La situation sociolinguistique de l’irlandais

The sociolinguistic situation of Irish is characterised by a very significant and early decline in the number of its speakers, as a consequence of the English domination of the country. Whereas in 1800, English was only used in a few urban areas in the East of the island, by 1851, i.e. after the Gre...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Anders Ahlqvist
Format: Article
Language:fra
Published: Université de Bretagne Occidentale – UBO 1998-10-01
Series:La Bretagne Linguistique
Subjects:
Online Access:https://journals.openedition.org/lbl/3704
_version_ 1827352360812281856
author Anders Ahlqvist
author_facet Anders Ahlqvist
author_sort Anders Ahlqvist
collection DOAJ
description The sociolinguistic situation of Irish is characterised by a very significant and early decline in the number of its speakers, as a consequence of the English domination of the country. Whereas in 1800, English was only used in a few urban areas in the East of the island, by 1851, i.e. after the Great Famine, Irish was no longer the majority language but in three large regions in the West (from Donegal to Kerry), with no more territorial continuity. However, the gradual emancipation of the country, until its complete independence after the First World War, allowed Irish to regain a place in official and state use. The resulting development of new norms is nonetheless not without its problems. As for the large-scale revitalisation of Irish, it also remains a challenge, sometimes pitting collective against individual interest in mastering the language.
first_indexed 2024-03-08T03:03:47Z
format Article
id doaj.art-3d292075d7f24f11b4f9a887799bcef4
institution Directory Open Access Journal
issn 1270-2412
2727-9383
language fra
last_indexed 2024-03-08T03:03:47Z
publishDate 1998-10-01
publisher Université de Bretagne Occidentale – UBO
record_format Article
series La Bretagne Linguistique
spelling doaj.art-3d292075d7f24f11b4f9a887799bcef42024-02-13T10:43:39ZfraUniversité de Bretagne Occidentale – UBOLa Bretagne Linguistique1270-24122727-93831998-10-011227728610.4000/lbl.3704La situation sociolinguistique de l’irlandaisAnders AhlqvistThe sociolinguistic situation of Irish is characterised by a very significant and early decline in the number of its speakers, as a consequence of the English domination of the country. Whereas in 1800, English was only used in a few urban areas in the East of the island, by 1851, i.e. after the Great Famine, Irish was no longer the majority language but in three large regions in the West (from Donegal to Kerry), with no more territorial continuity. However, the gradual emancipation of the country, until its complete independence after the First World War, allowed Irish to regain a place in official and state use. The resulting development of new norms is nonetheless not without its problems. As for the large-scale revitalisation of Irish, it also remains a challenge, sometimes pitting collective against individual interest in mastering the language.https://journals.openedition.org/lbl/3704IrelandIrish (language)revitalisationEnglish (language)is there a French sociolinguistic exception? (colloquium)official language
spellingShingle Anders Ahlqvist
La situation sociolinguistique de l’irlandais
La Bretagne Linguistique
Ireland
Irish (language)
revitalisation
English (language)
is there a French sociolinguistic exception? (colloquium)
official language
title La situation sociolinguistique de l’irlandais
title_full La situation sociolinguistique de l’irlandais
title_fullStr La situation sociolinguistique de l’irlandais
title_full_unstemmed La situation sociolinguistique de l’irlandais
title_short La situation sociolinguistique de l’irlandais
title_sort la situation sociolinguistique de l irlandais
topic Ireland
Irish (language)
revitalisation
English (language)
is there a French sociolinguistic exception? (colloquium)
official language
url https://journals.openedition.org/lbl/3704
work_keys_str_mv AT andersahlqvist lasituationsociolinguistiquedelirlandais