Scottish Gaelic, Welsh, and Irish 'Gaelic' are probably the Celtic languages most people are somewhat aware of; Breton and the revived Manx and Cornish are not.In Scottish Gaelic 'warrior' can belaoch = warrior; hero; championàrmann = hero/warriormìlidh = warriorIn Irish it can be:Laoch = warrior; heroGaiscíoch = warrior; heroCuradh = warrior/hero; championIn Welsh (Celtic but not Gaelic):Rhyfelwr = warrior
Ceilteach (adjective).
In Irish Gaelic, farm is "feirm" and in Scottish Gaelic, it is "feΓ rrm".
It's the other way around: Irish is a Celtic language.Here is a list of all 6 modern Celtic languages:Irish GaelicScottish GaelicManxWelshBretonCornish
In Celtic languages, you can say "beautiful" as "breΓ‘" in Irish Gaelic, "prydferth" in Welsh, and "beli" in Cornish.
Gaiscíoch SíochánaLaoch SíochánaThat's modern Irish not Old Irish.
Celtic is not a language, it is a group of languages 6 in all Welsh, Cornish, Breton Irish Gaelic, Scots Gaelic, Manx Gaelic You have to be a bit more specific
Treibh trodairí (warrior tribe).
Irish:laoch dorcha Scots Gaelic: ...
Celtic is not a language. It is a group of languages. You would have to specify. Here are some of the most common Celtic languages: Irish Gaelic Scottish Gaelic Welsh Manx Cornish Breton
In Irish: In Scots Gaelic: In Manx: In Welsh: In Breton: In Cornish:
In Celtic languages, "daughters" can be translated as follows: Irish Gaelic: inΓonacha Scottish Gaelic: nighean Welsh: merched Please note that Celtic languages vary in the translation of words, so the term may differ depending on the specific Celtic language.