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Yola dialect information


Yola
Forth and Bargy dialect
Native toIreland
RegionCounty Wexford
Extinctc. late 19th century[1][2][3][4]
Language family
Indo-European
  • Germanic
    • West Germanic
      • North Sea Germanic
        • Anglo-Frisian
          • Anglic
            • Yola
Early forms
Proto-Indo-European
  • Proto-Germanic
    • West Saxon Old English[5]
      • Middle English
Language codes
ISO 639-3yol
Glottologeast2834
yola1237
Linguasphere52-ABA-bd

Yola, more commonly and historically the Forth and Bargy dialect, was an Anglic language variety once spoken in the baronies of Forth and Bargy in County Wexford, Ireland. As such, it was probably similar to the Fingallian dialect of the Fingal area. Both became functionally extinct in the 19th century when they were replaced by modern Hiberno-English. The word "yola" means "old" in the dialect.[6]

Yola hut refurbished in Tagoat, County Wexford, Ireland
  1. ^ Browne, Kathleen (31 December 1921). "The Ancient Dialect of the Baronies of Forth and Bargy, County Wexford". jstor.org. Retrieved 4 November 2023. [...] Mr Hore, one of the last speakers of the dialect died in 1897
  2. ^ Hore, Herbert (1862). "An Account of the Barony of Forth, in the County of Wexford, Written at the Close of the Seventeenth Century". jstor.org. Retrieved 4 November 2023. p. 57: for if the use of this old tongue dies out as fast for the next five and twenty years, as it has for the same by-gone period, it will be utterly extinct and forgotten before the present century shall have closed.
  3. ^ Hogan, Jeremiah Joseph (1927). "The English language in Ireland". archive.org. Retrieved 1 December 2023. p. 44: In the baronies of Forth and Bargy (Especially in Forth), an area of about 200 sq. miles lying south of Wexford town, isolated by the sea and a long mountain, there lived on until the last century another descendant of the old Kildare English.
  4. ^ Hickey, Raymond (2023). "3.6.2 The Dialect of Forth and Bargy". The Oxford Handbook of Irish English. Oxford University Press. p. 48. After a period of decline, it was replaced entirely in the early nineteenth century by general Irish English of the region.
  5. ^ Hogan, J. J.; O'Neill, Patrick C. (1947). A North-County Dublin Glossary. pp. 262–283.
  6. ^ Hickey, Raymond (2005). Dublin English: Evolution and Change. John Benjamins Publishing. p. 238. ISBN 90-272-4895-8.

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