B.The consonants.
§ 173. Corresponding to the two main vowel-divisions, back and front, we find the consonants grouped into palatal (palatalised) and non-palatal (non-palatalised) consonants, so that to every non-palatal sound there answers one of the other group[A 1]. In some cases separate symbols are used to denote the palatal sound as in the case ofj,v,ɲ,ç,ʃ, but in the majority of cases the palatal sound is represented by writing ʹ after the consonant, thustʹ. It will be seen later that strictly speaking it is incorrect to call Donegalpʹ,bʹ,mʹ palatal sounds, but as they correspond to the palatal forms of the other consonants it will be convenient to include them among the latter. We propose to deal with the consonants in the following order:
(a)h,j,w.
1.h.
§ 174. In Donegal the aspirate corresponds in sound to an English h and except in stressed syllables is not pronounced very forcibly. When standing between vowels at the end of a stressed syllable it is often very faint, cp. Jespersen, Lehrbuch der Phonetik pp. 94, 95 and footnote. In monosyllables a clippedh occurs very frequently after short vowels, for the formation cp. Jespersen l. c. p. 100. After palatal vowelsç frequently appears instead ofh.
§ 175. Most frequentlyh represents a written th. When th is immediately preceded or followed by a voiced consonant, it makes that consonant voiceless. In the case of voiceless consonantsh < th under these circumstances can produce no change ask,t,p,s are already aspirated. It will be convenient to deal with cases of loss of voice caused byh < th whilst we are treating ofh. Examples ofh < th—αhuirʹ, ‘a second time’, Di. ath-uair;bʹαhə, ‘life’, O.Ir. bethu;bα꞉huw, ‘to drown’, M.Ir. báthad beside older bádud (see Rhys p. 86 note);bɔhɔg, ‘hut’, Di. bothóg,boh, ‘hut’, M.Ir. both;bɔihαχ, ‘byre’, Meyer bó-thech;brαh, ‘to look upon’, O.Ir. mrath;dri꞉hə, ‘druids, wizards’, Di. draoithe, from this is formeddrihαχtə, ‘sorcery’, which further seems to have influencedrihαχtə, ‘kingdom’, Di. ríoghacht;dαh, ‘colour’, M.Ir. dath;fʹrʹihirʹ, ‘sore’, Di. frithir;fʹrʹi꞉hə, ‘through her’, cp. M.Ir. tréthi;kαhũw, ‘to throw, spend’, M.Ir. caithem;kαhə, ‘battle’, O.Ir. cath;kʹαhərNαχ, ‘small, impudent person’, Di. ceatharnach, cp.tridʹ bo̤di꞉ lʹɛ kʹαhərNαχ, ‘the fight of a mouse and a lion’;kɔhuw, ‘to feed’, Meyer cothaigim;mαhαn, ‘muscle’, cp. O’R. mathán, ‘sucker of a tree’ (?);mʹihidʹ, ‘due time’, M.Ir. mithich, mithig, there is also a substantive in use which does not occur in books, viz.mʹihəs as inhenʹi ʃə ə vihəs dɔ꞉ ꬶɔl, ‘the time came for him to go’ = de mhitheas;mαihi꞉m, ‘I perceive’, M.Ir. mothaigim;Nʹihαχαn, ‘washing’, Di. nigheachán (for the tendency to introduce a hiatus-fillingh cp.rihαχtə supra);rehi꞉nʹαχt, ‘ramming’, Di. has reitheachas;sα꞉huw, ‘to thrust’, M.Ir. sáthud;srαhər, ‘straddle’, O.Ir. srathar;tuəhəl, ‘balancing rind in quern’, < *tuathal.
§ 176. Initiallyh occurs as the aspirated form oft,tʹ,s,ʃ, e.g.lʹɛ də hɔlʹ, ‘with your leave’, le do thoil;mə hu꞉lʹ, ‘my eye’,mo shúil. Else in pausa forms only in the case of a few adverbs and the pronounshuw,hïsə (Pedersen, KZ. xxxv 331 f.),hαL, ‘yonder’, O.Ir. tall;huəs, ‘aloft’, O.Ir. túas;hui,əhui, ‘in the north, to the north’, O.Ir. fa thuaith;herʹ, ‘in the east’,hiər, ‘in the west’, M.Ir. tair, tíar;hærʹ,hærʹə, ‘past, beyond’ (prep.), O.Ir. tar, dar. Theh as initial ofheidʹ ʃə, ‘he will go’, is due to the loss of the pretonic syllable < do-théit, which has doubtless influencedhigʹ ʃə, ‘he comes’, M.Ir. tic (futuretʹïky꞉). The reason for the constant aspiration of the infin.hαχt, O.Ir. techt as also ofꬶɔl, ‘to go’, is not plain. Theh ofhenʹikʹ, ‘came’, O.Ir. tánicc is due to the analogy of other preterites.
§ 177.h arises sometimes in combinations like ghth, bhth, thmh, as inNʹi꞉ αhαr = ní fhághthar;Lʹɛhαrαχt, ‘reading’, Di. léightheoireacht;tihə, ‘houses’, Di. tighthe;dαhinʹ mʹə, ‘I recognised’, < aithgeuin;Nʹα̃ujlʹi꞉hu꞉lʹ (‑jlʹiw̥əlʹ), ‘unlawful’, Di. neamh-dhlightheamhuil;LUhə, ‘rotten’, < lobhtha;Lũ꞉hər, ‘vigorous, active’, Di. lúthmhar.
§ 178.χ has a tendency to give up its spirant character and becomeh. This seems to be general in Ulster, cp. O’Donovan, Grammar p. 48; G. J. 1896 p. 146 col. 2. See also Rhys p. 71. Initially we findh forχ inhαnikʹ,henʹikʹ, ‘saw’, = chonnaic;ho̤gəd, ‘to you’, Mod.Ir. chugad (Spir. Rose p. 5 spelt thugad);hui, ‘went’, O.Ir. docuaid;hαskər sə, ‘it thawed’, cp. M.Ir. coscrad;ku꞉gʹi꞉ ho̤Nαχtə, ‘Province of Connaught’, M.Ir. cóiced Connacht;hα(꞉), ‘not’, < ní co (the distribution of ní and cha as negatives in Donegal is discussed by Lloyd in Seachrán Chairn tSiadhail p. 124. I can only say that in Meenawannia cha is generally confined to emphatic answers and here principally inhα ·nɛlʹ,hα row̥ being much rarer. Further east round Ballinamore cha seems to be much more frequent). Mediallyh may be heard inαhαsαn, ‘reviling’, Di. achmhusán, Meyer athchomsan;brαhαn, ‘porridge’, O.Ir. brothchán;fʹlʹαhuw, ‘to starve’,fʹlʹætʹə, ‘perished with cold’, M.Ir. flechud. See further § 333.
§ 179. In a few wordsh arises fromç, cp. Finck i p. 85. This is the case inhïnəfʹænʹ, ‘already’, Mod.Ir. cheana, O.Ir. cena + féin;fʹihə, ‘twenty’, O.Ir. fiche;ĩ꞉hə, ‘night’, O.Ir. aidche.
§ 180. In certain stress-groups initial f when standing after a word which does not aspirate tends to becomeh. This is also the case with medial fr. Compare Rhys pp. 72, 165; Pedersenp. 19. With the different sources of this f we need not trouble ourselves here. Examples—mʹɛ heinʹ, ‘myself, O.Ir. féin butfʹeinʹαχ, ‘selfish’;Nʹi꞉s α꞉r, ‘better’,sa꞉r = is fearr (theh is not heard afters, cp. § 175), Manx share but alsoNʹi꞉s fʹα꞉r, cp. Pedersen, KZ. xxxv p. 319;Nʹi꞉ ho̤rəst, ‘it is not easy’ butfo̤rəst, Wi. ur-ussa;ɔr̥ælʹ, ‘offertory’, gen. sing.Nə hɔr̥αlə, plur.ɔr̥αlαχə, Di. ofráil, cp. Manx oural;kɔ꞉r̥ə, ‘chest’, Di. cófra.ifʹrʹəN, ‘hell’;αfʹrʹəN, ‘mass’ andfʹiəfri꞉, ‘to ask’, retain f in Donegal but other dialects shew the normal developement, cp. ZCP. v 98 and Chr. Bros. Aids to Irish Pron. p. 15. Cp. Manx fer-oik, ‘officer’, oic < oific, Rhys p. 182.
The f of the future (O.Ir. b, f) has givenh which is not heard after voiceless sounds such asp,t,k,s &c. but which unvoicesb,g,d,w,r,l,m,n &c. Examples—bo̤guw, ‘to stir’, Di. bogadh, fut.bo̤kə mʹə;bridʹuw, 1. ‘to nudge’, Di. broidighim, 2. ‘to smart, ache’, infin.bridʹərNỹ꞉, subst.bridʹərNαχ ‘smarting’, fut.britʹi꞉ ʃə;ʃiəbuw, ‘to sweep away’, Di. siabhadh, Manx sheebey, fut.ʃiəpwi꞉ ʃə;tʹrʹouw, ‘to plough’, M.Ir. trebad, fut.tʹrʹo꞉w̥ə mʹə. As instances of stems ending in a vowel (in the spoken language)Lʹeihə mʹə, ‘I shall read’, infin.Lʹɛuw;Lo꞉hi꞉ <Louw, ‘to rot’;tö̤꞉hə mʹə,te꞉hə mʹə, ‘I shall choose’ <tö̤uw;Nʹi꞉hə mʹə <Nʹi꞉(ə), ‘to wash’. In the conditional passive forms withfʹ alternate with forms withh, asvɛ꞉r̥i꞉,vɛ꞉rfʹi꞉ frombʹerʹəm, O.Ir. beirimm;fɔ꞉ky꞉,fɔ꞉kfʹi꞉ frompɔ꞉guw, ‘to kiss’. The future passive invariably has‑hər. Apart from the conditional passive the f is only preserved in two instances, viz. in the case of the verbs for ‘to run’ and ‘to see’,rαfə mʹə besideriçə mʹə, ‘I shall run’, infin.r⅄ç,rαhi꞉,rαχtælʹ;tʹi꞉fʹə mʹə, ‘I shall see’, M.Ir. 2nd sing. atcífe (Atk.).
§ 181. The enclitic forms of the verbdʹα꞉nuw, ‘to do’, are peculiar, as they contain forms withh where we should expectj, e.g.Nʹi꞉ hα꞉nəm, ‘I do not do’, interr.dʹα꞉nəm,Nʹi꞉ hα꞉rN, ‘I did not do’, interr. (ə)dʹα꞉rN, fut.jα꞉n̥ə mʹə, ‘I will do’ but neg.Nʹi꞉ hα꞉n̥ə mʹə, interr.ə Nʹα꞉n̥ə mʹə. Dinneen p. 796 says “the Dependent, Perfect, and Future and Conditional begin with a t in Ulster”. Cp. Lloyd, Seachrán Chairn tSiadhail p. 150, ní theanaim. The question is how did this state of affairs arise. I suspect that the above forms withh forj may be due to analogy with some of the parts of the verb ‘to go’. The 3rd sing. pres. ind. of this verb isheidʹ, O.Ir. do-téit, to which the perfect isNʹi꞉ hαχi꞉, interr.dʹαχi꞉, O.Ir. ‑dechuid, withh forj from the present. From these forms theh has been introducedinto the corresponding tenses ofdʹα꞉nuw. Monaghan dialect has gone a step further and makes the infinitive teanamh, G. J. 1896 p. 147 col. 2. If theh were due to any other cause we should expect to find it making its appearance in the paradigms of the verb for ‘to say’, but J. H. always hasdʹerʹəm—Nʹi꞉ erʹəm, pret.du꞉rtʹ mʹə—Nʹi꞉ u꞉rtʹ mʹə (Nʹi꞉r u꞉rtʹ), interr.ərʹ u꞉rtʹ mʹə, fut.dʹɛ꞉r̥ə mʹə—Nʹi꞉ ɛ꞉r̥ə mʹə, interr.Nə Nαχ Nʹɛ꞉r̥ə mʹə. From the younger people one may however hearNʹi꞉ hɛ꞉r̥ə mʹə.
Theh inho̤bwirʹ, ‘almost’,ho̤bwirʹ gə dʹitʹiNʹ, ‘I almost fell’, is very peculiar.ho̤bwirʹ represents a preterite dh’fhuabair, Wi. fóbairim, but it is possible that fóbairim became *tóbairim in Donegal just as fuaim, fill appear as tuaim, till (§ 383).
§ 182. As we have seen above, Donegal Irish retains intervocalich to a much greater extent than Connaught or Munster, but even in the northh < th disappears under well-defined conditions. Althoughh < th is retained in monosyllables after a short vowel, it invariably disappears after a long vowel or diphthong, e.g.α꞉, ‘ford’, M.Ir. áth (plur.α꞉Nỹ꞉);blα꞉, ‘flower’, M.Ir. bláth (plur.blα꞉hə);bw⅄꞉, ‘foolish’, O.Ir. báith;dluw, ‘warp of a web’, Di.dlúth;fα꞉, ‘reason’, M.Ir. fáth, fád;g⅄꞉, ‘wind’, O.Ir. gáith (gen. sing.g⅄꞉hə,g⅄꞉çə);i꞉, ‘fat’, M.Ir. íth;kʹlʹiə, ‘harrow’, O.Ir. clíath (plur.kʹlʹehαχə);Luw, ‘vigour’, M.Ir. lúth;mw⅄̃꞉, ‘pliable’, O.Ir. móith;ɛr skα꞉, ‘for the sake of,ɛr skα꞉ ə wïlʹ ə ji꞉ç erʹ, ‘for all that it wants’, Di. scáth, O.Ir. scáath;sNα꞉, ‘bundle of thread’, M.Ir. snáth;trα꞉, ‘meal’, M.Ir. tráth (plur.trα꞉Nỹ꞉), cp.trα·nõ꞉nə, ‘afternoon, evening’.
§ 183. In dissyllables of the type cons. + áthach we commonly find loss ofh and contraction, e.g.blα꞉χ, ‘buttermilk’, M.Ir. bláthach;grα̃꞉χ, ‘usual’, M.Ir. gnáthach;sα꞉χ, ‘sated person’ (proverbNʹi꞉ higʹəN ə sα꞉χ ə ʃαŋ ‘the sated person does not understand the starved’), Wi. sathech, saithech, sathach;sLα꞉χ, alsosLαhαχ, ‘slush on the sea-shore’, Di. sláthach (gen. sing.sLα꞉i orsLαhi꞉). This same contraction occurs sometimes when the first vowel is short, e.g.bʹα꞉χ, ‘beast’, Meyer bethadach (plur.bʹαhi꞉,bʹɛhi꞉);fα꞉χ, ‘giant’, more commonlyfαihαχ, Meyer athech, aithech, cp. Molloy’s 33rd dialect-list where fách and faithiach are given;αNtrα꞉χ, ‘untimely’, Di. antráthach. Similarlysu꞉L Nə hα꞉, ‘the eye of the kiln’, súil na hátha. The formkʹαrN inkʹαrN ·χyLʹuw, ‘outlaw’, may here be mentioned.kʹαrN stands forkʹα꞉rN with shortening before the chief stress < Meyer cethern if the word has not come in from anotherdialect. Fortα꞉juw, ‘to weld, solder’, M.Ir. táthad see § 190. Furthergrõuw, ‘to gain’, Di. gnóthughadh.
§ 184. In unstressed syllables ghth is always silent, e.g.kɔhiər pres. pass. ofkɔhuw, ‘to feed, fatten’, Meyer cothaigim;bʹαNỹ꞉, ‘blessed’, Di. beannuighte (notetʹiNʹəs bʹαNỹ꞉, ‘epilepsy’).
§ 185. rth, lth in inflected forms of substantives and verbs in unstressed syllables appear asr,l instead ofr̥,l̥, with which compare the loss ofh in unaccented syllables in Welsh. Examples—αm αdərə, ‘milking-time’, cp. Di. eadarshudh,dõ꞉nαχ Nə Nʹαdərαχə, Di. Domhnach na n‑eadarshuidhe q.v.;gʹrʹi꞉wəri꞉, ‘deeds’, Keating gníomhartha;ko̤Nərə, gen. sing. ofko̤nṟuw, ‘bargain’, Atk. cundrad, gen. sing. cundartha;Lα꞉ kαskərə, ‘a thawing day’,blɔk kαskərə, ‘a block for splitting wood upon’ = coscartha, gen. sing. of Di. coscairt, Meyer coscrad;vi꞉ mwidʹ ə bw⅄꞉luw n wæʃtʹərə, ‘we were churning’, cp. Di. maistreadh, gen. sing. maisteartha;tʹɛəgərαχ, ‘snug’, Di. téagarthach. Also in the future of verbs with dissyllabic stem, e.g.gʹrʹisαli ʃə, ‘he will drub’;rõ꞉wərə mʹə, ‘I shall dig’, Di. rómhar;sα꞉wαlə mʹə, ‘I shall save’, Di. sábháil;tʹeʃαnə mʹə, ‘I shall shew’, infin.tʹiʃiNʹtʹ, Di. taisbeáint. Similarlygʹlʹɛəs ïmʹərə, ‘articles for amusement, dice, cards &c.’, Di. imeartha, gen. sing. of imirt.
