himself Wrote:These mutations are probably a good thing in widely spoken languages because you get to see languages evolving (although the down side is that the dialects / versions of the language aren't seen as equal and people are judged for the brand of the language they speak, e.g. black Americans may be looked down upon for using African American Vernacular English). In Irish, there are so few speakers that the 'incorrect' version spoken by non-native speakers (who outnumber native speakers) dominates and, in the end, it will be the one to survive, at the expense of the 'correct' version of the Irish language spoken by native speakers.
Of course, I agree wholly
I mean, it's sad to say that ultimately, that may just end up being the case; Simply for the fact that when Irish Gaelic was initially developed/spoken;
It was in a time with less "inclusism"(Yes I made that up); Meaning;
Ireland is now more and more integrated with the UK as a whole, as far as I remember from being in England (for the whole of 4 dang Months LoL), and tho the history is tumultuous, especially with the lingual 'genocide' by oppressive Englishmen's institutionalized usage of English;
It's now the common mode of conversation because of the lingual purge; and for the pure and simple fact that English right now is the World's Lingua Franca.
Trust me; I'm not the biggest fan of English, simply because of it's expansion, now into the territory of cultural erasure of other languages;
But it's the simplest, and most widely understood or recognized languages;
And because Irish Gaelic by population alone would've been small anyway, the overall chances that it would've survived "intact" and even hereafter, as we can now see with Spanish and other languages that 'adopt' English terms, is significantly low.
It would've at some point dichotomized.
Every language does, is doing it now, and will continue to do so until whenever.
In a hundred or so odd years; This conversation we're having may look like Greek to both of us; or one of our Englishes may evolve far more drastically in a different direction.
I think the case of Irish Gaelic, like Okinawan Japanese and other 'critically endangered' languages, are one's of Sentimentalism and Cultural identity.
Which I fully support.
Because I know I wouldn't want my own Dialect to go extinct and we lose all that we are to adapt to another way of life/speaking.
I completely sympathize my dear.