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When derived from continental Celtic, it would be translated with "yew".
The Continental Celtic languages ceased to be widely used by the 6th century.
Continental Celtic languages cannot be shown to have any absolute/conjunct distinction.
Continental Celtic languages are attested only in inscriptions and place-names.
Continental Celtic languages were also spoken in the peninsula, before the arrival of Latin.
Since little material has been preserved in any of the Continental Celtic languages, historical linguistic analysis based on the comparative method is difficult to perform.
Society and Law in Continental Celtic Europe.
Venetic - close to Italic and possibly Continental Celtic.
The modern term Continental Celtic is used in contrast to Insular Celtic.
"Continental Celtic".
Compare this to English or French (and possibly Continental Celtic) which are normally subject-verb-object in word order.
Continental Celtic (only a collective term of convenience, not a single branch of Celtic)
Galatian is a Continental Celtic language contemporary and closely related to the Gaulish language.
Linguistically, Continental Celtic is divided into Celtiberian and Gaulish.
Gaulish is paraphyletically grouped with Celtiberian as Continental Celtic.
The resident population at this time was generally speaking Brythonic-the insular variety of continental Celtic which was influenced by the Roman occupation.
Gaulish, maybe the only survivor of the continental Celtic languages in Roman times, slowly became extinct during the long centuries of Roman dominion.
Comparison with Continental Celtic languages, specifically Gaulish, shows that it was similar to other Celtic languages of the time.
Instead, the group called Continental Celtic is polyphyletic and the term refers simply to non-Insular Celtic languages.
From all the different names of the same Celtic people in literature and inscriptions it is possible to abstract a continental Celtic segment, boio-.
"Continental Celtic", "The Celtic Languages", ed.
The Noric language or Eastern Celtic language was a Continental Celtic language.
The theonym has been classified as a Continental Celtic deity but has also been taken to be an Illyrian divine name.
While Continental Celtic presents much substantiation for phonology, and some for morphology, recorded material is still too scanty to allow a secure reconstruction of syntax.
However a simple division into P- and Q-Celtic may be untenable, as it does not do justice to the evidence of the ancient Continental Celtic languages.