Laoch Ceilteach
or Gaiscíoch Ceilteach.
Scottish Gaelic, Welsh, and Irish 'Gaelic' are probably the Celtic languages most people are somewhat aware of; Breton and the revived Manx and Cornish are not.In Scottish Gaelic 'warrior' can belaoch = warrior; hero; championàrmann = hero/warriormìlidh = warriorIn Irish it can be:Laoch = warrior; heroGaiscíoch = warrior; heroCuradh = warrior/hero; championIn Welsh (Celtic but not Gaelic):Rhyfelwr = warrior
Ceilteach (adjective).
In Irish Gaelic, farm is "feirm" and in Scottish Gaelic, it is "feàrrm".
It's the other way around: Irish is a Celtic language.Here is a list of all 6 modern Celtic languages:Irish GaelicScottish GaelicManxWelshBretonCornish
In Irish it's "álainn" In Welsh it's "hardd" In Scots Gaelic it's "bòidheach"
Gaiscíoch SíochánaLaoch SíochánaThat's modern Irish not Old Irish.
Celtic is not a language, it is a group of languages 6 in all Welsh, Cornish, Breton Irish Gaelic, Scots Gaelic, Manx Gaelic You have to be a bit more specific
Treibh trodairí (warrior tribe).
Irish:laoch dorcha Scots Gaelic: ...
Celtic is not a language. It is a group of languages. You would have to specify. Here are some of the most common Celtic languages: Irish Gaelic Scottish Gaelic Welsh Manx Cornish Breton
In Irish: In Scots Gaelic: In Manx: In Welsh: In Breton: In Cornish:
In Celtic languages, "daughters" can be translated as follows: Irish Gaelic: iníonacha Scottish Gaelic: nighean Welsh: merched Please note that Celtic languages vary in the translation of words, so the term may differ depending on the specific Celtic language.