Gaelic (gā'lik) [key], or Goidelic, group of languages belonging to the Celtic subfamily of the Indo-European family of languages. See Celtic languages; Irish language.
The Columbia Electronic Encyclopedia, 6th ed. Copyright © 2007, Columbia University Press. All rights reserved.
Related content from HighBeam Research on: Gaelic
Gaelic is the soul, not a side-order (New Statesman (1996))
Making the Irish European: Gaelic honor politics and its Continental contexts. (Renaissance Quarterly)
Hail the Gaels. (Gaelic language revival in Northern Ireland among both Catholics and Protestants) (The Economist (US))
Stroop phenomenon as a measure of cognitive functioning of bilingual (Gaelic English) subjects. (British Journal of Psychology)
Reimagining Culture: Histories, Identities and the Gaelic Renaissance (Anthropological Quarterly)
The politics of language and national school reform: the Gaelic League's call for an Irish Ireland, 1893-1922. (American Educational History Journal)
The Gaelic front controversy: the Gaelic League's (post-colonial) crux. (Irish University Review: a journal of Irish Studies)
1951 Edinburgh People's Festival Ceilidh/Gaelic Songs of Scotland: Women at Work in the Western Isles (Journal of American Folklore)
Reimagining Culture: Histories, Identities and the Gaelic Renaissance.(Review) (Journal of the Royal Anthropological Institute)
(Never) mind your language; Gaelic.(Scotland's ancient language is dying. Nobody cares much)(Brief Article) (The Economist (US))
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