. The Gaels are the peoples who speak these languages or did so in the past. Gaelic was in danger of being exterminated in many of the traditional Gaelic speaking areas, but now a Gaelic renaissance has slowed this trend if not yet reversed it.
The most numerous are Welsh and Gaelic, members of separate branches of the Celtic languages.
Both in Galloway in Scotland and Galway in Ireland, which you could mean, English is the main language spoken. Scots Gaelic and Irish Gaelic are also spoken in those respective areas.
Scottish English ( English conditioned by two older languages Gaelic & older Scots in accent,vocabulary,grammar) Gaelic is still spoken as native language in the Highlands.