§ 186. In a number of words the voiceless sound has given way to the voiced without any apparent reason. Examples—blα꞉nəd, ‘the female of the weasel’, Meyer bláthnait;dʹαlαN dα꞉rə, ‘an ember from the fire made on St John’s eve which is thrown at a cow to make her bear’, = dealán dártha, here the genitive seems to have followed the nominative;du꞉rαi, ‘foundation’, Di. dúthrach, in Donegal the word is feminine; ïmʹαχt, ‘to depart’, O.Ir. immthecht;kʹerʹə, ‘four’, M.Ir. cethri but alwayskʹαr̥ər, O.Ir. cethrar (kʹerʹə has probably arisen through being used before the chief stress in such combinations askʹer̥ʹə kʹiNʹ ·dʹɛəg);ræNʹαχ, ‘fern’, more commonlyræn̥ʹαχ, M.Ir. raithnech. The prefix ath‑, ‘re‑’, seems not to unvoice a followinglʹ, e.g.ælʹαs, ‘second manure’, = ath-leas;ælʹïguw, ‘a relapse of sickness’, = ath-leagadh. Butaw̥ilʹ, ‘change of appearance’, = ath-bhuil.
§ 187. Rarely does it happen that Donegal has a voiceless sound where the other dialects have the voiced. This is the case inbʹαl̥uw, ‘grease’, Di. bealadh, Meyer belad;dʹïn̥əsαχ, ‘diligent’, O’R. díonasach, Di. déanasach;el̥ʹidʹ, ‘fawn’, M.Ir. eilit;kʹer̥ʹi꞉nʹ, ‘plaster’, Di. ceirín, Meyer céirín;plα꞉n̥ædʹ,plα꞉n̥ʹædʹ, ‘state ofthe atmosphere, climate’, Di. plainéid. It may also be noted that before the ending‑αχə (fem. plur. of nouns and fut. act. of the second conjugation) there is a distinct tendency to unvoice a preceding media, e.g.dʹαrəkαχə mʹə fromdʹαrəguw, ‘to light’, Di. deargadh;dʹarəfαχə mʹə, ‘I shall assert’, fromdʹαrəwi꞉m, Di. dearbhuighim;dʹi꞉kαχə, plur. ofdʹi꞉g, ‘dyke, trench’, Di. díog, plur. díogacha.
The pluralbαh, ‘cows’, <bα` M.Ir. ba (acc.), is due to the tendency to make a short final accented vowel end in breath (§ 42). Words which in Donegal have come to end inç in the singular sometimes haveh in the plural, e.g.ĩ꞉wα̃iç, ‘image’, M.Ir. imaig, plur.ĩ꞉wα̃ihəNỹ꞉.
2.j.
§ 188. This symbol denotes the y sound in Engl, ‘yes’ but the organs are tense during the production of the Irish sound and the middle of the tongue is raised much higher towards the hard palate. As is the case with all palatal (palatalised) sounds in Donegal the tip of the tongue is pressed more or less firmly against the lower teeth.
§ 189. Most commonlyj represents an aspirated initial d or g before O.Ir. e, i, e.g.α jiə, ‘O God’;mə je꞉i, ‘behind me’;jrʹαs mʹə, ‘I drove away’, Di. dreasuighim;fwi꞉ jĩ꞉vαs, ‘scorned, despised’, = faoi dhímheas;ji꞉lʹɛi mʹə, ‘I digested’, Di. díleaghaim;ty꞉w o jαs, ‘south side’;ə jiɲ, ‘the wedge’, = an ghing;ə jαlαχ, ‘the moon’;jα꞉r mʹə, ‘I cut’;bo̤d ə jɛrtə, ‘blast of wind’, = bod an ghiorta, cp. Di. giorraide, giorta;αiçərə n χytʹfʹrʹ꞉dʹ ə jrʹi꞉si꞉ = aithghiorra an chait fríd an ghríosaigh, i.e. trying to take a short cut and coming to grief, cp. alsoLʹeimʹ əNʹ tʹinʹi əNə gʹrʹi꞉suw, ‘from Scylla into Charybdis’;jrʹαd, pret. ofgʹrʹαduw, ‘to thrash’;pαræʃtʹə jliNʹə, ‘Parish of Glen(columkille)’.
§ 190. Medially we sometimes findj arising from dh = O.Ir. d before e, i. This is the case after a long vowel inkα꞉jαχ, ‘filthy’, Keat. cáidheach;prα꞉jiNʹαχ, ‘diligent’, O’R. práidhineach, Di. práidhneach. Further inbə ·je꞉, budh e,bə ·jα, budh eadh, cp. Henebry p. 61, KZ. xxxv 325. But note the proclitic form inbwi ən mαduw ə riNʹ ə, ‘it was the dog that did it’.mʹα꞉jəm, ‘I weigh’, Di. meadhaim, is a new formation to the pret.vα̃꞉i < *mheadhuigh and has become the model for other verbs whose stems end in a long vowel, such aste꞉jəm, ‘I choose’, fromtö̤uw, Di. toghadh;tʹrʹo꞉jəm, ‘plough’, Di. treabhaim;spʹrʹeijəm, ‘I spread’, Di. spréidhim;kruijəm, ‘I harden’, Di. cruadhuighim, but this may come direct fromkrui, ‘hard’,kruijə, ‘steel’, Di. cruaidhe. Similarlytα꞉jəm, ‘I weld, solder’, Di. táithim, táthaim;grõ꞉jəm,’I gain’, Di. gnóthuighim, infin.grõuw.
j is lost inmʹi꞉rʹəN, ‘discord’, Di. míghreann.
§ 191. The prepositions do, de are frequently reduced toə and when standing before a substantive with vocalic initial, aj orꬶ is inserted according as the O.Ir. initial was palatal or not. Thisə j- (ə ꬶ‑) is usually explained as being a reduplication of the do, de and thej (ꬶ) is written dh’ (Henebry pp. 60, 61). In many cases thej (ꬶ) were originally doubtless nothing more than glides, cp. the insertion ofw § 199. In parts of Munster this reduplication of do has even been extended to the preterites of verbs, e.g. do dhól sé for d’ól sé (Molloy, 25th dialect-list). Examples—hu꞉si꞉ ʃəd ə jo̤mpər, ‘they started carrying’;Lα꞉n ə çleiv ə jeiʃkʹ, ‘the basket full of fish’,α lʹɛhəd(ʹ)də jαr, ‘such a man’;Nʹi꞉s mo꞉ ə jïglə, ‘greater fear’;tα꞉ ʃɛ gɔl ə jïmʹαχt, ‘he is going to go away’;tα꞉ ʃïnʹ ə jiNʹtʹiNʹ əgəm, ‘that is my intention’;ho̤g ʃɛ bɔ꞉ əNə welʹə ə jinʹigʹiLʹtʹ, ‘he brought a cow home to graze’;əmwiç sə ti꞉w o jαs də jeirʹiNʹ, ‘down in the south of Ireland’;hu꞉si꞉ ʃi꞉ ə jiçə ætʹəni꞉, ‘she started eating furze’;ə jɛəNtɔ꞉r̥i꞉s, ‘at one birth’;tα꞉ ʃɛ jiəχfwi꞉ ɔrəm, ‘it is incumbent upon me’, = de fhiachaibh, v. Dinneen;ə jæNʹænʹ (gə), ‘although’, v. Di. aimhdheoin.
§ 192.fʹ,mʹ,bʹ before accentedɔ꞉,o꞉ are followed byj, cp. Henebry p. 40, Dottin, RC. xiv 107. Examples—bʹjɔ꞉, ‘alive’, O.Ir. beó;bʹjɔirʹ, ‘beer’, Meyer beóir;fʹjɔ꞉ləmʹ, ‘to learn’, O.Ir. foglaimm (§ 321);fʹjɔ꞉lʹ, ‘flesh, meat’, M.Ir. feóil;fʹjɔ꞉χən, ‘seasoning, drying’, Di. feochadh;fʹjɔ꞉tʹə, ‘seasoned’, Di. feoidhte;fʹjɔχαn, ‘breeze, puff’ (?);fʹjo꞉s, ‘excellence’, M.Ir. febas;mʹjo꞉nʹ, ‘means’ (§ 40);mʹjõ꞉rʹ, ‘mind’, O.Ir. mebuir. O.Ir. eó becamejɔ꞉, eba gavejo꞉ but in the case of all consonants exceptfʹ,mʹ,bʹ thej coalesced with the preceding palatal consonant. The labials as such can only be palatalised by raising the tongue into the j position simultaneously with the loosening of the lip-contact. This renders the assumption necessary that Donegal, the Decies (Henebry p. 40) and N. Connaught (RC. xiv 107) have given up palatalised labials before other vowels than those mentioned in this paragraph. This I believe to be the case. The Aran dialect and Scotch Gaelic have preserved thej, cp.Fincki 43; Henderson, ZCP. iv 251 ff. This loss ofj in Donegal may be compared with the substitution of palatal for palatalised articulation in the other consonants, cp. § 173. That thej forms part and parcel of the labial is shewn by its disappearance withfʹ when the latter is aspirated, e.g.bʹα꞉χ ə o꞉s ə = beathadhach da fheabhas é, ‘however excellent a beast it may be’. Beforeu꞉ we findfʹj by stress-shifting infʹjuw, ‘worthy’, O.Ir. fiú;fʹju꞉Ntəs inriNʹ ʃɛ fʹju꞉Ntəs mo꞉r lʹïm, ‘he treated me very decently’, Di. fiúntas. Similarlybʹiuw 3rd sing. imper. oftα꞉ in rapid speech becomesbʹjuw as inbʹjuwgαL gə mʹɛ ʃə əNsə welʹə rĩv ə Nĩ꞉çə ‘I bet you he will be home before night’.
§ 193. When standing initially the diphthongiə tends to becomejiə, e.g.jiərəgnuw, ‘annoyance’, Di. iarghnó;jiərəgu꞉l, ‘wilderness’, Di. iargcúil,jiərəgu꞉Ltə, ‘timid, uncouth’,jiərəgu꞉Ltαχt, ‘remote, wild place’;gədʹe꞉ vi꞉ ʃɛ jiəri꞉ (jïri꞉), ‘what was he wanting’, = dia iarraidh.
3.w.
§ 194. This symbol denotes a bilabialw which however does not become confused withv as on Aran (Fincki 66). The difference between Donegalw and English w is clearly heard in final‑uw. In English who (huw) the lips glide into thew position but no friction is audible whilst it is very evident in a word likekuw, ‘hound’. Those speakers who substitute labiodental for bilabialv in pronouncingw draw back the lower lip towards the edge of the upper teeth without necessarily touching them and friction is thus set up.
§ 195.w occurs initially as the aspirated form of non-palatalb,m, e.g.mə wα꞉d, ‘my boat’;ĩ꞉çə wo̤g, ‘a wet night’;fα꞉lʹ wα꞉ʃ ‘dying’;wæʃtʹə mʹə, ‘I baptised’;wrαiç mʹə, ‘I betrayed’;wlæʃ mʹə, ‘I tasted’;α wα̃hærʹ, ‘O mother’;wαLə mʹə, ‘I cursed’;wɔihi꞉ mʹə, ‘I felt, perceived’;wĩ꞉v mʹə, ‘I begrudged’;ə wædʹïnʹ, ‘since morning’;əs mo꞉dʹə di꞉d ʃïnʹ ərs iNʹ dʹrʹɔ꞉lαn Nerʹ ə wu꞉Nʹ ʃə sə Nαrəgʹə = is móide díod sin, arsa’n dreólan, nuair do mhún sé san fhairge.
w therefore never stands initially in pausa forms except in cases likew⅄꞉m, ‘from me’, infra § 199.wægʹə in asseverations,wægʹə mæʃə heinʹ ətα꞉, ‘well indeed it is to be sure’, is a distortion of the name of the Virgin. In the case ofwĩ꞉, ‘mane’, a word not in common use, the original initial has been forgotten, cp. bhárdail, mhárdul in Molloy’s 30th dialect-list.
w is also the eclipsed form of initialf, e.g.ə wα꞉Nʹʃə = dha bhfaghainnse;ə wo̤gəs də, ‘near to’, = i bhfogus.Nʹi꞉ wi꞉ mʹə, ‘I shall not get’, cp. M.Ir. fúigbe, probably owes itsw to the preteriteNʹi꞉ wuirʹ, for which see § 199, and cp.ĩ꞉ç(ə)i꞉r, ‘a cold night’. But this is not certain as I have no exact parallel.
§ 196. Except when joining with a vowel and becoming vocalised (§§ 40,48)w is the regular representative of O.Ir. intervocalic m, b before a, o, u, e.g.bʹi꞉wiəNtə, ‘slyly, mischievous’, Meyer bibdaide;dʹəwælʹ, ‘want, lack’, O.Ir. dígbail;dʹĩ꞉wi꞉nʹ, ‘single, unmarried’, M.Ir. dímain;ĩ꞉wαiç, ‘image’, M.Ir. imaig;kʹlʹiəwαn, ‘cradle’, Meyer cliabán;krũwɔg, ‘maggot’, Di. crumhóg;krα̃꞉wə, ‘bones’, M.Ir. cnáma;Lα̃꞉wαχ, ‘firing’, Di. lámhach;Lα̃꞉wəkαn, ‘moving on all fours’, Di. lámhacán;Nα̃꞉widʹ, ‘enemy’, O.Ir. námait (acc.);rα꞉wəLʹi꞉, ‘raving, being in a state of delirium’, Di. rámhailligh;sNα꞉wəm, ‘I swim’, Di. snámhaim;ʃkʹrʹi꞉wəm, ‘I write’, O.Ir. scríbaim;ʃNʹi꞉wəm, ‘I spin’, Di. sníomhaim, M.Ir. sním;tα꞉wαχt, ‘industry’, Di. tábhacht. Betweenu(꞉) andα w drops out, e.g.duαn, ‘hook, kidney’, Di. dubhán,duαn αLy꞉, ‘spider’;duαχ, ‘ink’, Di. dubhach;suαχ, ‘merry’, M.Ir. subach.bα꞉wən, ‘enclosure’, is obscure. Dinneen writes bádhbhdhún, Meyer bádún, O’Brien bábhún. InLα꞉ lʹ ·α꞉wɛgʹə, ‘St Swithin’s day’, we havew forv. The saint is Dabeoc who is commemorated on July 24. It may be noted that Ware speaks of “lectulus vel circulus Abogi”.
§ 197. Post-consonanticw disappears inαhαsαn, ‘reviling’, < Di. achmhusan < Meyer athchomsan;α꞉nṟi, ‘broth’, M.Ir. enbruthe;fα꞉gælʹ, ‘to leave’, M.Ir. fácbáil;ʃαχtinʹ, ‘week’, M.Ir. sechtmain (acc.), I am given to understand that further north the formʃαχtu꞉nʹ occurs;tα꞉rLαχ, ‘Toirdhealbhach’;u꞉dəlαn, ‘swivel’, O.Ir. utmall. On the other handw is retained inαχwirʹkʹ, ‘heat in horses’, Di. eachmairt;α꞉rwαχ, ‘slaughter’, árbhach;αswi꞉, ‘want’, M.Ir. esbuid, cp. Pedersen p. 164;bʹɛəlwαχ, ‘bridle-bit’, Meyer bélbach;fʹjɔ꞉lwαχi꞉, ‘different kinds of meat’, Di. feólmhach, feólbhach;kʹαrwαχ, ‘gamester’, Di. cearrbhach;tʹαswαχ, ‘heat’, Di. teasbhach.
§ 198. Forw as the second element ofuw in syllables with chief and secondary stress see §§ 47,49.
