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Scottish Gaelic dictionary gets £2m boost | |
(about 2 hours later) | |
The Scottish government has given £2m funding for an online Gaelic dictionary that could take 30 years to complete. | |
Work has already begun collecting source material for a digital archive containing 30 million words. | |
The project is a partnership of Skye's Gaelic language centre Sabhal Mor Ostaig UHI and Aberdeen, Edinburgh, Glasgow and Strathclyde universities. | |
It is thought there are about 60,000 speakers of Gaelic - one of Europe's ancient languages. | |
Gaelic has fewer letters than the English alphabet - 18 against 26. | |
The aim of the project is to produce a historical dictionary of Gaelic that will be comparable in value and status to dictionaries already available for Scots and English. | |
Compilers expect it to have more than 100,000 entries. | |
The Scottish Funding Council (SFC) said the dictionary would provide a new understanding of the structure, variations and development of Gaelic through its use in speech, literature, song and place names. | |
The SFC's funding package will help to accelerate the project with the recruitment of more staff and to buy software to support their work. | |
Preparatory research has been going on for a decade while work on the actual dictionary will begin five years from now. | |
Other organisations are also providing financial support to the project. | Other organisations are also providing financial support to the project. |
The Arts and Humanities Research Council is providing £100,000 and £50,000 is coming from the Economic and Social Research Council. | The Arts and Humanities Research Council is providing £100,000 and £50,000 is coming from the Economic and Social Research Council. |
Gaelic national body Bord na Gaidhlig has supported the work since 2004 and contributes £75,000 a year. | Gaelic national body Bord na Gaidhlig has supported the work since 2004 and contributes £75,000 a year. |
Sabhal Mor Ostaig UHI is managing the project called Faclair na Gaidhlig. | |
'Secure future' | 'Secure future' |
First Minister Alex Salmond has welcomed the new funding package. | |
He said: "We're committed to working with a range of other public bodies to create a secure future for the Gaelic language. | He said: "We're committed to working with a range of other public bodies to create a secure future for the Gaelic language. |
"The dictionary initiative will play an important part in that work and I'm delighted that this extra funding has been identified to drive forward the project." | "The dictionary initiative will play an important part in that work and I'm delighted that this extra funding has been identified to drive forward the project." |
SFC chairman John McClelland said the Faclair na Gaidhlig project was vital to securing the future of the Gaelic language. | SFC chairman John McClelland said the Faclair na Gaidhlig project was vital to securing the future of the Gaelic language. |
Prof Boyd Robertson, principal of Sabhal Mor Ostaig, added: "The award will expedite preparatory work for the dictionary which will, in time, give Gaelic a resource comparable to the Dictionary of the Older Scottish Tongue and the Oxford English Dictionary." | Prof Boyd Robertson, principal of Sabhal Mor Ostaig, added: "The award will expedite preparatory work for the dictionary which will, in time, give Gaelic a resource comparable to the Dictionary of the Older Scottish Tongue and the Oxford English Dictionary." |
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