An Cionnfhaolach wrote:
Lughaidh wrote:
- Pronouncing broad g before /e(:)/, /i(:)/ and /æ:/ as gw- (eg. Gwaylga for Gaeilge etc)
Hmm, maybe its a case of the English phonetics, but pronouncing "Gae" or "Gao" as "Gway" I would say is a common phonetic feature of Munster Irish, for instance you'll never hear a Munster speaker pronounce Gaeilge or Gaoluinn as "*Gail-ga" or "Gail-ing" its "Gway-ul-ga" or "Gway-ling"
*Gail- as English speakers pronunciation of the name Gail
Yes, this one may be a bit subtle to explain. The sound may not be a "w" but there is definitely something there in Connemara Irish (and apparently Munster Irish), so if it isn't GWAY, it certainly isn't just GAY either.
Here are some native speaker pronunciations of
Gaeilge,
Gaeltacht and
Gaeltachtaí from Learning Irish for example:
.
. Gaeilge, Gaeltacht and Gaeltachtaí(Source: アイルランド語文法コシュ・アーリゲ方言Learning Irish, Mícheál Ó Siadhail, KENKYUSHA, 2007)
Redwolf wrote:
A mistake I hear a lot of beginners make is pronouncing short vowels as if they were long.
That can be dialectal though. Connemara and particularly Cois Fhairrge dialect often lengthen vowels where the other dialects do not. The long a, for example, is not the same as the
á in that case.