§ 199. In a few instances we findw prefixed to words beginning withu, e.g.wuidʹ, ‘from you’, O.Ir. úait,wuə,w⅄ə, ‘from him’, O.Ir. úad;Nʹi꞉ wuirʹ = ní fhuair where thew seemsto be hiatus-filling, as is also the case inə wuəχtər, ‘from above’, cp.ə jiəχtər, ‘from below’. Ingə gyrʹi dʹiə N tα꞉w ɔrt (= go gcuiridh Dia an t‑ádh ort) we seem to have aw-glide.
ui < uai becomeswi꞉ by stress-shifting insmwi꞉tʹuw, ‘to think’, Di. smuaintigheadh, M.Ir. smuained (§ 443);fwi꞉rʹ mʹɛ, ‘I got’, <fuirʹ mʹə. Further infwi꞉r <fw⅄꞉r, ‘cold’, M.Ir. fúar.uə < ua becomeswα beforeχ infʹïNwαχt, ‘coolness’, Di. fionnfhuacht.
§ 200. All non-palatal labials tend to develope aw before a following vowel, i.e. at the moment when the contact is loosened the tongue is in the position foru. For the lip-action see § 289. Thisw is heard most clearly before front vowels and⅄꞉ and in this book is regularly written in these cases, e.g. beforeæ, infwærʹə, ‘wake’;mwædʹə, ‘stick’;mwælʹkʹ, ‘soreness from riding bareback’;mwærʹig, ‘woe’;mwærʹəm, ‘I remain’;mwæʃtʹi꞉nʹ, ‘mastiff’ (as term of abuse);ə mwæNʹænʹ, ‘in spite of me’;mwæʃtʹruw, ‘to churn’;pwædʹirʹ, ‘prayer’;smwæLʹtʹə, past part. ofsmαluw, ‘to wither’. Beforei inbwiLʹə, ‘blow’;bwi꞉dʹαχ, ‘small’;dʹrʹαpwirʹαχt, ‘climbing’;klo̤pwidʹə, ‘dip in land, wrinkle in cloth’;kʹαpwirʹə, ‘slice of bread and butter’;Lʹαbwi꞉, ‘bed’;mwiLʹə, compar. ofmαL, ‘late’;spwiɲkʹə, gen. sing. ofspo̤ŋk, ‘tinder’;tapwi꞉, ‘quick’. Before⅄꞉ inmw⅄꞉r, ‘keeper’;mw⅄̃꞉, ‘pliable’;mw⅄꞉l, ‘bald, blunt’. Before ï inmwïgʹlʹi꞉, ‘mild, modest’. Thisw may also be clearly heard if the labial is the final of one word and the next begins with a front vowel, as intα꞉ tʹrʹi꞉ fo̤Nt əgəm werʹ = tá trí phunta agam air;tʹi꞉m wi꞉ = tím í. In the case of initialf thew is lost on aspiration, thusfwïlʹ, ‘blood’ butfα Nïlʹ, ‘concerning the blood’.
§ 201. A voicelessw (w̥) arising from various sources is very frequent in Donegal. It is found regularly when aspirated b, m are followed byh < th, fh or preceded byh < th, e.g.αw̥ilʹ, ‘change of appearance’, Di. athbhuil;row̥ər = rabhthar. In futures and past participles,sNα꞉w̥ə mʹə, ‘I shall swim’;ʃNʹiuw̥ə mʹə, ‘I shall spin’, past part.ʃNʹiuw̥ə, imperf. pass.nʹiuw̥i꞉. By contraction insi꞉w̥əlʹ, ‘odd’, Di. saoitheamhail (similarlyriw̥əlʹ, ‘royal’);Nʹα̃ujli꞉w̥əlʹ, ‘unlawful’, Di. neamh-dhlightheamhail;mʹi꞉w̥ər, ‘ugly’, Craig (Iasg.) míofuar seems to be mío-(fh)uathmhar.tα̃꞉uw, ‘doze’, Di. támh, M.Ir. tám,tα̃꞉w̥irʹαχt, ‘dozing’, have been influenced by some word or other, whilsttαuw̥əN(t), ‘barking’, M.Ir. toffund containsw̥ <sv. As to the difficulty in distinguishing betweenf andw̥ see § 309.
§ 202. In monosyllables with short root-vowel followed by aspirated b, m, thew arising from the latter loses its voice in accordance with the Donegal fondness for breath-endings in short syllables, cp. § 12. At the same time the back of the tongue seems to be raised from theu-position towards the soft palate, thus producing in addition a slightχ sound. When the next word begins with a consonant, thew̥ usually disappears, thusrow̥ = rabh, butlʹɛ ro lʹɛ dʹα꞉nuw ɛgʹə. Examples—brow̥, ‘blade’, Meyer brobb, brod;dα̃uw, ‘ox’, O.Ir. dam;dUw̥, ‘black’, O.Ir. dub;dŨw̥, ‘to me’, O.Ir. dom;kʹrʹα̃uw̥, ‘garlic’, Meyer crem;sklα̃uw̥, ‘snarl’, Di. sclamh;Nʹα̃uw̥, ‘heaven’, O.Ir. nem.Nʹα̃uw̥ is now rarely heard except in the Lord’s Prayer and inNʹɛəLti꞉ Nʹï̃və, ‘very high clouds’. Cp.ər Nʹα̃uw Nɔ ər tαluw Nʹi꞉ αkəs ə lʹehədʹ.Uw̥ is also the result of cons. + u + th ingrUw̥ (grU bwiə), ‘biestings’, M.Ir. gruth;gUw̥, ‘voice’, O.Ir. guth;krUw̥, ‘form’, O.Ir. cruth;srUw̥, ‘stream’, O.Ir. sruth, alsosrUw̥αn. SimilarlytʹrʹUw̥, ‘hooping-cough’, Di. triuch. In these casesw̥ passes sporadically intof, cp. the Scotch Gaelic spelling stuth < Engl. stuff, puth < puff, and duf, ‘black’, uf, ‘egg’, quoted for Sligo in Molloy’s 29th dialect-list. A few other words shew a dislike for the endingU`, e.g.tʹUw̥, ‘thick, frequent’, M.Ir. tiug;əNʹUw̥, ‘to-day’, O.Ir. indiu, Spir. Rose p. 8 anuth. The words for ‘horse-shoe’ and ‘dowry’, M.Ir. cró, have been influenced by cruth, ‘form’, as they are bothkrUw̥,krU kαpwilʹ, ‘horse-shoe’. The genitive of the word for ‘dowry’ I have heard askrïv.tlŨw̥, ‘tongs’, Di. tlúgh, has further joined this group.
(b) The liquids and nasals.
Note on l, m, n and r sounds.
§ 203. The first accurate description of the various l, n sounds in Irish was given by a writer in the Gaelic Journal for 1887 (p. 8), who styled himself Clann Chonchobair. More recently Pedersen in his ‘Aspirationen i Irsk’ contributed much to the elucidation of the puzzling r-sounds. Practically all writers of Irish Grammars with the exception of Neilson and O’Brien have based their observations on the dialects of Munster or Connaught, whilst the speech of Donegal might long ago have supplied the key to the most difficult problem of Irish phonetics. It is now well known thatL andl,Lʹ andlʹ,N andn,Nʹ andnʹ differ from one another in the matter of articulation but in Donegal they also differ from one another in the matter of length.This is most clearly heard when these sounds occur as the finals of monosyllables after a short vowel. Comparemo̤L, ‘heap’,kʹïN, ‘head’,bo̤N, ‘sole’,ʃïnʹ, ‘this’, withmo̤l, ‘mill-shaft’,kʹïn, ‘affection’,bo̤n, ‘bottom’,ʃiNʹ, imper. ‘play’ and the difference in length is just as striking as the difference in articulation.l,lʹ,n,nʹ in this position are perhaps over-short[A 2], whilstL,Lʹ,N,Nʹ are very long sounds. Initially the difference between the pairs is naturally not quite so marked but it nevertheless exists, whilst in syllables with secondary stress the long sounds are somewhat reduced, so that confusion easily takes place. Precisely the same is true ofR,r, though the dialect has not preserved the sounds in their original relations andRʹ has been entirely given up.m,mʹ after short stressed vowels are invariably long. Donegal Irish, it would seem, is the only living Irish dialect which preserves in some measure the original difference between the single and double consonants of O.Ir. orthography. For the remaining consonants see § 357. From Henderson one gathers that Scotch Gaelic agrees in a measure with Donegal, cp. ZCP. v 515 (s), 521 (Nʹ), 523 (R).
1.L.
§ 204. This symbol denotes a so-called ambi-dental divided l (fan or spread l), which is formed by pressing the front rim of the tongue very forcibly against the upper teeth or the edge of the lower teeth. Henderson (ZCP. v 92) says of Scotch GaelicL: “The point of the tongue is spread out like a fan so that the whole of its rim is brought against the teeth while the back of the tongue is at the same time slightly raised”. In Donegal the back of the tongue seems to be raised in producing this sound but the raising is of no consequence, as it also occurs in the case ofl,N,n (Pedersen pp. 21, 22). Beforet,k ands L is partly voiceless.L andN are very thick, heavy sounds and modify a followingi, § 125.
§ 205.L occurs initially representing O.Ir. l before a, o, u when the preceding word is not capable of causing aspiration. Examples—Lα꞉, ‘day’, O.Ir. láthe;Lα̃꞉uw, ‘hand’, O.Ir. lám;Lo꞉rtʹ, ‘to speak’, M.Ir. labrad;Luə, ‘early’, M.Ir. luath;Luw, ‘less’, O.Ir. lugu;Lũ꞉hər, ‘nimble’, M.Ir. lúthmar;Ly꞉, ‘to lie’, O.Ir. lige (influenced by the causative laigim, Thurneysen, IF. Anz. vi 46);Lo̤g, ‘weak’, M.Ir. lac.
§ 206. Medially and finallyL corresponds to O.Ir. non-palatal ll of whatever origin, e.g.αLαχ, ‘cattle’, O.Ir. ellach;αLəs, ‘sweat’, Meyer allas;bαL, ‘spot’, O.Ir. ball;bαLαn, ‘teat’, Meyer ballán;bαLə, ‘wall’, < Engl. ‘wall’;brαLαχ, ‘bosom’, M.Ir. brollach;bʹrʹαL, ‘glans penis’, Meyer brell, whencebʹrʹαLαn, ‘simpleton’;dõ꞉nəL, M.Ir. Domnall,dõ꞉nəL Nə gʹαli꞉, ‘the man in the moon’;əNαL, ‘hither’, O.Ir. anall;fʹαL, ‘treachery’, M.Ir. fell;gαL, ‘foreigner, Englishman’, M.Ir. gall;iəL, ‘whang, leather boot-lace’, M.Ir. íall;kαL, ‘hazel’, M.Ir. coll;kαLαn, ‘noisy talk’, Di. Macbain callán, cp. M.Ir. callaire;kynʹigʹəL, ‘condition’, Meyer coingell;ko̤Lαχ, ‘boar’, O.Ir. cullach;mαL, ‘late’, O.Ir. mall;mʹαLuw, ‘decoy, deceive’, M.Ir. mellaim;po̤L, ‘hole’, M.Ir. poll.
§ 207.L has arisen in a number of cases from the assimilation of l and another consonant, e.g.o̤Lə, gen. sing. ofɔləN, ‘wool’, M.Ir. oland;ko̤Lə, O.Ir. collno, gen. sing. of colinn, cp.ə tαrt ə tɔkrəs əgəs ə tɔχəs, tʹrʹi꞉ Nαvdʹə Nə ko̤Lə, ‘thirst, hunger and itching are the three enemies of the body’;ko̤Luw, ‘sleep’, O.Ir. cotlud;mʹɛəLαχαn, ‘corpulent person’, <mʹɛədəl, Di. méadal;No̤Likʹ, ‘Christmas’, M.Ir. notlaic;tʹiəLəky꞉, ‘talents’, Di. tiodhlacadh, M.Ir. tidlacim;tʹαLαχ, ‘hearth’, M.Ir. tenlach. FurtherfαLænʹ, ‘healthy’, M.Ir. follán < fo-slán;duwLαn, ‘challenge, defiance’, Di. dubhshlán, cp. Craig Iasg.;αuwLə, ‘wafer’, O.Ir. obla (the word also means ‘a cluster of nuts’).
§ 208.L occurs afters both initially and medially, e.g.sLα꞉n, ‘healthy’, M.Ir. slán;sLαuwruw, ‘chain’, O.Ir.slabradsLαt, ‘rod’, M.Ir. slat;sLö̤꞉dαn, ‘cold’, Di. slaghdán;sLαχtər, ‘slaughter’, < Engl.;sLα꞉χ, ‘slush’, Di. sláthach;sLo꞉k, ‘sloke’, < Engl.;sLïNʹuw, ‘surname’, M.Ir. slondud;sLo̤t, ‘wick’;sLuə, ‘host’, O.Ir. slúag;sLuəsəd, ‘shovel’, Di. sluasad;sLo̤gəm, ‘I swallow’, M.Ir. slocim;mαsLuw, ‘trouble, tease, worry’, Di. maslughadh, Keat. masla;brɔsLuw, ‘to incite’, < Meyer brostaigim.
§ 209.L stands beforet,d,N,s, e.g.αLt, ‘cliff’, M.Ir. alt;αLtuw, ‘grace’, M.Ir. altugud < atlugud;dʹu꞉Ltuw, ‘to refuse’, O.Ir. díltud;gα꞉Ltə, ‘Protestant’, Di. gallda;ku꞉həLtə, ‘backward, retiring’, Di. cúthaltas, Meyer cuthal;kʹαŋəltαn, ‘parcel’, Di. ceangaltán;mɔLt, ‘wether’, M.Ir. molt;mʹαLtə, ‘deceived’, M.Ir. mellaim. ForL beforet in sandhi cp. § 459.L can only occur befored in late loan-words, as O.Ir. ld gaveL. My only example isgo̤ldər, ‘roar’, Craig Iasg. guldar.LN is only foundin sandhi (§ 459) as O.Ir. ln becameL, supra § 207. Examples ofL befores—bo̤Lsirʹə, ‘a crier’, Di. bollsaire;fαLsə, ‘idle’, Di. fallsa;fʹαLsky꞉, ‘burning grass or heather off the ground’.
§ 210.L stands afterr, e.g.bʹɛ꞉rLə, ‘English’, M.Ir. bérla < bélre;hα꞉rLy꞉, ‘happened’, M.Ir. tarla;kɔrLαχ, ‘small remainder’, Di. corrluach;mo̤rLəs, ‘mackerel’, Di. murlus;ɔ꞉rLə, ‘to vomit’, O’R. orlúghadh;ɔ꞉rLαχ, ‘inch’, M.Ir. ordlach;o̤rLə, ‘eaves’, M.Ir. urla;o̤rLuw, ‘speech, eloquence’, M.Ir. erlabra;tα꞉rLαχ ‘Toirdhealbhach’.
§ 211. Afterm w l frequently has the thick sound ofL in words likeo̤mlαn, ‘whole, entire’;eʃəmLɔrʹ, ‘example’, Di. eisiompláir. It may be noted that Finck states thatL occurs afterw,v on Aran (i72,73) and cp. Molloy’s comlain whatever the word may be (quoted by Pedersen p. 30).
§ 212.L occurs in a number of forms where we should expect to findl. Finck notes that the descendant of O.Ir. tempul hasL on Aran (i 73) and this is also the case in Donegal, =tʹα(꞉)mpəL. There is a considerable amount of hesitation betweenL andl, as inαskəL, ‘arm-pit’ (pʹαt(ə)αskiLʹə, ‘mother’s darling, spoilt child or beast’,skαrtʹ αskiLʹə, ‘a boil under the arm-pit’), Craig only writes one l and great uncertainty is observable in older stages of the language, cp. Meyer ascall, ochsal, axall, axal;dʹəwəl, ‘devil’, O.Ir. diabul, Craig diabhall;kαuwlædʹ, ‘noisy talk’, Di. collóid, callóid (§ 143);mo̤gəl, ‘husk, mesh, eyelid’, Di. mogall;tuəfʹəL, ‘a whirl, the wrong way’, M.Ir. tuaithbel.mo̤L, ‘a heap, pile’, Di. O’R. mol, may have been influenced by the plur.mo̤Ltri꞉ to differentiate it frommo̤l, ‘shaft of a mill-wheel’, M.Ir. mol, with which it is really identical. InuwLə, ‘apples’, andmʹαruwLαn, ‘giddiness, fit of dizziness’, Di. mearbhlán, theL has been transferred fromuwL, ‘apple’, M.Ir. uball, and Di. mearbhall.
