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Ulster Irish - Phonology |  | Ulster Irish - Phonology: Encyclopedia II - Ulster Irish - Phonology |  | The phonemic inventory of Ulster Irish (based on the accent of Gweedore) is as shown in the following chart (based on Ní Chasaide 1999; see International Phonetic Alphabet for an explanation of the symbols). Symbols appearing in the upper half of each row are velarized (traditionally called "broad" consonants) while those in the bottom half are palatalized ("slender"). The consonants /h, n, l/ are neither broad or slender.
The vowels of Ulster Irish are as shown on the following chart. These positions are only approximate, as vowels are strongly influenced by the palatalization a ...
See also:Ulster Irish, Ulster Irish - Lexicon, Ulster Irish - Phonology, Ulster Irish - Morphology, Ulster Irish - Initial mutations, Ulster Irish - Verbs, Ulster Irish - Particles, Ulster Irish - Syntax |  | | Ulster Irish, Ulster Irish - Initial mutations, Ulster Irish - Lexicon, Ulster Irish - Morphology, Ulster Irish - Particles, Ulster Irish - Phonology, Ulster Irish - Syntax, Ulster Irish - Verbs, Ulster Scots language, Mid Ulster English |  | |
|  |  | Ulster Irish: Encyclopedia II - Ulster Irish - Phonology
Ulster Irish - Phonology
The phonemic inventory of Ulster Irish (based on the accent of Gweedore) is as shown in the following chart (based on Ní Chasaide 1999; see International Phonetic Alphabet for an explanation of the symbols). Symbols appearing in the upper half of each row are velarized (traditionally called "broad" consonants) while those in the bottom half are palatalized ("slender"). The consonants /h, n, l/ are neither broad or slender.
The vowels of Ulster Irish are as shown on the following chart. These positions are only approximate, as vowels are strongly influenced by the palatalization and velarization of surrounding consonants.
The long vowels have short allophones in unstressed syllables and before /h/.
In addition, Ulster has the diphthongs /ia, ua, au/.
Some characteristics of the phonology of Ulster Irish that distinguish it from the other dialects are:
- The only broad labial continuant is the approximant [w]. In other dialects, fricative [vˠ] is found instead of or in addition to [w]. No dialect makes a phonemic contrast between the approximant and the fricative, however.
- There is a three-way distinction among coronal nasals and laterals: /n̪ˠ ~ n ~ ṉʲ/, /l̪ˠ ~ l ~ ḻʲ/, and there is no lengthening or diphthongization of short vowels before these sounds and /m/. Thus, while ceann "head" is /cɑːn/ in Connacht and /caun/ in Munster, in Ulster it is /can̪ˠ/
- /ɔː/ corresponds to the /oː/ of other dialects. The Ulster /oː/ corresponds to the /au/ of other dialects.
- Long vowels are shortened when in unstressed syllables.
- /n/ is realized as [r] (or is replaced by /r/) after consonants other than [s]. This happens in Connacht as well.
- Orthographic -adh in unstressed syllables is always [u] (this includes verb forms).
- Unstressed orthographic -ach is pronounced [ax], [ah], or [a].
Other related archivesConnacht, County Mayo, Donegal, Gaeltacht, Gweedore, International Phonetic Alphabet, Irish language, Irish verbs, Mid Ulster English, Munster, Ulster, Ulster Scots language, allophones, approximant, continuant, dative, definite article, dialect, diphthongs, fricative, initial mutations, labial, long vowels, negative, noun, palatalized, particle, person, phonemic, phonology, pronoun, subjunctive mood, unstressed, velarized, vowels
 Adapted from the Wikipedia article "Phonology", under the G.N U Free Docmentation License. Please also see http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki |
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