brandysimmons_47 wrote:
Can anyone tell me why these change and why there is an h added and t's etc
Or have a referance guide? TIA
The short answer is that it's just the grammar of the language. The initial sound of a word can change based on the type of word that comes before it. These changes are known as initial mutations, and they're a unique feature of the modern Celtic languages. There are a lot of different types of words which can cause the following word to change its initial sound, so it's generally better to memorise the examples you're learning from rather than to try and digest the grammar, at least at an early stage of learning.
To give you a few examples of how this works, based around the words you've listed in the title of this post:
Athair = "father", but
an t-athair = "the father",
a hathair "her father", and
ár nathair "our father".
Máthair = "mother", but
an mháthair = "the mother".
Mac = "son" but
a mhac = "his son".
If you look up "initial mutations" in Irish you can find more detailed information about this phenomenon. These can be further divided into initial consonant mutations, and vowel mutations. The initial consonant mutations are known as lenition and eclipsis, while the vowel mutations are known as t-prothesis and h-prothesis. The insertion of the "h" in examples above like
an mháthair and
a mhac is lenition. Eclipsis is the insertion of letters before the initial letter of a word, like in
ár nathair. Finally, you have an example of t-prothesis where a "t" is inserted before the vowel in
an t-athair, and similarly of h-prothesis in
a hathair.