§ 213. A voicelessL with strongly breathed off-glide occurs in the future of verbs whose stem ends inL, e.g.fʹαL̥ə mʹə ‘I shall betray’;gʹαL̥ə mʹə, ‘I shall promise’;mʹαL̥ə mʹə, ‘I shall deceive’;po̤L̥ə mʹə frompo̤Luw used of catching hares &c. in gins, of bulls goring persons &c.;to̤L̥i꞉ fut. ofto̤Luw, cp.to̤L § 55. Furtherpα꞉rL̥αn, ‘Partholon’. For the articulation ofL̥ and other voiceless liquids and nasals see Jespersen’s remarks on the corresponding Welsh sounds (Lehrbuch der Phonetik p. 80).2.l.
§ 214. This sound seems to me to correspond pretty nearly to the ordinary English l, though the point of the tongue rests just above the upper teeth and not against the arch-rim. The raising of the back of the tongue gives thisl, when standing at the end of a syllable other than a clipped one, the same dull sound that is so characteristic of Engl. l. In other positions this quality is not so noticeable.
§ 215.l corresponds to O.Ir. l before original a, o, u whether preserved or lost in any position except initially and apart from the special cases mentioned in §§ 207–210. Examples—αlə, ‘swan’, M.Ir. ela;αlpαn, ‘lump, bit’, Meyer alp;αləbə, ‘Scotland’, M.Ir. Alba;α꞉luw, ‘sudden grip’, M.Ir. álad;α̃꞉ləʃ, ‘mixture of milk and water’, Meyer anglas, englas;blαs, ‘taste’, O.Ir. mlass;bɔluw, ‘smell’, M.Ir, bolad;bɔləg, ‘belly’, M.Ir. bolg;kʹαŋəl, ‘trying’, M.Ir. cengal;mʹɛədəl, ‘paunch’, Di. méadal;mʹïtəl, ‘metal, mettle’, Di. miotal;ɔ꞉l, ‘drink’, M.Ir. ól;ʃiəl, ‘seed’, O.Ir. síl.
§ 216.l stands beforer (=r,rʹ), althoughlṟ must once have beenLR,LʹRʹ, e.g.bɔlṟiαχ, ‘scenting’ (of a blood-hound);gαlṟi꞉, ‘diseases’;ku꞉lṟö̤꞉skαχ, ‘backward’, Di. cúilriascmhar;kʹïlṟiænʹ, ‘Kilraine’, = Cill Riáin;o̤lṟuw, ‘shouting’, cp. ulfairt (?);ʃiəlṟuw, Di. síolrughadh. Forlṟ in sandhi see § 460.
§ 217. It might be expected that we should findL followingt,d as it always precedes these sounds. But such is not the case, fortl,dl like most Irish combinations of consonants do not coalesce (§ 437). The off-glide of thet,d is clearly heard as the tongue moves into the position forl. This off-glide is so distinct that Finck actually inserts a vowel and writesdəlū́—dluth, ‘warp’ (ii p. 266). Examples—dli꞉, ‘lock, wisp of straw’,dli꞉ ə wo̤Ly꞉, ‘top-stopple, the thatch on the top of a cottage’, M.Ir. dlai;tlũw̥, ‘tongs’, Di. tlúgh (rare, the usual term ismwædʹəbʹrʹiʃtə);ə tlui = an tsluaigh (gen. sing.);ə tluəsəd, ‘the shovel’, an tsluasad;erʹ ə tlαuwruw = air an tslabhradh.
§ 218. In those cases where other consonants are aspirated initially,l takes the place ofL. This only happens however in the speech of the older people. The younger folk make no distinction betweenL andl initially, cp. Fincki p. 76; Henderson, ZCP. v 90. Examples—ə fʹαr ə lo꞉r lʹïm, ‘the man who spoke to me’;lu꞉b mʹə, ‘I bent’;lö̤꞉di mʹə, ‘I lessened’;lɔtʹ mʹə, ‘Iwounded’;lɔk mə χri꞉, ‘my heart failed me’; ïŋə lö̤꞉rʹ, ‘toenail’;dʹe꞉lo꞉r̥ə, ‘eloquent’;ku꞉gʹi꞉ ləiən, ‘the province of Leinster’;bʹlʹiïnʹ luə, ‘an early year’;gʹαrænʹ lα꞉dʹirʹə, ‘strong horses’;tro̤mli꞉, ‘nightmare’;dən vαn lo̤g, ‘to the weak woman’;sə wα꞉d lα꞉n, ‘in the full boat’;tα꞉ ʃɛ əN αr wo꞉r lα꞉dʹirʹ, ‘he’s a big strong man’.L is however never aspirated after the article orçïd, ‘first’, e.g.ə Lo̤χɔg, ‘the mouse’;ə çïd Lα꞉, ‘the first day’. The same holds good forLʹ,N,Nʹ.
The aspiration of initialsL which should beL̥ isL,[1] cp. Pedersen p. 23, e.g.də lα꞉Nʹtʹə, ‘your health’;lα꞉ni, pret. ofsLα꞉nuw, ‘to redeem’;kα lïNʹuw huw, ‘what’s your name (surname)?’
L is not aspirated afterr, e.g.gʹαr` Lα꞉dirʹ, ‘middling strong’;fʹiərLo̤g, ‘very weak’;fʹïr Lα꞉dʹirʹə, ‘strong men’. Similarly aftererʹ, ‘upon’, as inər Lα꞉r, ‘down, on the ground’.
§ 219. Ingɔl ·ço꞉lʹ, ‘singing’, < gabháil cheóil, the palatal quality is often given up in the syllable preceding the stress, cp.ə fʹαr sən, ‘that man’ and Zimmer, Untersuchungen über den Satzaccent des Altirischen p. 4.
§ 220. An unvoicedl with strongly breathed off-glide occurs in futures and a few substantives, e.g.dʹiəl̥ə mʹə, ‘I shall sell’;dʹu꞉l̥i ʃə, ‘he will suck’;mɔl̥ə mʹə, ‘I shall praise’;ɔ꞉l̥ə mʹə, ‘I shall drink’,bʹαl̥uw, ‘grease’, Di. bealadh, Meyer belad;mʹαl̥ɔ꞉, ‘interruption, delay’, Di. meathladh;ʃiəl̥α꞉, ‘strain’, cp. Di. siothladh, M.Ir. sithlaim,ʃiəl̥αn, ‘strainer’, Di. siothlán.
3.Lʹ.
§ 221. This symbol denotes a palatal l followed by aj-sound. For the formation cp. Jespersen p. 129. OfLʹ andNʹ Pedersen says (p. 21)꞉ “Lʹ andNʹ are much more strongly palatalised (i.e. thanlʹ andnʹ), so strongly, that in the transition from these sounds to a (back‑) vowel one seems to hear aj-glide (which is not the case withlʹ andnʹ)”. Thisj-glide is also clearly heard before palatal vowels. Dottin writes (RC. xiv 107) ꞉ “L’l et l’n devant une voyelle palatale ne sont pas exactement le l et le n mouillé du français ; l’élément palatal n’est pas entièrement fondu avec la consonne”. The articulation ofLʹ and indeed of almost all the palatal consonants (Nʹ,ʃ,tʹ,dʹ,kʹ,gʹ) resembles that ofL. The front rim of the tongue is pressed firmly against the lower teeth whilst the front of the tongue covers the greater part of the hard palate. Cp. Chr. Bros. Aids to the Pron. of Irish p. 19.It may be noted thati always appears forə in unstressed syllables beforeLʹ andNʹ.
§ 222.Lʹ represents O.Ir. initial l before e, i, e.g.Lʹα`, ‘half’, O.Ir. leth;Lʹαhən, ‘broad’, O.Ir. lethan;Lʹαk, ‘flag’, M.Ir. lec;Lʹαnu꞉Nʹtʹ, ‘to follow’, O.Ir. lenmain;Lʹαr intα꞉ Lʹαr erʹ, ‘he’s wrong in his head’, M.Ir. ler;LʹɛəN, ‘learning’, O.Ir. legend;Lʹɛəs, ‘healing’, M.Ir. leges;Lʹiə, ‘grey’, M.Ir. líath;Lʹiənuw, ‘to fill’, O.Ir. linath;Lʹitʹirʹ, ‘letter’, O.Ir. liter;Lʹo꞉r, ‘book’, O.Ir. lebor.
§ 223. Medially and finallyLʹ arises from O.Ir. ll before original e, i whether retained or lost, e.g.bwiLʹə, ‘blow’, M.Ir. bulle;fʹiLʹ mʹə, ‘I returned’, M.Ir. fillim (i.e. phill mé);kæLʹαχ, ‘hag’, O.Ir. caillech;kæLʹəm, ‘I lose’, M.Ir. coillim;kʹiLʹ, ‘churchyard’, M.Ir. cill (dat.);mʹiLʹuw, ‘to spoil’, M.Ir. milliud;sæLʹ, ‘grease, fat’, M.Ir. saill;tʹiLʹuw, ‘addition’, O.Ir. tuilled.
§ 224. MediallyLʹ may arise by assimilation, e.g.guiLʹαχə, ‘shoulders’, plur. ofguəliNʹ;bræLʹi꞉nʹ, ‘sheet’, Di. braitlinn;kyLʹαχə mʹə, ‘I shall sleep’, < coidleachaidh mé;fwi꞉Lαχ, ‘leavings’,fwi꞉Lʹi꞉, ‘February’, not ‘January’ as Dinneen has under fuighle, cp.
See further Wi. fuidell.
§ 225.Lʹ comes to stand beforeNʹ in modern contracted forms, e.g.ʃkʹiLʹiNʹ, ‘shilling’, plur.ʃkʹiLʹNʹə;fwïLʹNʹi꞉m, ‘I endure’, pret.dïlʹiNʹ (diLʹiNʹ), fut.fwiLʹNʹαχə mʹə, Di. fuilingim, O.Ir. foloing.
Lʹ stands further beforeʃ,tʹ, e.g.æLʹʃə, ‘cancer’, Meyer allse;bʹrʹiLʹʃkʹə, ‘light-headed, half-witted fellow’, Di. breillsce;mʹiLʹʃə, ‘sweeter’, M.Ir. millsiu;sɔLʹʃuw, ‘to shine’, M.Ir. soillsiugad;tʹrʹiLʹʃαn, ‘plaited rush, wick’, Di. trilseán, earlier trilsen.iLʹtʹ, plur. ofαLt, ‘cliff’;kʹeLʹtʹ, ‘to conceal’, Di. ceilt;tɔLʹtʹənəs, ‘consent’, Di. toilteanas. ForLʹ beforedʹ I have no examples.
§ 226.r (< *Rʹ) andʃ require to be followed byLʹ, e.g.kõ꞉rLʹə, ‘advice’, O.Ir. comairle;i꞉ʃLʹuw, ‘to lower’, Di. ísliughadh;kæʃLʹαn, ‘castle’, Meyer caslén;ʃLʹα꞉n, ‘turf-spade’;tæʃLʹαχ, ‘wet weather’, Di. taisleach, cp.fʹlʹïχlαχ. ForrLʹ,ʃLʹ in sandhi see §§ 455,459.
§ 227. A voicelessLʹ with strongly breathed off-glide occurs principally in futures, e.g.gyL̥ʹi꞉, future of Di. goillim;gʹeiL̥ʹə mʹə, ‘I shall yield’;kæL̥ʹə mʹə, ‘I shall lose’;miL̥ʹə mʹə, ‘I shallspoil’;sæL̥ʹə mʹə, ‘I shall pickle, salt’.kʹαrL̥ʹi꞉nʹ, ‘ball of string, wool’, <kʹαrtʹlʹi꞉nʹ which may also be heard, Meyer certle. J. H. has a further form,kʹɛrL̥ʹi꞉nʹ, which he says means ‘a lifeless or awkward mass’.
4.lʹ.
§ 228. Bylʹ we denote a clear alveolar l like that in German ‘hell’ but slightly palatalised. The palatalisation is most clearly heard whenlʹ is final afteræ. The younger generation largely substituteLʹ forlʹ, see infra § 231 and Fincki 76.
§ 229.lʹ represents O.Ir. medial and final l before e, i whether retained or lost and also l standing before or after other palatal consonants than those mentioned in §§ 225,226. Examples—bwelʹə, ‘townland’, M.Ir. baile;bwidʹælʹ, ‘bottles’;fʹiəkilʹ, ‘tooth’, O.Ir. fiacail;fʹjɔ꞉lʹ, ‘flesh’, O.Ir. feúil;kælʹkʹ, ‘chalk’, M.Ir. cailc;kʹαŋilʹ, imper. ‘bind’;mwælʹkʹ, ‘soreness from riding bareback’;pʹïlʹəpʹi꞉nʹ, ‘plover’, Di. pilibín;ʃelʹigʹ, ‘chase’, O.Ir. seilgg (acc.);ʃelʹɔg, ‘willow’, M.Ir. sail;ʃïlʹαg, ‘saliva’, Di. seile < M.Ir. saile.dʹlʹiuw, ‘law’, O.Ir. dliged;fʹlʹïχ ‘wet’, O.Ir. fliuch;tʹlʹigʹən, ‘vomit’, < M.Ir. teilcim,tʹlʹikʹə N bα꞉ʃ, ‘sentenced to death’.
§ 230. Except in the case of the prepositionlʹɛ together with the pronominal formslʹïm,lʹαt &c.lʹ can only stand initially as the aspirated form ofLʹ,fʹlʹ, e.g.lʹαn mwidʹ, ‘we followed’;lʹαsi ʃiəd, ‘they improved’;lʹɛəs tuw, ‘you healed’;lʹei ʃə, ‘he read, melted’;lʹiən mʹə, ‘I filled’;lʹi` mʹə, ‘I licked’;lʹïg mʹə, ‘I overthrow’;lʹɔi mʹə, ‘I heckled’;lʹo꞉n mʹə, ‘I sprained’.lʹɛ mə lʹiNʹ, ‘in my time’;tʹrʹi꞉ lʹitʹirʹ, ‘three letters’;gʹαrlʹo꞉r, ‘a moderate book’;gʹɛ꞉rlʹαnũ꞉Nʹtʹ, ‘persecution’;gʹαrlʹiəNtə, ‘fairly well filled’;ĩ꞉çə lʹïχ ‘a wet night’. One may hearsə Lʹəχlαχ ‘in the wet weather’ but this is to be attributed to the younger generation.
Lʹ generally remains after the prepositionerʹ, e.g.ər Lʹαhu꞉lʹ, ‘one-eyed’;ər Lʹαbwi꞉, ‘on a bed’;ər Lʹαr, ‘in a fix, astray’ lit. ‘at sea’, Wi. ler, alsovi꞉ Lo̤ŋ əmwiç ər Lʹαr, ‘there was a ship lying out at anchor’. But I have heardər lʹαχɔrænʹ, ‘for half-a-crown’ from J. H. Similarly after the article, e.g.kʹïN ə Lʹinʹəv, ‘the infant’s head’.
The aspiration of words beginning withʃLʹ islʹ neverl̥ʹ. It is interesting to note that when J. H. imitates Connaught speech, he pronouncesko̤Ndαi l̥ʹigʹi꞉, ‘County Sligo’, whereas his own pronunciation is alwaysk. lʹigʹi꞉. Examples—Nʹi꞉lʹ mʹə əN α lʹi꞉,‘I am not beholden to him’ (slige);kαsænʹ lʹα̃uwnə, ‘slippery paths’;αskəN lʹα̃uwinʹ, ‘a slippery eel’;lʹα̃uwnə tuw, ‘you slipped’;lʹi꞉k ʃə, ‘he stroked, smoothed’;u꞉r lʹeivə, ‘sage’, Hogan iubhar sléibhe.
§ 231. The younger generation have given up the aspiration ofLʹ and in a number of wordsLʹ is substituted forlʹ. The inflected forms of ïLʹə, ‘elbow’, Wi. ule, have ll already in M.Ir.stα꞉wi꞉lʹ, ‘stumbling’, occurs besidestα꞉wəLʹi꞉, Di. stabhghail;kɔr huefʹiLʹ, ‘whirlpool’, Di. cor tuaithbil. I have usually heardgə fɔ꞉Lʹ, ‘yet’ but Craig writes go fóil.
