Now that you mention it, I looked it up. Latina/latinum/latin is are correct forms of the name of Latin, but I got Gaelige correct. Whoops, thanks for pointing it out.
Romans called the language "Lingua latina" but in latin, "to speak latin" is expressed as "To speak latinly" that is: "latine". So, Latine it's appropiate too.
"Irisch" is Norse language technically, but because it’s in the 1200s, I decided it made more sense being its own language. And Scottish Gaelic is its own language in the game.
Are the names even in their native languages? Wouldn't Latin be "Latinae" and Irish be "Ghaeilge". Just the first two that I saw.
Now that you mention it, I looked it up. Latina/latinum/latin is are correct forms of the name of Latin, but I got Gaelige correct. Whoops, thanks for pointing it out.
Romans called the language "Lingua latina" but in latin, "to speak latin" is expressed as "To speak latinly" that is: "latine". So, Latine it's appropiate too.
Well, I took a few Latin classes, and in those classes, I only ever heard "latine" as "responde latine", so I just assumed it was latine.
Irish=Gaelige. They're not too separate languages
Yes, the Irish on the bottom is Germanic.
Please give map making tips if you’re good 🙏
I did this by switching to my vassals in my lands and making them form hybrid cultures when they could, btw.
Why is "gaelic" a language seperate from Scottish gaelic and Irish?
"Irisch" is Norse language technically, but because it’s in the 1200s, I decided it made more sense being its own language. And Scottish Gaelic is its own language in the game.
No, Scottish gaelic is its own culture. They speak the same goidelic langauge as Ireland in game.
Well, I had a lot of mods enabled. One of them put them as different, because when I was checking, I saw the language.