Kernuack Nowedga : diforc'h etre ar stummoù

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'''Kernuack Nowedga''' ("kerneveureg modern"; ''Kernewek Diwedhes'' e [[Kernewek Kemmyn]]) eo anv un doare ar [[kerneveureg|c'herneveureg]] a-vremañ adsavet hag a zo diazezet war testennoù ar {{XVIIvet kantved}} hag an {{XVIIIvet kantved}}.
 
When [[Kernewek Unys]] came under heavy fire in the early 1980s, various attempts were made to rectify its problems. While some supporters stuck with modified UC, two main schisms arose, that of [[Kernewek Kemmyn]] led by [[Ken George]], and that of Modern Cornish, led by [[Richard Gendall]].
''Disambiguation: you may be looking for general contemporary forms of the [[Cornish language]]''
 
Unlike [[Kernewek Kemmyn]] which tended to go to medieval Cornish for inspiration, Modern Cornish uses the latest known forms of Cornish from the 17th and 18th centuries from writers such as Nicholas Boson and John Boson, William Rowe, Thomas Tonkin and others, and [[West Country dialects|Anglo-Cornish dialect]] words of Brythonic origin.
'''Modern Cornish''' (''Kernuack Nowedga/Curnoack Nowedga'') is one of the varieties of revived [[Cornish language|Cornish]]. It is sometimes called "Revised Late Cornish" or '' Kernewek Diwedhes'' in [[Kernewek Kemmyn]].
 
When [[Unified Cornish]] came under heavy fire in the early 1980s, various attempts were made to rectify its problems. While some supporters stuck with modified UC, two main schisms arose, that of [[Kernewek Kemmyn]] led by [[Ken George]], and that of Modern Cornish, led by [[Richard Gendall]]. Unlike [[Kernewek Kemmyn]] which tended to go to medieval Cornish for inspiration, Modern Cornish uses the latest known forms of Cornish from the 17th and 18th centuries from writers such as Nicholas Boson and John Boson, William Rowe, Thomas Tonkin and others, and [[West Country dialects|Anglo-Cornish dialect]] words of Brythonic origin. Critics claim that the later forms of Cornish are corrupt and anglicised, but supporters of Modern Cornish counter this by saying that they are continuing the natural evolution of the tongue where it left off.
 
Modern Cornish tends to use an English based orthography, and its grammar is somewhat simpler than some of the other varieties. For instance, the word for 'good' typically spelt dâ, 'good' could also be written daa, and the word for 'month' could be spelt mîz or meez. It contains a certain amount of English vocabulary, e.g. "Wolcum", instead of "Dynargh" (welcome) and makes sparing use of accents and diacritical marks. One very basic, but noticeable difference between Kernewek Kemmyn and Modern Cornish, is that the later uses the letter "c" far more frequently, where the former would use "k".
 
[[Cussel an Tavas Kernuack]] is the governing body of Modern Cornish. The need for standard spelling when learning a language has led the Cornish Language Council to adopt the Revived Late Cornish spelling standardised by Gendall and Neil Kennedy.
 
While the various varieties of revived Cornish have had a rocky relationship with one another, this has had the positive effect of creating a publishing and writing boom in Cornish in general. All of them have been used in constructing the Cornish language wikipedia.
 
 
==Gwelit ivez==