§ 232. A voicelessl̥ʹ with strongly breathed off-glide is frequent in futures, e.g.el̥ʹə mʹə, ‘I shall rear’;gil̥ʹə mʹə, ‘I shall boil’;gyl̥ʹə mʹə, ‘I shall weep’;kʹel̥ʹə mʹə, ‘I shall conceal’;mʹel̥ʹə mʹə, ‘I shall grind’. In substantives < thl, lth, e.g.l̥ʹigʹ mʹə, ‘vomited’, Di. tligim;krïl̥ʹɔg, ‘stalk of barley’, cp. Meyer crothal (?);el̥ʹidʹ, ‘fawn’, M.Ir. eilit;fα꞉l̥ʹi꞉, ‘shy’;rïl̥ʹαn, ‘wheel in spindle’, Di. roithleán. Also frequently inwïl̥ʹ in questions = an bhfuil?
In the case ofkyl̥ʹəd, ‘knave at cards’,l̥ʹ seems to have arisen out ofrʹ, Di. cuireat.
§ 233.spʹiɲkʹ, ‘precipice’, seems to have lost anlʹ, cp. Di. spinnc, splinnc.
5.N.
§ 234.N denotes a thick ambi-dental n similar in formation toL (§ 204). In the production of the Irish nasals the resonance in the nose is much greater than is the case in English and in consequence all vowels flanking an n or m sound are liable to be nasalised, more particularly in stressed syllables (§ 172). This nasalisation of vowels in the neighbourhood of n, m sometimes leads to the insertion of a nasal as inmu꞉NLə, ‘a mould, a kind of button’ < Engl. ‘mould’, cp. Manx cronk (Pedersen p. 23).Lu꞉NəsNə, ‘Lammas, August’, M.Ir. lúgnasad, owes its secondN to an attempt to make the unstressed syllables alike.
§ 235.N stands initially as the representative of O.Ir. n preceding a, o, u, e.g.Nα̃꞉widʹ, ‘enemy’, O.Ir. náme;Nα꞉rʹə,‘share’, M.Ir. náre;Nɔχtəm, ‘I lay bare’, Wi. nochtaim;Nõ꞉s, ‘custom’, M.Ir. nós;No̤Likʹ, ‘Christmas’, M.Ir. notlaic;Nïnu꞉r, ‘set of nine’, O.Ir. nónbur;Nuw, ‘new’, O.Ir. núe;Nỹuw, ‘saint’, O.Ir. nóib;N⅄꞉skəN, ‘snipe’, Di. naosca.
The n of the article (as also the eclipsen ofa,[2] ‘their’,erʹ, ‘our’,mər, ‘your’,dα, ‘if’) before a vocalic initial or aspirated f is treated as if it belonged to the following word and is thereforeN before a substantive or verb beginning in O.Ir. with a, o, u, e.g.ə NɔləN, ‘the wool’;ə Nαsəl, ‘their donkey’ or ‘from the donkey’;ɛgʹ ə Nærʹə, ‘at the wake’ (faire);erʹ ə N⅄꞉nαχ, ‘at the fair’;sə Nõ꞉wər, ‘in the autumn’;mə hαχt Nαnəm də hu꞉lʹ,ʃe꞉ du꞉rtʹ ə kαt lʹeʃ ə Nʹiəsk = mo sheacht n‑anam do shúil, sé dubhairt an cat leis an iasc. Compare the spellings Mac a nathar, cuid a nfir censured by Donlevy (quoted by O’Donovan, Grammar p. lxxvi) and the proper names Naul, Navan < an Áill, an Emain. The conjunction an uair, ‘when’, is similarlyNerʹ. Parallel to these cases are the adverbsəNuəs,əNαL,əNo̤N,əNɔ꞉ri꞉rʹ, < anúas, an-all, inonn, i n‑airthiur. We might expectN inəniʃ, ‘now’, but I have only heardəniʃ < *ind fhoiss.əNo̤χt is regular < O.Ir. innocht. The preposition dochum was reduced to chum, chun, ’un and from those cases where the final n regularly becameN as in the case of the article, the forməN was generalised, e.g.gɔl ə NαfrʹiNʹ, ‘going to mass’. Craig’s statements about this preposition are incomplete (Grammar² p. 210). Before masculines with consonantal initial and all feminines the full forməNə < ’un an is perhaps as frequent as the contractedNα,Nə. The n after prepositions before the possessive pronoun a ‘his, her, their’, is alsoN,lʹɛ Nαhærʹ, ‘with his father.’ According to Pedersen (p. 123) le n‑a éan is pronounced on Aranlʹe꞉ Nʹe꞉n. In Donegal this would belʹɛ Nɛən. We have already seen that the word for ‘one’ may be reduced fromɛən toən,n which before a vocalic initial becomesN, e.g.ə Nɔkəl əwα̃꞉n, ‘a single word’.
§ 236. Medially and finallyN represents O.Ir. nn, nd, e.g.αNũw, ‘seldom’, M.Ir. andam;bo̤N, ‘sole’, M.Ir. bond;bʹαNuw, ‘to bless’, cp. O.Ir. bendacht;bwinʹəN, ‘female’, Meyer boinend;fo̤N, ‘desire’, M.Ir. fonn;fʹïN, ‘fair’, O.Ir. find;gαN, ‘scarce’, O.Ir. gann, gand;grα꞉Nə, ‘ugly, repulsive’, M.Ir. gránna, gránde;gʹlʹαN, ‘valley’, M.Ir. glenn, glend;ko̤Nỹ꞉(ʃtʹə), ‘tame’, M.Ir. cendaid (§ 416);k⅄꞉r̥əN, ‘rowan-tree’, Meyer cáerthann;kʹαNy꞉m, ‘I buy’, M.Ir. cennaigim;kʹïN, ‘head’, O.Ir. cenn;Lo̤skəN, ‘toad’, M.Ir. loscann;LʹαNæNʹ ʃi꞉, ‘fairy lover’, M.Ir. lennán;LʹɛəN, ‘learning’, O.Ir. legend;mʹαNαn, ‘kid’, Di. meannán;mʹïNə, ‘oaths’, M.Ir. mind;po̤NəN, ‘sheaf’, M.Ir. punnann;tʹαNəm, ‘I tighten’, O.Ir. tend.
It may be noted that the enclitic ending of the present indicative is‑əN with J. H. I have listened repeatedly andhave only heard‑əN. Craig writes pósan muid but he is not reliable for l and n sounds.
§ 237. MedialN sometimes arises from assimilation of n with another consonant, e.g.fʹiəNiʃ, ‘witness’, O.Ir. fiadnisse;çiəNə, ‘same’, O.Ir. cétne;Lu꞉NəsNə, ‘Lammas, August’, M.Ir. lúgnasad;ə mʹlʹiəNə, ‘this year’, cp. O.Ir. gen. sing. bliadne;Nα, ‘than’, O.Ir. inda. Similarly the na forms of the article haveN, O.Ir. inna. nd >N also occurs in certain stereotyped compounds, e.g.·αNinʹə, ‘ungracious person’, Di. anduine;ɛəNynʹə, ‘anybody’, Di. aonduine;ʃαNinʹə, ‘old man’, Di. seanduine. With these cases we may compare the eclipse n before initiald which also producesN, e.g.ə Nα꞉n, ‘fated, in store’, Di.i. ndán.
§ 238.N stands beforeL,t,d,s, e.g.αNLo̤g, ‘very weak’;αNLo̤m, ‘very bare’;αNLũ꞉χər, ‘very nimble’;bʹαN ·Lyə, ‘mistress’;bʹlʹɛəNLαχə, plur. ofbʹlʹein, ‘groin’, O.Ir. mlén;ɛəNLαiç, ‘fowl’, M.Ir. énlaith;tα꞉ ʃiəd ə go̤bwirʹ əs ɛəNLα̃꞉v, ‘they are hand and glove together’;ko̤NLαχ, ‘stubble’, Meyer connlach, connlech;Nỹ꞉ NLy꞉ = naoi ndlaoi;sLα꞉NLəs, ‘plantain’, Di. slánlus;spʹrʹïNLə, ‘lazy fellow’, cp. Di. sprionnlóg.αli꞉Ntə, ‘tricky, artful’, Di. ealadhanta;ɛəNtiəs, ‘living in the same house’, aontuigheas;gʹαNtrαχə, plur. ofgʹiɲ, ‘wedge’;kαNtər, pres. pass. ofkαnəm, ‘I speak’;LʹαNtər, pres. pass. ofLʹαnəm, ‘I follow’;LʹiəNtə, ‘filled’;mαNtə, ‘lot, amount’, < Engl. ‘amount’;mαNtαχ, ‘talking indistinctly’, Di. manntach;so꞉Ntαχ, ‘simple’, Di. sonntach. ForNt in sandhi see § 465. According to § 236Nd can only occur in sandhi, for which see § 465.kʹαNsuw, ‘to pacify’, M.Ir. cendsugud;o̤Nsuw, ‘to face, make for’, M.Ir. indsaigim;o̤Nsə, ‘ounce’, Di. únsa;sko̤Nsə, ‘fence’, Di. sconnsa.
§ 239.N followsr (<R) ands, e.g.bʹα꞉rN, ‘gap’, M.Ir. bern;dɔ꞉rN, ‘fist’, M.Ir. dorn;kα꞉rNαn i꞉lʹi꞉, ‘dunghill’;kɔ꞉rNuw, ‘to roll up’, Di. cornaim;kʹαhərNαχ, ‘small, impudent person’, Meyer cethernach;Lu꞉bərNỹ꞉, ‘wriggling’, Di. lúbarnaighil. In monosyllables ending inrN (rNʹ) theN (Nʹ) is almost syllabic.αsNə, ‘rib’, M.Ir. asna;brɔsNə, ‘single piece of firewood’, Meyer brosna;kɔsNuw, ‘to cost’;ɔsNə, ‘sigh’, O.Ir. osnad;sNαg, ‘hiccough’, Di. snag;sNαhαd, ‘needle’, O.Ir. snáthat;sNα꞉, ‘bundle of thread’,sNα꞉içə, ‘thread’, O.Ir. snáthe;sNα꞉uw, ‘to swim’, M.Ir. snám;sNuw, ‘complexion’, M.Ir. snúad;sNỹ꞉, ‘bier’, Macbain snaoidh;sNỹ꞉mʹ, ‘knot’, M.Ir. snaidm.
§ 240. Occasionally there is hesitation betweenN andn, ashαNikʹ besidehαnikʹ (alsohenʹikʹ) = chonnaic, M.Ir. atchonnairc.o꞉Nə = abhna, gen. sing., has been influenced by theNʹ of the nominativeo꞉Nʹ, ‘river’, = abhainn.
§ 241.N arises out of ng in a few instances, e.g.αskəN, ‘eel’, O.Ir. escung;kũ꞉N, ‘narrow’, O.Ir. cumung, cp. Manx coon, Scotch G. cumhann;ə Nαχ Lα̃꞉v = i ngach láimh.
§ 242. A voicelessN with strongly breathed off-glide occurs infʹïN̥uw, ‘hair of animal’, M.Ir. findfad, and in the futuresfʹαN̥ə mʹə, ‘I shall flay’;tʹαN̥ə mʹə, ‘I shall tighten’.
6.n.
§ 243.n is an alveolar nasal sound corresponding in formation tol and therefore not unlike Engl. n, except that the point of the tongue is nearer the upper teeth.
§ 244.n represents O.Ir. medial and final n followed or once followed by a, o, u, or preceding a consonant followed by these vowels, apart from the special cases mentioned in §§ 236–239. Examples—αrαn, ‘bread’, M.Ir. arán;bα꞉n, ‘white, fair’, O.Ir. bán;bʹαn, ‘woman’, O.Ir. ben;bro꞉n, ‘sorrow’, O.Ir. brón;bαnəfαn, ‘sucking pig’, M.Ir. banb;dαmni꞉m, ‘I condemn’, M.Ir. damnaim;drɔχwu꞉nuw, ‘bad manners’;do꞉n, ‘world’, O.Ir. domun;dʹαləgnαχ, ‘chicken-pox’;ɛən, ‘bird’, M.Ir. én;fαnαχt, ‘to remain’, O.Ir. anaim;Lʹαnu꞉Nʹt, ‘to follow’, O.Ir. lenmain;Lʹαnuw, ‘child’, M.Ir. lenab;ɔ꞉n, ‘Owen’, M.Ir. Eogan;ʃkʹïn, ‘knife’, M.Ir. scían.
§ 245. With the older peoplen is the aspirated form ofN, e.g.mə nα꞉widʹ, ‘my enemy’;bʹαn nα꞉wədαχ ‘a vicious woman’;ꬶα꞉ n⅄꞉skiNʹ, ‘two snipe’;nɔχt mʹə, ‘I stripped’. The aspiration does not take place after the article, e.g.Nαχ mo꞉r ə Nα꞉rʹə ꬶydʹə, ‘is it not a shame for you?’;bʹeigʹəN du꞉Nʹ tu꞉suw əNsə Nuw, ‘we had to begin over again’. J. H. aspirates initialN after the prepositionerʹ, e.g.tα꞉ ʃə ər nõ꞉s χo̤mə lʹïm, ‘he’s a careless, indifferent fellow’;bʹi꞉ ər nõ꞉s Nə ku꞉rtʹə, ‘do at Rome as Rome does’.
The aspiration ofsN isn, e.g.ni꞉mʹ tuw, ‘you fastened’;α nũw, ‘his complexion’;nα̃꞉uw tuw, ‘you swam’.
§ 246.n occurs beforer where onceNR (NʹRʹ) must have stood, e.g.α꞉nṟi, ‘broth’, M.Ir. enbruthe (proverbəs olk ə kïlʹαχ Nαχ fʹjuw α꞉nṟi ɔ꞉l, ‘it is a bad cock that is not worth a sup ofbroth’ said of a suitor a girl won’t look at);α꞉nṟɔ꞉, ‘misery’, M.Ir. andró;bα꞉nṟi꞉n, ‘queen’;ko꞉nṟαχə, ‘coffins’ (§ 442);ko̤nṟuw, ‘bargain’, O.Ir. cundrad (gen. sing.ko̤Nərə);krα꞉nṟə, ‘corn on the foot, knot in wood’, Di. crannra;Lʹïnṟuə, ‘a complaint of the stomach’, Di. lionnruadh;Lʹïnṟαχ a contracted form ofLʹïNʹərαχ, ‘bright’, Di. loinneardha;o̤nṟikʹə, ‘upright’, O.Ir. inricc (I have also heardo̤Nrikʹə from younger people);skα꞉nṟuw, ‘to frighten’, Di. scannradh;smʹɛənṟə didʹ, ‘it is fortunate for you’, < M.Ir. mo-genar (alsosmʹɛərə § 443). See further § 276. ButNʹrʹ occurs into̤m̥αχə Nə Nʹrʹiʃαg, ‘the bramble-bushes’ (driseóg);vi꞉ ʃɛ α Nʹrʹαsuw, ‘he was hunting them’ (dreasughadh).
§ 247.n represents an older ngn inku꞉nuw, ‘assistance’, O.Ir. congnam;i꞉nuw, ‘wonder’, < ingnáth, ingnád.n appears fornʹ inə fʹαr sən, ‘that man’, owing to lack of stress (§ 219). Alsodαhən mʹə (?) besidedαhinʹ mʹə, ‘I recognised’, cp. Cl. S. 19 ix ’03 p. 3 col. 1.αnəm, ‘soul’, O.Ir. anim, is a new formation after the oblique cases, gen. sing. anma, partly due doubtless to a desire to keep the word separate from ainm, ‘name’.ku꞉nælʹ, ‘perishing with cold’, intα꞉ mʹɛ ə mə χu꞉nælʹ, Di. cúnáil,Lα꞉ ku꞉nαlαχ, ‘a perishing day’, may possibly represent the old infinitive congbáil retained in this particular sense. The ordinary infinitive iskyNʹæLʹtʹ.
§ 248. A voicelessn with strongly breathed off-glide is frequent in futures and substantives, e.g.kαn̥ə mʹə, ‘I shall talk’;Lʹαn̥ə mʹə, ‘I shall follow’;Lʹiən̥ə mʹə, ‘I shall fill’;Lʹo꞉n̥ə mʹə, ‘I shall sprain’;mu꞉n̥ə mʹə frommu꞉nəm, ‘mingo’.bʹrʹαn̥uw, ‘expect’, Meyer brethnaigim;kro̤n̥i꞉m, ‘I miss’, Di. crunthuighim, crothnuighim;kʹrʹαn̥uw, ‘terror, to terrify’, Di. creathnughadh, pret.çrαn̥i꞉,kʹrʹαn̥iαχ, ‘terrible’, Meyer crithnaigim;sro̤n̥uw, ‘to scatter, spread’, Di. srathnuighim.
7.Nʹ.
