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  1. Breton is most closely related to Cornish, another Southwestern Brittonic language. Welsh and the extinct Cumbric, both Western Brittonic languages, are more distantly related, and the Goidelic languages (Irish, Manx, Scottish Gaelic) have a slight connection due to both of their origins being from Insular Celtic. [citation needed]

  2. 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 ...

  3. The Goidelic languages: Irish, Manx, and Scottish Gaelic They are also called "Q-Celtic" because of the use of a Q sound (spelled with a C or a K). 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.

  4. Glottolog. insu1254. Insular Celtic languages are the group of Celtic languages spoken in Brittany, Great Britain, Ireland, and the Isle of Man. All surviving Celtic languages are in the Insular group, including Breton, which is spoken on continental Europe in Brittany, France. The Continental Celtic languages, although once widely spoken in ...

  5. Celtic language decline in England. The opening verses of the fourteenth-century Cornish play Origo Mundi. Prior to the 5th century AD, most people in Great Britain spoke the Brythonic languages, but these numbers declined sharply throughout the Anglo-Saxon period (between the fifth and eleventh centuries), when Brythonic languages were ...

  6. Glottolog. None. Linguasphere. 50-AB. Neo-Brittonic, also known as Neo-Brythonic, [2] is a stage of the Insular Celtic Brittonic languages that emerged by the middle of the sixth century CE. Neo-Brittonic languages include Old, Middle and Modern Welsh, Cornish, and Breton, as well as Cumbric (and potentially Pictish ).

  7. According to the OED 'apparently of Celtic origin: compare Irish and Gaelic creag, Manx creg, cregg, Welsh craig rock. None of these, however, exactly gives the English crag, cragg '. [13] Celtic (OED1) common. doe. Possibly from a Brittonic root *da-, [14] but could also be from Latin. Latin dāma (OED1) technical.