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PostPosted: Thu 13 Apr 2023 5:34 pm 
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Ade wrote:
All the best with your endeavour to learn the language! :good:


Thank you!

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PostPosted: Fri 14 Apr 2023 7:07 am 
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Are you still in the Phonetics chapter before the real book starts? I remember Chapter 1 started to get complicated, with the autonomous form of the verb (táthar sasta anseo), so post any questions you have on that!


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PostPosted: Fri 14 Apr 2023 4:12 pm 
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djwebb2021 wrote:
Are you still in the Phonetics chapter before the real book starts? I remember Chapter 1 started to get complicated...

I am. I'm not letting myself get too bogged down or intimidated by all the phonetics information. I can (and will) come back to study it in bits and pieces, later. Also, I am somewhat familiar with the IPA (which his system resembles).

djwebb2021 wrote:
...so post any questions you have on that!

I will. Thank you!


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PostPosted: Sun 23 Apr 2023 4:38 am 
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From Ó Siadhail's Learning Irish, page 3:

"5. Dropping of the Vowel /ə/
The neutral vowel (to which all unstressed short vowels are reduced) is not pronounced before or after any other vowel."

In the "Exercise" section at the end of of this same chapter 1, there is a sentence, "Úna atá orm." The phonetics are shown as /u:Nə tɑ: orəm/.

Wouldn't the ə in u:Nə be dropped (because it is reduced and proceeds a vowel in the next word) and the first ɑ in atá be pronounced? Shouldn't the phonetics be /u:N ɑtɑ: orəm/?

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PostPosted: Sun 23 Apr 2023 7:36 am 
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Brús Liam wrote:
From Ó Siadhail's Learning Irish, page 3:

"5. Dropping of the Vowel /ə/
The neutral vowel (to which all unstressed short vowels are reduced) is not pronounced before or after any other vowel."

In the "Exercise" section at the end of of this same chapter 1, there is a sentence, "Úna atá orm." The phonetics are shown as /u:Nə tɑ: orəm/.

Wouldn't the ə in u:Nə be dropped (because it is reduced and proceeds a vowel in the next word) and the first ɑ in atá be pronounced? Shouldn't the phonetics be /u:N ɑtɑ: orəm/?


I think you're splitting hairs here. The first letter in atá is unstressed and, hence, also ə. So it doesn't matter if you pronounce /u:Nə tɑ: orəm/ or /u:N ətɑ: orəm/, either way it sounds the exact same. The same vocalic sound is dropped in the position. Wondering whether it's the first or second instance of it that's considered to be dropped is definitely overthinking the matter.

I should note, also, that this sound rule is only true of uninterrupted speech. If you were to say the words slowly, one after another, as you might to a child who is learning to speak, you would absolutely pronounce both vowels separately, /u:Nə ətɑ: orəm/. It's the same as in the English phrase "The sofa at work". You would run the final a of "sofa" into the first a of "at" if speaking quickly, but if pronouncing the words slowly, as you might to somebody who is not very proficient at speaking English and finds it difficult to understand quick, fluent speech, you'd deliberately pause between each word and therefore pronounce the vowel twice.


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PostPosted: Sun 23 Apr 2023 9:00 am 
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Ade wrote:
I should note, also, that this sound rule is only true of uninterrupted speech. If you were to say the words slowly, one after another, as you might to a child who is learning to speak, you would absolutely pronounce both vowels separately, /u:Nə ətɑ: orəm/. It's the same as in the English phrase "The sofa at work". You would run the final a of "sofa" into the first a of "at" if speaking quickly, but if pronouncing the words slowly, as you might to somebody who is not very proficient at speaking English and finds it difficult to understand quick, fluent speech, you'd deliberately pause between each word and therefore pronounce the vowel twice.


