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A Guide to Irish Culture
on the web

Language

Acmhainní Gaedhilge Gaelic resources, including Gaelic text database, over 3 million words of searchable quality modern Gaelic texts (mostly Irish, some Scottish), and some hints about natural Gaelic and in particular Ulster Gaelic. Ciarán Ó Duibhín. Sabhal Mór Ostaig, Colaiste Gháidhlig na h-Alba

An Etymological Dictionary of the Gaelic Language MacBain, Alexander. Gairm Publications, 1982. 1st edition - 1896. 2nd edition (revised) - 1911.Photolitho Reprint of 1911 edition - 1982. Keyed in by Caoimhín P. Ó Donnaíle, Sabhal Mór Ostaig. HTML version by John T. McCranie, San Francisco State University. ceantar.org

An Tobar Téarmaí Gaeilge don Earnáil Phoiblí, or Useful Irish terms for the Public Sector. Connect Ireland

Clófhoirne Oghaim / Ogham Fonts including Michael Everson’s Beith-Luis-Nion, Pollach, Maigh Nuad, Craobh Ruadh, Everson Mono Ogham, and Cog Crosta; Curtis Clark’s Beth-Luis-Nion, Jost Gippert, TITUS Ogham; and David F. Nalle’s Ragnarok Ogham. Evertype
see also
Irish Ogham Inscriptions There are roughly 400 known ogham inscriptions on stone monuments scattered around the Irish Sea, the bulk of them dating to the 5th and 6th centuries. Their language is predominantly Primitive Irish, but a few examples record fragments of the Pictish language. Wikipedia
see also
Titus Ogamica. Ogam Inscriptions Inscriptions, Database, Bibliography, and Image catalogue NB clicking on an image opens three tabs – the image itself, its database details, and number. Part of Titus (Thesaurus Indogermanischer Text- und Sprachmaterialien)

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