Jay Bee wrote:
Quote:
"It can be very subtle," McGuire said. "We have one kind of similar contrast in English, where the 'l' sound in a word like leaf is different from the "l" sound in feel, where the "l" in feel has a 'w-ish' quality."
But why do they always say this? They're
not subtle but
very obvious. IT should take 20 minutes to learn how to pronounce in a 'first draft' sort of way Irish and hear the differences and stop the nonsense about it after that. (You do have to be careful in reading for some snags tho, but there is the hard things to learn after which take much more time)
Urk. The only reason that the difference between light and dark L is "subtle" to an English speaker is because they represent the same phoneme, and we've trained our brains to disregard the differences. Objectively, there's a notable difference; subjectively, there's none.
The difference between broad and slender in Irish is absolute, and objectively not subtle. That the difference between correct and incorrect pronunciation to a foreigner isn't clear isn't news, but you can't put the blame on the language that they're learning.