djwebb2021 wrote:
Well, I thought that was terrific. In fact, I wish I could pronounce Irish so well. Maybe you are Irish, and have some help from substrate features in your Irish English. In any case you have the Irish Rs right and the broad and sender contrast. I hope people focused on Conamara Irish weigh in. There are a few on this forum, but they don't contribute as much a they used to. If you compare your Irish to the Irish of nearly all Irish Youtubers, you will see a massive difference - you are pronouncing things properly, while 99% of Irish people simply insist that is wrong to ask them to try to adopt native pronunciation... If you think of people like Eoin from BiteSize Irish, who claims to be a native speaker, but has had poor Irish, ón gcliabhán, you will see the difference.
Thank you very much for the feedback. It was lovely to read and I appreciated it coming from you. I'm trying my best to get as good a pronunciation as I can, much to the ridicule of other (Irish, non-Gaelic speaking) people around me, I might add!
One problem as a learner is that when I learn independently, then partake in online materials (videos on Youtube, and even some courses such as the audio recordings for Gaeilge gan Stró), it makes me doubt my pronunciation enormously as there are very few 'modern resources' that replicate the sounds I'm trying to make. I'm not advanced enough (yet) to use selected media etc. yet to aid my learning, so a bit of a conundrum. I rely on feedback from the likes of people on this forum and also a tutor that I am working with!