subfamily of Celtic languages, including Welsh, Cornish, Breton and Cumbric
Brythonic refers to a subfamily of Celtic languages that includes Welsh, Cornish, Breton, and the now-extinct Cumbric. These languages matter because they represent a distinct branch of the Celtic language family and help us understand the linguistic and cultural history of western Europe.
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The Brittonic languages (also Brythonic or British Celtic) form one of the two branches of the Insular Celtic languages; the other is Goidelic. It comprises the extant languages Breton, Cornish, and Welsh. The name Brythonic was derived by Welsh Celticist John Rhys from the Welsh word Brython, denoting a Celtic Briton as distinguished from Anglo-Saxons or Gaels.
The Brittonic languages derive from the Common Brittonic language, spoken throughout Great Britain during the Iron Age and Roman period. In the 5th and 6th centuries emigrating Britons also took Brittonic speech to the continent, most significantly in Brittany and Britonia. During the next few centuries, in much of Britain the language was replaced by Old English and Scottish Gaelic, with the remaining Common Brittonic language splitting into regional dialects, eventually evolving into Welsh, Cornish, Breton, Cumbric, and possibly Pictish, which is often identified as a descendant of a related to Brittonic branch of Celtic, known as Pritenic. Welsh and Breton continue to be spoken as native languages, while a revival in Cornish has led to an increase in speakers of that language. Cumbric and Pictish are extinct, having been replaced by Goidelic and Anglic speech. There is also a community of Brittonic language speakers in Y Wladfa (the Welsh settlement in Patagonia).
Discovered by embedding cosine similarity (sentence-transformers MiniLM, 384-dim).