§ 249.Nʹ is a palatal n corresponding in formation toLʹ. The younger generation substituteNʹ fornʹ particularly after consonants, e.g.fɔrʹəmʹNʹiʃαχ, ‘steady’;gïvNʹə, ‘smiths’;suivNʹαχ, ‘at rest’. Craig following the speech of the younger people writes nn fornʹ in many words, thus beáltainne, M.Ir. beltene; cluinnim, M.Ir. cluinim, O.Ir. rocluinethar; fearthainn, M.Ir. ferthain; gloinne, M.Ir. glaine, gloine; sínneadh, M.Ir. sínim. From most speakers one hears forms such asdiNʹə,‘man’;diNʹəN, ‘bad weather’;kyNʹi꞉nʹ, ‘rabbit’;mwiNʹαl, ‘neck’;ræNʹαχ (=ræn̥ʹαχ), ‘fern’;ʃαχtiNʹ, ‘week’;ʃiNʹə, compar. ofʃαn, O.Ir. siniu. As far as can be gathered from Rhys’s description this confusion has taken place in Manx (l.c. p. 135). For Connaught see Fincki p. 62. On the whole J. H. and some of the oldest people preserve the difference betweenNʹ andnʹ almost intact.
§ 250.Nʹ represents an O.Ir. initial n before e, i, e.g.Nʹαd, ‘nest’, M.Ir. net;Nʹαχ, ‘any one’, O.Ir. nech;Nʹαmɔrt, ‘neglect’ (§ 27);NʹαNtαg, ‘nettle’, late M.Ir. nenntóg, earlier nenaid;Nʹαrt, ‘strength’, O.Ir. nert;Nʹαrtrαχ, ‘rough grass’;Nαs, ‘near’, O.Ir. nessa;Nʹαskɔdʹ, ‘boil’, M.Ir. nescóit;Nʹα̃u-hiLʹəmwiαχ, ‘independent’, O.Ir. neb‑, neph‑;Nʹɛəl, ‘cloud’, O.Ir. nél;Nʹïv (Nʹïfʹ), ‘poison’, O.Ir. nem;Nʹi꞉, ‘not’, O.Ir. ní;Ni, ‘thing’, O.Ir. ní;Nʹi꞉m, ‘I wash’, M.Ir. nigim;Nʹo꞉nʹi꞉nʹ, ‘daisy’, < nóinín by assimilation, alsoNʹo꞉nʹ, ‘evening’, cp.əs ɛəskyαχə Nʹo꞉nʹ Nα mwædʹïnʹ. O.Ir. ingen has been transformed on the model of the pretonic form ní, M.Ir. iní andNʹ has been introduced by analogy.
§ 251. Medially and finallyNʹ arises from O.Ir. nn, nd before a palatal vowel whether preserved or lost, e.g.bwæNʹə, ‘milk’, O.Ir. banne;bwiNʹαχ, ‘diarrhœa’, Meyer bunnech;bwiNʹαn, ‘a young, fresh stalk’, Meyer bunnén, alsobwiNʹαn bwi꞉, some kind of bird;bʹiNʹ, ‘melodious’, O.Ir. bind;bʹiNʹ, ‘gable, peak’, from oblique cases of O.Ir. benn;əNʹe꞉, ‘yesterday’, O.Ir. indhé;əNʹUw̥, ‘to-day’, O.Ir. indiu;fα꞉Nʹə, ‘ring’, O.Ir. ánne;fwiNʹɔg, ‘window’, M.Ir. fuindeóc;fʹi꞉rʹiNʹə,, ‘truth’, O.Ir. fírinne;iNʹαχ, ‘woof’, M.Ir. innech;iNʹəLtə, ‘neat’, < M.Ir. indell;iNʹærʹ, ‘anvil’, O.Ir. indéin;in̥ʹi꞉Nʹ, ‘brain’, M.Ir. inchinn;kyNʹə,əs kyNʹə, ‘opposite’, M.Ir. conne;kyNʹəl, ‘candle’, M.Ir. caindel;mwæNʹirʹ, ‘sheep-fold’, M.Ir. maindir;o꞉Nʹ, ‘river’, from the oblique cases of M.Ir. aba;rïNʹ, ‘dealing’, M.Ir. roinn (dat.);sLïNʹuw, ‘surname’, M.Ir. slonniud < O.Ir. slondud. The formsə ꬶæNʹænʹ,ə mwæNʹænʹ, ‘in spite of him, me’, belong here as they represent Meyer’s an-deón, dom-andeoin-sa, cp. Henebry p. 31.æNʹαs, ‘very pretty’, may be heard foræNʹdʹαs from some speakers.
§ 252.Nʹ may arise by assimilation oftʹnʹ,dʹnʹ, but the only instance I have ismwæNʹə, gen. sing. ofmwædʹïnʹ, ‘morning’.mwædʹinʹə is however more frequently heard.αrəNʹ, plur.αrəNʹαχə), ‘stitches, pains’,αrəNʹαχə bα꞉ʃ, ‘pains of death’,is probably a case ofNʹ fornʹ, cp. Meyer aradain, gen. sing. aradna. Cp. támaoinne < támuidne D. P. 28 i ’05 p. 3 col. 7.
§ 253. The n of the article before O.Ir. e, i givesNʹ, e.g.lʹeʃ ə NʹαLαχ, ‘with the cattle’;ə Nʹiʃαg, ‘the lark’ (§ 452);də Nʹɔilʹ, ‘of the flesh’;sə Nʹɛ꞉r, ‘in the grass’;iNʹʃerʹ ə Nʹαr, ‘to the man’;kyrʹuw əNə Nʹɛəstə, ‘an invitation to the feast’; cp. the common formula of thankssɔnəs əgəs ʃɛən ɔrt əgəs dʹαrəməd fαd ə Nʹɛəg. Note the difference betweenə Nʹαr, ‘from the man’, and (mʹαsəm gə wïlʹ pʹαdər)əN αr heivirʹ, ‘I imagine Peter is a rich man’.ɛən, ‘a single one’, is often reduced ton, which before a word beginning with (O.Ir.) e, i, appears asNʹ, e.g.lʹɛ Nʹαr əwα̃꞉nʹ ɔkuw, ‘with one single man of them’. Similarly in the case ofəNə n‑, the lengthened form ofə,i, O.Ir. i n‑, e.g.vi꞉ ʃi꞉ kʹαŋəLʹtʹə suəs əNə Nʹɛədi꞉ d⅄꞉rə, ‘she was got up in expensive clothes’. Other examples of the eclipse n aftererʹ, ‘our’;mər, ‘your’;α, ‘their’;gə, ‘that’;ə,α,dα, ‘if’;ə(n), the interrogative particle before a word beginning in O.Ir. with e, i or d followed by the same vowels—ər Nʹi꞉Nʹαr, ‘our dinner’,mər NʹinʹigʹiLʹtʹ, ‘your grazing’;ə NʹiNʹtʹiNʹ, ‘their intention’;ə Nʹɛr sə, ‘does he say?’;gə Nʹi꞉sət(ʹ) ʃə, ‘that he would eat’;ə Nʹiəl̥ət(ʹ) ʃə, ‘if he were to pay’. ForəNʹiər, ‘out of the west’, O.Ir. an-íar;əNʹerʹ, ‘out of the east’, O.Ir. an-air;əNʹi꞉s, ‘from below’, M.Ir. anís, see § 235.
§ 254.Nʹ precedesLʹ,lʹ,dʹ,ʃ, e.g.α꞉NʹLʹɔg, ‘swallow’, Di. fáinleóg, áinleóg, < O.Ir. fannall;kyNʹLʹɔrʹ, ‘candlestick’, Di. coinnleoir;Lo̤s mʹi꞉NʹLʹə, ‘white bed-straw’, Hogan lus mínle;ʃæNʹLʹeimʹ < sean + léim, inbʹɛ mʹə ərʹ mə hæNʹLʹeimʹ əmα꞉rαχ, ‘I shall be myself to-morrow’;Nʹi꞉ hα꞉NʹLʹïm ə, ‘I do not like it’, O.Ir. án, a phrase that is now only familiar to a few. Note alsoæNʹLʹɛənu꞉r, ‘very painful’, an + léanmhar.bwiNʹtʹ, ‘to pull, pluck, cut’;kæNʹtʹ, ‘talk’, Di. caint;kʹiNʹtʹuw, ‘to determine’, Di. cinntiughadh;Lʹαnu꞉Nʹtʹ, ‘to follow’;siNʹtʹ, ‘avarice’, O.Ir. sainte (gen. sing.);tα꞉Nʹtʹə, ‘reported’;tïNʹtʹə, ‘stitch’, Di. tuinnte, taoinnte;ɛgʹ əNʹ tʹɔ꞉riNʹ, ‘at the boundary’. Except in a very few cases such asæNʹdʹαs, ‘very pretty’;spαrtʹ viNʹdʹə, ‘milk curdled with rennet’ (bʹinʹidʹ),Nʹdʹ can only occur in sandhi.bwæNʹʃə, gen. sing. ofbαniʃ, ‘wedding’;əNʹʃinʹ,əNʹʃɔ, ‘there, here’, M.Ir. andsen, andso;iNʹʃə, ‘to relate’, M.Ir. do innissin;iNʹʃαχəs, ‘a sheltered place in the mountains for cattle’;kyNʹʃkʹlʹɔ꞉, ‘disturbance’, cp. Meyer cumscle;o꞉Nʹʃαχ, ‘hussy’, Di. óinseach;iNʹʃɔrəm,iNʹʃɔrt, ‘to me, to you’ <o̤Nsɔrəm,o̤Nsɔrt = d’ionnsuidhe orm. The forms withNʹʃ arose in the 3rd sing. masc.iNʹʃerʹ <o̤Nserʹ under the influence ofʃerʹ,iNʹʃɔ. Craig condemns the forms withNʹʃ (Grammar² p. 75) but they are much more frequently used than those withNs.
§ 255.Nʹ occurs afterʃ andLʹ, e.g.fʹrʹiʃNʹæʃαχ, ‘irritable’;ʃNʹαχtə, ‘snow’, O.Ir. snechta;ʃNʹiuw, ‘to spin’, M.Ir. sním;tαrkiʃNʹə, ‘contempt, slight’, M.Ir. tarcuisne;fαrsNʹə < *fæRʹʃNʹə, compar. of O.Ir. fairsing, cp.fαrsNʹu꞉l, ‘abundant’,fαrsNʹαχ,fαrsNʹαχəs, ‘abundance’. For examples ofNʹ afterLʹ see § 225.
§ 256.tʹnʹ should be assimilated toNʹ (Pedersen p. 20) but I have no examples. Intætʹnʹi꞉m, ‘I please’, Di. taitnighim, O.Ir. taitnem, thetʹ has evidently been restored from the pret.hætʹi꞉nʹ.n +nʹ orNʹ giveNʹ, e.g.æNʹï̃vnʹαχ, ‘very painful’;ʃæNʹαhəNỹ꞉, ‘old things’. For sandhi examples see § 456.
§ 257. In a series of wordsNʹ arises from an older ng.Nʹ andɲ are sounds which are very close to one another and are liable to be confused, cp. the Munster substitution ofɲ forNʹ and forɲ >Nʹ see Rhys p. 136. Examples—αku꞉Nʹ, ‘strength, endurance’, Di. acfuinn, M.Ir. accmaing;dïlʹiNʹ mʹə, ‘I suffered’, = d’fhuiling me, Atk. ro-fhulaing;dɔ꞉riNʹ, ‘affliction’,tα꞉ dɔ꞉riNʹ wo꞉r (hiNʹiʃ)erʹ hö̤꞉g, ‘Thady is in great pain’,dɔ꞉riNʹαχ, ‘severe’, Keat. doghraing;fαrsiNʹ, ‘plentiful’, O.Ir. fairsing;kïvlʹiNʹ, ‘to emulate, emulation’, Meyer comleng;kyNʹαl,kyNʹæLʹtʹ, ‘to keep’, M.Ir. congbáil, the forms withNʹ < palatal ng arose in cases like the future coingéba;riNʹ, ‘made’, M.Ir. doringni < O.Ir. dorigéni (KZ. xxx 62);tα꞉rNʹə, ‘nail’, M.Ir. tairnge;tαrNʹtʹ, ‘to pull, draw’, M.Ir. tarraing, Manx tayrn, Scotch G. tarruinn.
§ 258. In the written language when in inflected forms nn comes to stand after a consonant only one n is written but in speakingNʹ is usually heard before palatal vowels. One does indeed hearkrækʹnʹə, ‘skins’, but invariablyɛvNʹαχə, ‘rivers’, plur. ofo꞉Nʹ;igʹNʹαχə, plur. ofigʹiNʹ, ‘a ring to put round the neck of cattle’. ThisNʹ is doubtless due to analogy with the singular, cp. Pedersen p. 33.
§ 259. A voicelessNʹ with strongly breathed off-glide occurs inʃiN̥ʹə mʹə, future ofʃiNʹəmʹ, M.Ir. senim.
8.nʹ.
§ 260. The symbolnʹ denotes a very slightly palatalised alveolar n. As stated above the younger generation fail to distinguishnʹ andNʹ and in the majority of cases substituteNʹ.
§ 261.nʹ occurs initially innʹi꞉m, ‘I do’, O.Ir. dogniu. Craig gives the pronunciation as nnidhim (Grammar² p. 15), i.e.Nʹi꞉m, but here again he is following the younger generation which does not distinguish this word fromNʹi꞉m, ‘I wash’, M.Ir. nigim.
§ 262.nʹ appears further as the aspirated form of initialNʹ but only with the older people, e.g.Lα꞉rʹikʹ nʹï̃vnʹαχ, ‘a sore thigh’;Nʹαskɔd(ʹ)nʹïvnʹαχ, ‘a painful boil’;gʹαr nʹï̃vnʹαχ, ‘rather painful’;tʹrʹi꞉ nʹαd, ‘three nests’;Nʹi꞉rʹ iNʹiʃ mʹə ə ʃkʹɛəl də nʹαχ ə mwerʹəN, ‘I did not tell the story to a soul alive’;tα꞉ ʃɛ ko̤r nʹαχtə, ‘it is snowing’.[3]ər Nʹαuw̥, ‘in heaven’, hasNʹ according to J. H.’s pronunciation.
The aspiration ofʃNʹ isnʹ, e.g.nʹiuw mʹə, ‘I span’, imperf. pass.nʹiuw̥i꞉.
§ 263.nʹ represents O.Ir. medial or final n before an original palatal vowel whether preserved or lost, in all positions except those mentioned in §§ 254,255, e.g.bʹlʹiïnʹ, ‘year’, O.Ir. bliadain;dinʹə, ‘person’, O.Ir. duine;enʹəmʹ, ‘name’, O.Ir. ainm (æNʹəmʹ);əwα̃꞉nʹ, ‘only’, M.Ir. amáin;fuiʃkʹnʹuw, ‘shudder’;genʹə̃v, ‘sand’, M.Ir. ganim (dat.);heinʹ, ‘self’, O.Ir. féin;inʹiʃ, ‘island’, M.Ir. inis;kαsænʹ, ‘paths’, < casáin;kα꞉nʹ, ‘fine’, M.Ir. cáin;Lʹeinʹi, ‘shirt’, M.Ir. léne;mwænʹærʹ, ‘manor, division of land’, Di. mainear;Nʹα̃ujõ꞉nʹ (gə), ‘although’, Meyer am-deón (§ 38);ri꞉nʹ, ‘tough’, M.Ir. rigin;smαχtʹi꞉nʹ, ‘mallet’, Di. smaichtín;ʃαχtinʹ, ‘week’, M.Ir. sechtmain (acc.);ʃαskinʹ, ‘quagmire’;ʃikʹnʹə, ‘hernia’, Di. seicin, seicne;ʃi꞉nʹuw, ‘to stretch’, M.Ir. síned;ʃLʹα̃uwinʹ, ‘slippery’, M.Ir. slemain;to꞉nʹ, ‘bottom’, M.Ir. tóin (dat.);tʹinʹi, ‘fire’, O.Ir. tene;uigʹnʹαχ, ‘solitary’, M.Ir. uagnech.
