It is currently Sat 01 Apr 2023 8:37 am

All times are UTC


Forum rules


Please click here to view the forum rules



Post new topic Reply to topic  [ 3 posts ] 
Author Message
PostPosted: Mon 17 Oct 2022 9:50 pm 
Offline

Joined: Fri 22 Jan 2021 4:24 pm
Posts: 93
Hi! I was going through and studying the past habitual verb endings, and was wondering about the pronunciation of the 3rd person singular endings. Now of course I’m almost 100% sure this is pronounced “oo” … but does anyone know

1) if there are any special changes in pronunciation before personal pronouns with the 1st Conjugation -adh endings (as is the case with some future and conditional tense endings?…
Such as (A) luascfaidh [LOOSK.hee] will rock, but Luascfaidh mé (LOOSK.huh māy) I will rock.
And (B) luascfadh (LOOSK.hoo) would rock, but Luascfadh sé (LOOSK.hutt shāy) He would rock.
Or is the past habitual always “oo” (Luascadh mé, sé, etc. = LOOSK.oo māy, shāy, etc.)

2) I found an old BBC article saying that, similarly to 2nd conjugation future/conditional tense endings, past habitual endings are pronounced multi-syllabically in Ulster (I’m assuming that the writer was probably only referring exclusively to 2nd (not 1st) Conjugation, 3rd Person Sing. Past Habitual Verbs?)…however he only stated that their pronunciation is “a quare handlin’” and then gave a way to avoid using the past habitual with the “Ba gnáth le…” format, but he never did say how the multi-syllabic past habitual is pronounced. Is it something like…
Cheannaíodh (HYANN.ee.aw.hoo), often bought
and… Cheannaíodh sé (HYANN.ee.aw.huh shāy), He often bought. ??

Can anyone confirm or correct? Thank you soooo much!


Top
 Profile  
 
PostPosted: Wed 19 Oct 2022 8:51 am 
Offline

Joined: Thu 15 Sep 2011 12:06 pm
Posts: 2431
Quote:
1) if there are any special changes in pronunciation before personal pronouns with the 1st Conjugation -adh endings (as is the case with some future and conditional tense endings?…
Such as (A) luascfaidh [LOOSK.hee] will rock, but Luascfaidh mé (LOOSK.huh māy) I will rock.
And (B) luascfadh (LOOSK.hoo) would rock, but Luascfadh sé (LOOSK.hutt shāy) He would rock.


Right except that -ua- is pronounced oo-ah in Ulster, so : LOO-ah-skee, etc.

Quote:
Or is the past habitual always “oo” (Luascadh mé, sé, etc. = LOOSK.oo māy, shāy, etc.)


It works like the conditional, but be careful, the endings are luascainn, luascthá, luascadh sé (Loo-ah-skutt shah...).
Note : when unstressed (ie. most of the time), the personal pronouns don't have long vowels and their vowel may change a bit: mé [mah], sé [shah], siad [shuh-d]

Quote:
2) I found an old BBC article saying that, similarly to 2nd conjugation future/conditional tense endings, past habitual endings are pronounced multi-syllabically in Ulster (I’m assuming that the writer was probably only referring exclusively to 2nd (not 1st) Conjugation, 3rd Person Sing. Past Habitual Verbs?)…however he only stated that their pronunciation is “a quare handlin’” and then gave a way to avoid using the past habitual with the “Ba gnáth le…” format, but he never did say how the multi-syllabic past habitual is pronounced. Is it something like…
Cheannaíodh (HYANN.ee.aw.hoo), often bought
and… Cheannaíodh sé (HYANN.ee.aw.huh shāy), He often bought. ??


Should bee HYANN-ee-oo before any subject except personal pronouns.
Cheannaíodh sé would be "HYANN-eett-shah".

But in most of Donegal (especially in the North), many endings with a long -í- are shortened and people actually say "cheannadh", "cheannainn"...

Also, and it might make you feel you've been wasting your time :S , nowadays and for decades now, Donegal speakers use the conditional instead of the past habitual, or "ba ghnách" + verbal noun phrase.
I used to go fishing = Rachainn a dh'iascaireacht, or: Ba ghnách liom ghabháil a dh'iascaireacht.
I can ask native speakers on Facebook to be sure but I think the past habitual is rather a literary form that people don't use in speech (in Donegal - it's alive elsewhere, I think).

_________________
Is fearr Gaeilg na Gaeltaċta ná Gaeilg ar biṫ eile
Agus is í Gaeilg Ġaoṫ Doḃair is binne
:)


Top
 Profile  
 
PostPosted: Wed 19 Oct 2022 9:41 pm 
Offline

Joined: Fri 22 Jan 2021 4:24 pm
Posts: 93
A Lughaidh, bhí sé sin an-chabhrach! :clap: You even cleared up something else I’ve been wondering for awhile too (about sé, mé, siad sometimes sounding a little different), so go raibh milliúin maith agat! :good: :wave: :good: :hullo: This cleared it all right up! It’s also very helpful to know that this form is probably mostly literary in Donegal, and at the same time, I’m also really glad you helped me clear up the pronunciation, so that I at least know how its said. :good:


Top
 Profile  
 
Display posts from previous:  Sort by  
Post new topic Reply to topic  [ 3 posts ] 

All times are UTC


Who is online

Users browsing this forum: Bing [Bot] and 3 guests


You cannot post new topics in this forum
You cannot reply to topics in this forum
You cannot edit your posts in this forum
You cannot delete your posts in this forum

Search for:
Jump to:  
Powered by phpBB® Forum Software © phpBB Group