Yola language of County Wexford

E601016

The Yola language of County Wexford was an extinct Anglic language variety once spoken in southeast Ireland, notable for preserving many archaic features of Middle English.

All labels observed (1)

Label Occurrences
Yola language of County Wexford canonical 1

How this entity was disambiguated

Statements (46)

Predicate Object
instanceOf Anglic language
extinct language
variety of English
alternativeName Forth and Bargy dialect NERFINISHED
Yola NERFINISHED
causeOfLanguageShift increasing influence of Standard English
spread of Hiberno-English
country Ireland NERFINISHED
culturalContext spoken by descendants of Anglo-Norman and English settlers in southeast Ireland
derivedFrom Middle English NERFINISHED
distinctFrom Modern Hiberno-English of County Wexford
documentedIn 19th-century dialect descriptions and wordlists
endonym Yola NERFINISHED
extinctionCentury 19th century
geographicDistribution southeast Ireland
grammaticalFeature conservative verb morphology compared to Modern English
distinct second person plural pronouns
hasLimitedDocumentation yes
hasPoeticAttestations yes
hasSampleTexts songs and verses recorded in the 19th century
historicalStageOf English language
influencedBy Anglo-Norman settlement in southeast Ireland
languageFamily Anglic languages
Germanic languages
Indo-European language family
surface form: Indo-European languages

West Germanic languages NERFINISHED
lastKnownSpeakersApproximateDate late 19th century
lexicalInfluence Early Modern English vocabulary
Irish language loanwords
Middle English vocabulary
nameEtymology name "Yola" derives from a word meaning "old"
notableFeature preservation of many archaic features of Middle English
strong influence from early modern English settlers in southeast Ireland
phonologicalFeature retention of some Middle English vowel qualities
region County Wexford NERFINISHED
relatedTo Fingallian language NERFINISHED
Middle English dialects of southwest England
researchField English dialectology
contact linguistics
historical linguistics
sociolinguisticStatusBeforeExtinction local community vernacular
status extinct
subregion baronies of Forth and Bargy
timeDepthOfDivergence descends from Middle English introduced after Norman invasion of Ireland
usedIn rural communities of Forth and Bargy
writingSystem Latin alphabet
surface form: Latin script

How these facts were elicited

Referenced by (1)

Full triples — surface form annotated when it differs from this entity's canonical label.

Jacob Poole studied Yola language of County Wexford