Well, in Southern England, we have the "intrusive R". "The sofa at work" is pronounced "the sofar at work". I believe they do things differently in the US, and probably in Ireland. In Southern England /ə/ cannot run into /ə/ without a glide consonant /ɹ/. The exact glide consonant (semi-vowel or liquid) used to separate vowels in English (Southern English English) depends on the vowels. In the environment of /ə/, it is /ɹ/. But in "I am", the pronunciation becomes "I yam", with /j/ being the glide consonant. In "to understand", the pronunciation becomes "to wunderstand" with /w/ being the glide consonant. So, as you can see, it is not incorrect to produce such glides, and the intrusive R is not "wrong". Handling adjacent vowels is a feature of a language's phonology. In America, they say "to understand" going from /tə/ into "understand" with no glide consonant, as the dialectal phonological rules are different State-side.

But in Irish, vowels definitely are elided before other vowels. The vocative "A Eóin" is pronounced just "Eóin". As you say, Ade, speed of delivery is important here. If you're speaking disjunctively or particularly emphatically or slowly, then it would be "A Eóin", as /ʔə ʔo:ᵊnʲ/, where /ʔ/ is the glottal stop. In English, a glottal stop is produced before a vowel where the glottis is not already open. We don't normally notice this as a consonant, but it is one, and is written as such in Arabic (and the /ʔ/ symbol is taken from the Arabic alphabet).

Geoff Lindsey, the UK linguist, has commented on "hard attack", which is spreading in English. Hard attack is the German way of producing a glottal stop before every word beginning with a vowel, even if it is not the first word in a sentence. E.g. "um elf" in German sounds distinctive because both words start with a glottal stop, giving German its staccato sound, whereas in English "an elf" (which doesn't mean the same thing) traditionally only has a glottal stop before the "an" and not the "elf", because the vocal cords are already open to produce the next word, even if beginning with a vowel. Lindsey points out that more and more young English people (and Americans) are beginning to pronounce all words starting with vowels separately in the German style. I think this is also why more and more people are saying "a apple", and not "an apple", because if you use hard attack, "apple" begins with a glottal stop, and so needs no "n" to separate it from the article.

Learners pronounce phrases like "A Eóin" effectively with hard attack, although this wasn't the traditional way.

See https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KFZZI7HCp2M for Lindsey's video on Hard attack.


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PostPosted: Sun 23 Apr 2023 10:30 am 
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Just to add a small note to Ade’s response – the important part there is that atá is on its own pronounced a /əˈtɑː/, that is, the stress is on the second syllable and the first a- is the reduced unstressed /ə/. It’s not /ɑtɑː/. (In Old Irish the verb was at·tá where at· was an unstressed preverb added to the stressed root ·tá; in Early Modern Irish the initial a(t)- was dropped everywhere outside of relative clause context (and sometimes here too), and the a- was reinterpreted as a “relative particle” – but anyway, whenever it’s still there, it’s unstressed)


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PostPosted: Sun 23 Apr 2023 10:38 am 
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Yes, good explanation.

As for "Úna atá orm", this is grammatically more complex than a learner would realise in chapter 1. Of course, I recommend learners not to worry about the grammar of this while they are in Ch1.

But this is a copula sentence: (is) Úna atá orm, literally "it is Úna that is on me" ie. Úna is the name that is on me. The "is" (it is) can be dropped, and usually is, but seeing this as a copula sentence clarifies why there is a relative clause in this sentence. Tá = "is". Atá = "that is" or "which is".


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PostPosted: Sun 23 Apr 2023 3:57 pm 
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Ade, djwebb2021, and silmeth,

Thank you for your helpful answers!


Last edited by Brús Liam on Sun 23 Apr 2023 4:24 pm, edited 1 time in total.

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PostPosted: Sun 23 Apr 2023 3:58 pm 
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Ade wrote:
I think you're splitting hairs here. The first letter in atá is unstressed and, hence, also ə. So it doesn't matter if you pronounce /u:Nə tɑ: orəm/ or /u:N ətɑ: orəm/, either way it sounds the exact same. The same vocalic sound is dropped in the position. Wondering whether it's the first or second instance of it that's considered to be dropped is definitely overthinking the matter.


Haha! Yes, I was thinking of concluding my post by stating I was probably splitting hairs, here. I did listen to a sound file of this sentence and thought the pronunciation would sound the same, regardless of which vowel was dropped.

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