§ 264. A voicelessnʹ with strongly breathed off-glide is frequent and arises from various sources, (a) in futures, e.g.bwin̥ʹə mʹə, ‘I shall reap’;grα꞉n̥ʹə mʹə, ‘I shall loathe’ (Di. gráinighim);kα꞉n̥ʹə mʹə, ‘I shall speak ill of’;klïn̥ʹə mʹə. ‘I shall hear’;ky꞉n̥ʹə mʹə, ‘I shall weep’;mu꞉n̥ʹəmə <mu꞉n, ‘mingere’. (b) < thn, nth, e.g.en̥ʹi꞉m, ‘I recognise’, Meyer aithgninim;fwæn̥ʹə, ‘wart’, Di. faithne;kα꞉n̥ʹi꞉nʹ, ‘husk’, Di. cáithnín;krïn̥ʹαχtə, ‘wheat’, O.Ir. cruithnecht;kʹɔ꞉ ·brin̥ʹə, ‘haze portending heat’, cp. Di. ceobhrán;Lʹin̥ʹə, compar. ofLʹαhən, ‘broad’;ræn̥ʹαχ,rαin̥ʹαχ, ‘fern’, M.Ir. raithnech. (c) < chn, e.g.dʹïn̥ʹu꞉r, ‘set of ten’, Di. deichneabhar, O.Ir. dechenbor;in̥ʹi꞉Nʹ, ‘brain’, M.Ir. inchind.
Note on the r sounds.
§ 265. Corresponding to the four l and four n sounds described above we expect to find four parallel r sounds (R,r,Rʹ,r), but it would seem that almost everywherer has been generalised forR and there are no remains whatsoever ofRʹ. If any traces ofRʹ had survived we might expect to find them in such sandhi combinations asNʹi꞉rʹ rʹïgər se, ‘he did not answer’;fʹαrəg ə Nʹirʹ rʹiʃNʹæʃi꞉ (fʹrʹiʃNʹæʃαχ), ‘the temper of the irritable man’. I have tried all imaginable combinations but have never heard anything butrʹ. It is easy to form a palatal r with the articulation ofLʹ,Nʹ, i.e. with the front rim of the tongue pressing against the lower teeth, but I cannot conceive why the sound was given up. OfR on the other hand there are distinct traces, but not in the initial position where it has becomer. Fortunately Donegal has not lengthened the vowel in every case beforeR as Munster and Connaught have done and it is at the end of monosyllables after a short vowel that we must look for the sound.
9.R.
§ 266. By this symbol we denote a long, strongly trilled r with the tongue vibrating against the alveoles just above the upper teeth. Whether in pronouncingR the point of the tongue originally acted against the teeth as in the case ofL,N, it is now impossible to say. O’Brien in his Grammar says (p. 11)꞉ “It (viz. r) is sometimes written double, as barrach tow; earr, champion; and is then strongly pronounced, with a longer dwelling on the sound of r than if it were written singly”. Now O’Brien was according to O’Donovan a native of Meath and it is quite likely that traces ofR were preserved in that district as they have been in the west of Ulster. Quite unnecessarily Pedersen remarks (p. 38) that it is inconceivable that rr in barrach should be long. For traces ofR in Scotland see Henderson, ZCP. iv 523.
§ 267. I have heardR from J. H. in the following words, though even he frequently substitutesr—bαRə, plur. ofbα꞉r, ‘crop’, O.Ir. barr;do̤R said to a dog to encourage him, Di. dorrghail;ə gʹïRi꞉ (iəri꞉, see § 105), ‘asking, seeking’;kɔR, ‘odd’, Meyer corr (1);kɔR (wo꞉nuw), ‘crane’, Meyer corr (2), with whichkɔR, ‘a sand-eel’, is probably identical. These forms must be carefully distinguished fromko̤r`, Meyer cor.ko̤R, ‘edge’, Meyer corr (2);ko̤Rαχ, ‘quagmire’, M.Ir. currech;kɔRαχ, ‘steep’,klɔχ χo̤Rαχ, ‘a stone with many edges’, Meyer corrach;kɔRαn, ‘sickle’, Meyer corrán;kɔRuw lʹɛ, ‘upwards of;kαR, ‘car’, M.Ir. carr, to be distinguished fromkα꞉r, ‘ugly face, grin’, Meyer carr (5);mo̤Rαχəs, ‘superiority’, < mórdhachas;o̤Rə çlʹαsiαχt, ‘playmate’, Wi. urra;o̤Rəmαχ, ‘obedient’, M.Ir. urraim;spo̤Rαχ, ‘a lanky fellow’.
§ 268. Usually howeverR is reduced tor, e.g.bαrçiç, ‘a light shower’, = barr-chith;bα꞉riəL, ‘a leather boot-lace’, = barr-iall;bαriαχt, ‘superabundance’, Di. barraidheacht;bαrαχ, ‘tow’, Meyer barrach;dɔrəgə, ‘cross-looking’, Keat. dorrdha;gɔrαn, ‘rim round snout of pig’ (in Westmoreland called ‘grin’), Di. corran, ‘jaw’ (?);go̤ru꞉n, ‘haunch’, Di. gurrún;gʹαrαn, ‘horse’, lit. ‘gelding’ <gʹαruw, ‘to cut’, M.Ir. gerrad, plur.gʹα꞉r̥αχə (§ 21);kαriə, ‘deer’, Di. cairrfhiadh;kαrikʹ, ‘rock’, O.Ir. carric;kʹαrwαχ, ‘gamester’, Di. cearrbhach;ʃαrαχ, ‘foal’, M.Ir. serrach;tαrαχ, ‘pregnant’, M.Ir. torrach;to̤rskər, ‘refuse’, M.Ir. turrscar.
10.r.
§ 269. The ordinary Donegal r is a reduced form of a trilled r. There is usually only one flip of the point of the tongue against the alveoles. At the end of monosyllables after a short vowelr is clipped and very short, e.g.fʹαr`, ‘man’;go̤r`, ‘sitting’ (of a hen).
§ 270.r represents O.Ir. initial, medial r before a, o, u and final r when originally followed by a, o, u, e.g.bʹïr, ‘spit’, O.Ir. bir;dri꞉, ‘druid’, O.Ir. drui;fr⅄꞉χ, ‘heather’, O.Ir. froech;fʹαrəg, ‘anger’, O.Ir. ferc;gruəg, ‘hair’, Di. gruag;mαrəwi꞉m, ‘I kill’, M.Ir. marbaim;trα꞉, ‘meal’, M.Ir. tráth;u꞉r, ‘fresh’, M.Ir. úr.
§ 271.r has taken the place of older initialRʹ and in consequence the following vowel is frequently affected (§§ 73,156), e.g.rαhəm, ‘I run’, M.Ir. rethim;rɛi (rəi), ‘ready’, O.Ir.réid;ri꞉, ‘king’, O.Ir. rí;ri꞉nʹ, ‘tough’, M.Ir. rigin;rïχt, ‘strength, state’, O.Ir. richt;rö̤꞉χtənəs, ‘need, necessity’, M.Ir. riachtanus.
§ 272. Initial r is unaffected by aspirating words. The aspirated form offr isr, e.g.kʹαrk ri꞉, ‘a moor-hen’, cearc fhraoich;sə ræɲkʹ, ‘in France’.
§ 273. Initialsr whether standing before O.Ir. a, o, u, or e, i, has a sound peculiar to itself. Ther is not trilled in this case and seems to cause the tongue to be retracted from the ordinarys position. The two sounds coalesce and a kind of modifieds is produced. Cp. Chr. Bros. Aids to the Pron. of Irish (p. 18)꞉ “The two consonants are often pronounced almost simultaneously, so that it is difficult to know which consonant is pronounced the first”. Examples—srα`, ‘holm, field lying by a river’, M.Ir. srath;srα꞉dʹ, ‘street, space round a cottage’, M.Ir. sráit;srα꞉dʹɔg, ‘a bed on the floor’, Di. sráideóg;srαhər, ‘straddle’, O.Ir. srathar;srɛən, ‘bridle’, M.Ir. srían;srUhαn, ‘stream’, O.Ir. sruth. InitiallyʃRʹ has becomesr but medially we findʃrʹ (§ 283) except inαsrïgər, ‘a sharp retort’, < ais + freagar.
The aspirated form of initialsr is alwaysr, neverr̥, e.g.ro̤n̥ə mʹə, ‘I scattered’, Di. srathnuighim;Nʹi꞉ rihαχi ʃə, ‘he will not reach’, Di. sroichim;ko̤r fo̤l ṟo꞉nə, ‘to have nose-bleeding’.
§ 274.r arises from n in the groups cn, gn, tn, but the nasal character of the syllable is generally retained, e.g.krαguw, ‘to strike’, < Engl. ‘knock’;krα̃꞉bʹə, ‘hemp’, Meyer cnáip;krα̃꞉v, ‘bone’, O.Ir. cnáim;krɛpʹə, ‘button’, M.Ir. cnap;krõ꞉, ‘nut’, O.Ir. cnú;kro̤k, ‘hill’, O.Ir. cnocc;kʹrʹitʹαl, ‘to knit’, < Engl.;grẽ꞉hə, ‘business’, Di. gnó;grĩ꞉, ‘good looks’, Di. gnaoi.lʹeʃ ə trα̃hidʹ, ‘with the needle’;mʹeidʹ ə trα̃꞉, ‘the size of the yarn’;fαd ə trα̃꞉içə, ‘the length of the thread’;χUi ʃiəd əmαχ erʹ ə trα̃꞉uw, ‘they went out swimming’;erʹ ə trĩ꞉, ‘on the bier’;erʹ ə trĩ꞉mʹ, ‘on the knot’;erʹ ə trũw, ‘on the complexion’.
§ 275. BeforeL,N,t,d, wherer arises fromR, and also beforeLʹ,Nʹ,tʹ,dʹ, wherer representsRʹ,r is not trilled and in stressed syllables is perhaps slightly longer than the ordinary sound. The point of the tongue is raised towards the arch-rim and then slides along the alveoles into the position for the following sound. It is unfortunate that Pedersen has not given us a description of the corresponding sound on Aran l.c. pp. 28, 67. Afterr in the final positionN,Nʹ,Lʹ are almost syllabic.Examples—hα꞉rLy꞉, M.Ir. tarla.kα꞉rN, ‘heap’, M.Ir. carn;bʹα꞉rN, ‘gap’, M.Ir. bern;dɔ꞉rN, ‘fist’, M.Ir. dorn;kʹαhər Nαχ ‘small, impudent person’.bʹαrt, ‘burden’, Meyer bert;kʹαrt, ‘right’, M.Ir. cert.α꞉rd, ‘high’, O.Ir. árd.kõ꞉rLʹə, ‘advice’, O.Ir. comairle;kαbərLʹi꞉nʹ, ‘small, saucy-mouthed person or animal’;mαgərLʹə, ‘testicles’, M.Ir. macraille;α꞉rNʹə, ‘sloe’, Meyer airne;α꞉rNʹαl, ‘sitting up late’, M.Ir. airne;dïrNʹi꞉nʹ, ‘handle’, Di. doirnín;hαrNʹ ʃɛ, ‘he drew’, M.Ir. tairrngim;kα꞉rNʹ, gen. sing. ofkα꞉rN, ‘heap’;kɔrNʹαl, ‘corner’;kʹlʹiʃmʹərNʹi꞉, ‘starting up in sleep’, Di. s. clisim;Lo̤bərNʹə,ꬶɔl əN L., ‘to go to rack and ruin’;mα꞉rNʹαlαχ, ‘sailor’, Di. mairnéalach;mo̤rNʹi꞉nʹ, ‘darling’, M.Ir. múirn, muirn;dʹα sαhərNʹ, ‘Saturday’, M.Ir. dia sathairnd;tα꞉rNʹαχ, ‘thunder’, cp. Wi. tornech;tα꞉rNʹə, ‘nail’, M.Ir. tairnge; also intαrgirʹαχt, ‘prophecy’, O.Ir. tairngire.bαgərtʹ, ‘to threaten’;gɔrtʹɔg, ‘slight injury, sprain’;kæʃmʹərtʹ, ‘squabble’, Meyer caismert;ko̤nərtʹ, ‘hounds’, M.Ir. conairt (dat.);ku꞉rtʹ, ‘visit’, O.Ir. cúairt;spαrtʹ, ‘turf that has lain for a year without being raised’ (also calledspαdər),spαrtʹ viNʹdʹə, ‘milk curdled with rennet’, Di. spairt;skαrtʹ, ‘a shout’, Di. scairt.o̤rdʹə, ‘height’, M.Ir. arde;α꞉rdʹ, ‘point of the sky’, M.Ir. aird;o̤rdʹ, plur. ofɔ꞉rd, ‘sledge-hammer’, M.Ir. ord; alsokαrəʃ ·kʹrʹi꞉stə, ‘sponsor’, Meyer cairdes Críst.
Forfαrəgʹə, ‘sea’, O.Ir. fairggæ, foirrce see Pedersen p. 117. Similarlygʹïrə, compar. ofgʹα꞉r, ‘short’, M.Ir. gerr, ib. p. 24.
§ 276. Aftern,l <N,L we have perhaps a further trace ofR in thatr in this position is strongly trilled which we denote by writing a small bar under the letter, thusṟ.nṟ,lṟ are now-a-days incapable of palatalisation (except in the case mentioned in § 246) and therefore represent both earlierNR,LR andNʹRʹ,LʹRʹ. Examples—so꞉nṟuw, ‘to notice’,so꞉nṟiαχ, ‘remarkable’, Di. sonnrughadh, O.Ir. sainreth, sainred;ku꞉lṟö̤꞉skαχ, ‘backward’, Di. cúilriascmhar;ʃiəlṟuw, ‘to claim descent from’, Di. síolrughadh;αn-ṟifle, ‘a fine rifle’;αnṟo̤d, ‘an excellent thing, a great quantity’;αsəlṟiαχt, ‘performing a spell, enchantment’, Di. asarlaidheacht;əNə nrɔχχα꞉s, ‘in a bad plight’.nṟ,lṟ are also found in sandhi, e.g.bo̤n ṟïbʹə, ‘a sore with hair growing out of it’, Di. bun ribe;ko̤r fo̤l ṟo꞉nə, ‘to have nose-bleeding’.
§ 277. In a few words mainly encliticsr represents an older l or n, cp. Diss. pp. 10, 18 and Zimmer, Sitzungsber. d. Berl. Akad. 6 iv 1905 p. 3. Examples—mər, ‘as’, O.Ir. amal, amail;mər, ‘unless’, O.Ir. mani;dαrə, ‘second’, O.Ir. indala. Similarlygə mαrəm, if it containsαnəm, ‘soul’, see § 63.
§ 278. Medialrʹ+ʃ givesrs, e.g.fɔrsuw, ‘to harrow’, Di. foirseadh; ïrsαχə, plur. ofirʹiʃ, ‘hanger on creel’, Di. iris;kʹɛ꞉rsαχ, ‘hen blackbird’, Meyer céirsech;ʃkʹu꞉rsi꞉, ‘scourges’, Keat. sgiuirse;tïrsαχ, ‘tired’, O.Ir. toirsech;tɔrsαχ, ‘threshold’, M.Ir. tairsech. For sandhi instances see § 461.
In the groupsrʹ +ʃ +tʹ,rʹ +ʃ +Nʹ therʹ is depalatalised, whilst the first part of theʃ is a retracted alveolars and the secondʃ. Examples—fαrsNʹə, compar. offαrsiNʹ, ‘abundant’,fαrsNʹu꞉lʹ,fαrsNʹαχ, ‘abundance’;fɔ꞉rstʹə, ‘harrowed’;fɔ꞉rstʹən, ‘to suit’,fɔ꞉rstʹənʹαχ, ‘suitable’, Di. fóirstineach;kʹlʹi ·ɔrstʹə, ‘harrow’, Di. cliath fuirste.
rʹ has been further depalatalised inə Nαrəkyʃ, ‘to meet’, Meyer airchess.
