Jay Bee wrote:
There's a few things off with this:
a) 'Ancient Language' and nearly '2000 years' old -it's a modern language and is the same age is English, Russian etc
b) UCSC researchers are 'trying to save it' -how can they save it by doing a little research on it?
c) The guy's example of 'beo' is more like 'bey-o'
d) The BBC example doesn't include a native speaker...
e) Although they don't imply this, you might get the impression that the sound contrasts are not currently understood
I've never completely understood the reason for the UCSC study, personally. Unless they plan to make this data available to learners, it doesn't do much more than document the details of pronunciation. It certainly doesn't do much to "save the language"...if they want to do that, they should be LEARNING the language, and interacting with other Irish speakers, both in Ireland and elsewhere.
It's an odd situation. We have a few Irish speakers (and quite a few Irish learners) here in Santa Cruz County, and there's quite a thriving Irish language community over the hill in the East Bay and San Francisco areas, yet the people who study Irish at UCSC never really engage with us. I sometimes get the impression that they think of Irish as a museum piece to be studied for historical purposes rather than a living language.
The "contemporary language" argument is true, but if you take the Old and Middle Irish periods into account (and for English, the Old and Middle English periods), Irish is considerably older.
Redwolf