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The Gothic language is an extinct language. It belongs to the now extinct East Germanic group of the
Germanic subfamily of the Indo-European family of languages (see Germanic languages). Gothic has special
value for the linguist because it was recorded several hundred years before the oldest
surviving texts of all the other Germanic languages (except for a handful of earlier runic
inscriptions in Old Norse). Thus it sheds light on an
older stage of a Germanic language and on the development of Germanic languages in
general. The earliest extant document in Gothic preserves part of a translation of the
Bible made in the 4th century A.D. by Ulfilas, a Gothic bishop.
This translation is written in an adaptation of the Greek alphabet, supposedly devised by
the bishop himself, which was later discarded. |
Bibliography:
See Joseph Wright, Grammar of the Gothic Language and the Gospel
of St. Mark (2d ed. 1954)
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