§ 279. A voicelessr with strongly breathed off-glide is a very frequent sound in Donegal. It arises from (a) r + fh in futures, e.g.bʹα꞉r̥ə mʹə, ‘I shall shear, clip’;gʹα꞉r̥ə mʹə, ‘I shall cut’;iər̥ə mʹə, ‘I shall ask’. Similarly inkɔ꞉r̥ə, ‘chest’, < cófra (§ 180). (b) O.Ir. r followed or preceded by th givesr̥ in a large number of words, e.g.α꞉r̥uw, ‘change’, M.Ir. aitherraigim;bʹrʹiər̥ə, ‘words, speech’, M.Ir. briathra;du꞉r̥αχt, ‘zeal, fervour’, O.Ir. dúthracht;fʹαr̥iNʹ, ‘rain’, M.Ir. ferthain;gʹα꞉r̥αχə, ‘cuts’;kɔr̥əm, ‘even, level’, M.Ir. comthrom;kαr̥ənəs, ‘friendliness’, Di. carthannas;kʹαr̥ər, ‘set of four’, O.Ir. cethrar;kʹαr̥uw, ‘quarter’, O.Ir. cethramad;kʹïr̥əm, ‘deficiency in some member’,kʹïr̥əmαχ, ‘maimed, incapacitated’, Macbain ciorram, O’R. ciorthumach, ciorrumach, Di. ciorrthuimeach, cithréimeach, M.Ir. cirrim;Lʹαr̥αχə, ‘stirrup-leathers’, Di. leathracha;Lʹo꞉r̥i꞉, ‘books”, Craig leabharthaí;pα꞉r̥u꞉s, ‘paradise’, Di. parrthas, O.Ir. pardus;s⅄꞉r̥uw, ‘to earn’, Atk. saethrugud;tα꞉r̥ælʹ, ‘to assist’, Di. tárrtháil,tα꞉r̥αlαχ, ‘useful, profitable’;tʹi꞉r̥i꞉, ‘lands’. Similarly in past participles, e.g.bw⅄꞉r̥ə, ‘troubled’, O.Ir. búadartha;tuər̥ə, ‘bleached’, Di. tuaraim.
§ 280.rʹ beforeh < th also givesr̥, notr̥ʹ, e.g.dʹɛr̥ər (dʹɛrtər), pres. pass. ofrα꞉tʹ, ‘to say’;kïr̥ə, Di. coirthe, plur. ofkyrʹ, ‘crime’, Meyer cair,kïr̥αχ, ‘guilty’, Di. coirtheach;kïr̥αχə,ko̤r̥αχə, ‘invitations’, plur. ofkyrʹuw, Keat. cuireadh;ɔr̥i꞉, ‘upon her’,ɔr̥uw, ‘upon them’, O.Ir. airthiu;ə Nɔ꞉r̥i꞉r, ‘the day after to-morrow’, Di. lá a n‑oirthear, Wi. airthear (Craig writes an orthaidh, for which see § 444). Similarly in past participles—do̤r̥ə, ‘bulled’, from dáirim;go̤r̥ə, ‘called’, < M.Ir. gairim;ko̤r̥ə, ‘buried’, O.Ir. cuirthe.rrch givesr̥ intɔ꞉r̥i꞉s, ‘number at birth, parturition’, M.Ir. torrchius.
This is one of the few internal changes which does not hold good in sandhi, e.g.ky꞉rʹ hinʹuw ɔrt = caoir theineadh ort.
§ 281.r̥ is the aspirated form of initialtr, e.g.r̥α꞉χt mʹə, ‘I discoursed’;r̥idʹ ʃə, ‘he fought’;r̥ïʃLʹi꞉ ʃə, ‘he stumbled’, Di. tuislighim, O.Ir. tuisled;r̥ɔsk mʹə, ‘I fasted’. In the case of initialtʹrʹ the palatalisation seems to me to have been given up butr̥ in this case is a sound midway betweenr̥ andr̥ʹ, e.g.r̥eigʹ mʹə, ‘I abandoned’;r̥ïmwi꞉ ʃə, ‘it dried’, = thriomuigh < thiormuigh;α r̥iən, ‘his third’;r̥o꞉ mʹə, ‘I ploughed’, M.Ir. trebaim;r̥o꞉r̥ə mʹə, ‘I led’;α r̥u꞉r, ‘his three’, may sometimes haver̥ʹ. At any rate ther̥ in these cases is very different from ther̥ʹ in § 288.
11.rʹ.
§ 282. The Donegal palatal r is a very elusive sound and is perhaps more easy to acquire than to describe. The tip of the tongue hangs down slightly behind the upper teeth though not in such exaggerated fashion as in the case ofs andʃ. The front of the tongue a little over half an inch from the tip rests against the arch-rim leaving a narrow horizontal slit through which the breath rushes. The Aranrʹ as I have heard it from a friend who has spent some time on the islands has not the same acoustic effect as the Donegal sound and according to Finck’s description the two must be quite distinct from one another. As far as I am able to observe the hollowing out of the front of the tongue essential for the production ofs,ʃ is entirely absent. Perhaps the Desmond sound described in the Chr. Bros. Aids to the Pron. of Irish (p. 23) is different. There it is stated that “the slender sound of r is produced by spreading the tongue and forming a small hollow in the front portion of it. The point of the tongue is brought close to the gum just above the upper teeth.” When I first heard the Donegalrʹ, I was reminded of a j-sound formed against the arch-rim instead of against the hard palate. Cp. Henderson’s remark “in Tiree air ‘on’ sounds like eigh (eij) ‘ice’” (ZCP. iv 523). On the other handrʹ has a distinct affinity with đ and an Englishman may easily acquire the sound by slightly retracting the tongue from the edge of the upper teeth and substituting the contact with the arch-rim. Hence it is very natural to find đ appearing forrʹ in Scotch dialects (Henderson, ZCP. iv 516). Atthe end of a monosyllable with short root-vowelrʹ is always clipped likel,lʹ,n,nʹ,r, e.g.fʹirʹ, ‘men’;kyrʹ`, ‘send’.
Therʹ just described is doubtless not the original sound. According to its articulation it lies between *rʹ and *Rʹ.
§ 283.rʹ represents O.Ir. medial and final r followed by an original e, i whether preserved or lost. InitiallyRʹ has becomer. Examples—ærʹə, ‘care’, O.Ir. aire;ærʹiαχ, ‘herd, watchman’, Di. airigheach;dærʹ, ‘oak’, M.Ir. dair;fwærʹə, ‘wake of the dead’, M.Ir. faire;gα꞉rʹə, ‘laugh’, M.Ir. gáire;mwærʹəm, ‘I remain’, M.Ir. maraim;ʃerʹ, ‘eastwards’, M.Ir. sair. We may note that by the side ofəmα꞉rαχ, ‘to-morrow’, the forməmα꞉rʹαχ occurs. The two seem to run according to families and also exist side by side on Aran, cp. Finckii p. 253.
rʹ precedes other palatal consonants thanLʹ,Nʹ,tʹ,dʹ,ʃ, e.g.ærʹəgʹïd, ‘money’, O.Ir. arget;dirʹibʹ, ‘waterworm’, Di. dairb; ïmʹirʹkʹə, ‘removing’, M.Ir. immirge, immirce;irʹimʹ, ‘armies’, M.Ir. airm;kɔrʹkʹə, ‘oats’, Meyer coirce;kyrʹpʹ, ‘corpses’, M.Ir. cuirp;χyrʹfʹi꞉, condit. pass. ofkyrʹ ‘to put’. Followingbʹ,dʹ,fʹ,gʹ,j,kʹ,ç,mʹ,pʹ, e.g.bʹrʹɛə, ‘fine’, Meyer bregda;dʹrʹeimʹirʹə, ‘ladder’, M.Ir. drémire;fʹrʹïgrə, ‘answer’, O.Ir. frecre;gʹrʹiən, ‘sun’, O.Ir. grían;tα꞉ də jrʹeimʹ ə Nαsky꞉, ‘your expectation is vain’;kʹrʹïs, ‘girdle’, O.Ir. cris;tʹinʹi çrαsə, ‘tinder-box’, Meyer s. criss;ko̤mʹrʹi꞉, ‘protection’, Di. coimrighe, Meyer comairghe s. commairge (cp. comraighe Sg. Fearn. p. 96);kUʃkʹrʹəχαn, ‘place covered with reeds’, O’Don. Suppl. cuiscreach, Di. cuise, cuiseag;pʹrʹαbαn sα꞉lʹə, ‘lifter, patch on the heel of a boot’, Di. preabán;tʹrʹouw, ‘to plough’, M.Ir. trebad. Initiallyʃ+rʹ givessr (§ 273) but medially except in the case ofαsrïgər, ‘sharp retort’,ʃrʹ remains, e.g.kɔʃrʹikʹi꞉m,kɔʃrʹïkəm, ‘I consecrate’, Meyer coisregadh < cosecrad;ɔʃrʹαχ, ‘oyster’, Di. oisre;pʹiʃrʹɔg, ‘incantation’, Di. pisreog;ʃeʃrʹαχ, ‘plough’, M.Ir. sessrech.
§ 284.rʹ arises fromnʹ aftertʹ,kʹ, e.g.ko̤r ə tʹrʹαχtə, ‘fall of snow’;kʹrʹαtαn, ‘asthma’, Macleod cneatan < M.Ir. cnett;kʹrʹαdi꞉, ‘groan’, Di. cneadach;kʹrʹαsuw, ‘cicatrise’, M.Ir. cnessugud.
§ 285. A number of proclitic forms ending in r haverʹ in Donegal. This is partly due to the influence of the prepositionerʹ, ‘upon’, which is strictly speaking a pronominal form arising from a confusion of O.Ir. aire and fair.erʹ for ar would further arise regularly in the interrogative particle ar < in ro before a preterite with palatal initial, cp.Nʹ <n in the article § 253.From these two cases a fondness arose forrʹ in proclitics, which Pedersen mentions as existing to some extent on Aran (pp. 25, 26). Cp. also tar, tair in Molloy’s 27th dialect-list. Examples—ərʹ iər sə, ‘did he ask?’;erʹ fɔ꞉ʃ ʃi꞉, ‘did she marry?’;ərʹ eirʹi ʃə, ‘did he get up?’;ərʹ α̃uwirʹkʹ ʃə, ‘did he look?’;ərʹ hït tuw, ‘did you fall?’ Similarly with the negative formsNærʹ,Nʹi꞉rʹ, e.g.Nər Nærʹ iər sə, ‘when he did not ask’;Nə Nærʹïmʹi꞉ tuw, ‘did you not go away?’;Nærʹ αN tuw sə welʹə, ‘did you not stop at home?’;Nʹi꞉rʹ çαləg ʃi꞉ Nʹ Lʹαnuw, ‘she did not put the child to sleep’;Nʹi꞉rʹ çrʹidʹ Nα di꞉nʹi ə, ‘people did not believe him’. ButNʹi꞉r nʹi꞉ mʹə, ‘I did not wash’;Nʹi꞉r lo꞉rʹ mʹə, ‘I did not speak’ (§ 459).gər < go ro forms the only exception. In this ease r is never palatal, e.g.gər i mʹə, ‘that I ate’;gər eilʹi꞉ mʹə, ‘that I begged’. In like manner O.Ir. ar, ‘our’, appears aserʹ inerʹ mʹαn, ‘our lady’;erʹ mʹiə, ‘our food’. M.Ir. ar, ‘quoth’, is generally heard asərsə but Dottin gives a form with palatal r as occurring in N. Connaught (RC. xiv 114). We expecterʹ ⅄꞉n, ‘together’, M.Ir. ar oen, but the connection with the preposition does not seem to be felt. The O.Ir. preposition tar followserʹ and becomeshærʹ, e.g.hærʹə Nα ꬶα꞉ ꬶlu꞉n, ‘beyond his two knees’;tα꞉ ʃïnʹ hærʹ ə jα꞉nuw, ‘that is beyond doing, cannot be done’. From this has been differentiated the dar of oath formulas which in Donegal appears asdirʹ. O.Ir. eter, etir, itar appear asɛdirʹ, whilst in composition we find the regularαdər‑, e.g. inαdərꬶyə, ‘intercession’, Di. eadarghuidhe. The O.Ir. adjectives fír, ‘true, genuine’, sír, ‘everlasting’, when forming the first member of a compound assume the formsfʹi꞉rʹ,ʃi꞉rʹ, e.g.ʃi꞉rʹαhəs, ‘everlasting delight’, cp. the proverbα꞉wər gɔlə gə fʹi꞉r fʹαr̥iNʹ əgəs ʃi꞉rʹ ꬶ⅄꞉, ‘rain and constant wind are verily a cause for lamentation’;fʹi꞉rʹiʃkʹə, ‘spring water’;fʹi꞉rʹwα̃iç, ‘exceptionally good’;fʹi꞉rʹvïg, ‘very small’; butfʹi꞉rLo̤g, ‘very weak’,fʹierʹ, ‘crooked, athwart’, M.Ir. fiar, is peculiar.
§ 286. It is interesting to find isolated traces of initialrʹ as the aspirated form ofRʹ. It is quite possible that other instances occur but I have only heard the following from J. H.—rï̃və rʹe꞉, ‘already’, by the side ofre꞉, ‘time’, O.Ir. ree;α rʹi꞉ Nə pα꞉rtʹə, ‘gracious God’, orα rʹi꞉ χũαχti꞉, ‘Almighty God’, used as asseverations;hi꞉nʹ ə rʹαhə, ‘with difficulty’, cp.dʹïmʹi꞉ mʹə erʹ ə tαruw hi꞉nʹ ə rʹαhə αgəs ə wαr̥αχə bα꞉ʃ, ‘I escaped from the bull with great difficulty’,ro̤g ə kuw ərʹ jαriə hi꞉nʹə rʹαhə, ‘it was with enough to do that the hound caught a hare’. In the Gaelic Journal for 1891 p. 94 this is spelt h‑aonaireatha and Dinneen says s.torad—“In Teelin, Don., a righin a reatha (either = de righin an reatha or ar éigin an reatha) = hardly, scarcely”. This is very unlikely and I always imagined that the phrase containedʃi꞉nʹuw, ‘to extend’, = de shíneadh reatha, which will be found in Dinneen under síneadh but the s should be aspirated. Withhi꞉nʹ ə rʹαhə compareiʃkʹə rαhə, ‘running water’ withr.ərʹeirʹ, ‘according to’, < do réir, retains therʹ, whilst O.Ir. ríar has becomerö̤꞉r (r⅄꞉r), Di. soi-riartha =sɔr⅄꞉r̥ə. Therʹ distinguishes this phrase fromərɛirʹ, ‘last night’, M.Ir. irráir. Withrï̃və, ‘before’, we may compareərʹiuw, ‘over’, O.Ir. ríam (so also in Monaghan, v. G. J. 1896 p. 146 col. 2).ərʹiuw has been influenced byerʹ eʃ, ‘back’, = air ais with ar for dar, tar; similarlyərʹi꞉ʃtʹ, ‘again’, Meyer arís.mʹi꞉rʹiαLtə, ‘unruly’, Di. mi-riaghalta, is of interest when compared withrö̤꞉l, ‘rule’, O.Ir. ríagul, riagol.
§ 287.rʹ is the aspirated form of initialfʹrʹ, e.g.ərʹ rʹïgər sə, ‘did he reply?’;Nʹi꞉ fo̤rəst mwirʹ əs trα꞉i ə rʹαstəl = ní furust muir agus tráigh do fhreastal. But even herer is often substituted, e.g.rïgər sə, ‘he answered’.
§ 288. A voicelessrʹ with strongly breathed off-glide occurs in a few words, (a)r̥ʹ =rʹ +h < fh in futures, e.g.gyr̥ʹə mʹə, ‘I shall call’;kyr̥ʹə mʹə, ‘I shall put’;Lo꞉r̥ʹə mʹə, ‘I shall speak’. (b)r̥ʹ =r +ç, e.g.bwer̥ʹi꞉nʹ, ‘spancel’, < buarach + ín;mwir̥ʹi꞉Lʹə, ‘sleeve’, Di. muinchille. (c)r̥ʹ =h (< th) +rʹ, e.g.ær̥ʹαχə, ‘fathers’;ær̥ʹi꞉, ‘regret, penance’, M.Ir. aithrige;ærʹαχəs, ‘repentance, compunction’, M.Ir. aithrechus;kαir̥ʹαmʹ, ‘triumph’, M.Ir. caithréim;kαir̥ʹiɔrʹ, ‘citizen’, Meyer cathraigtheóir,kαir̥αχə, ‘cities’;ky꞉r̥ʹə, gen. sing. ofky꞉r’, ‘flame’;kyr̥ʹimʹ, gen. sing. ofkɔr̥əm, ‘even, level’, whereə has come to be regarded as a svarabhakti vowel, cp.ku꞉rʹimʹ gen. sing. ofku꞉rəm, ‘care’;kʹer̥ʹi꞉nʹ, ‘plaster’, Di. ceirín, Meyer céirín (§ 187);kʹɛdi꞉nʹ ə Luər̥ʹi꞉, ‘Ash Wednesday’, Di. luaithreach;Luir̥ʹəwαn, ‘ashes’, Di. luaithreamhán;mαir̥αχə, ‘mothers’. (d)r̥ʹ =rʹ +h < sh infʹier̥ʹu꞉lʹ, ‘squint-eye’, cp. Di. fíar-shúileach.
12.m.
§ 289. Of the labials in general Henebry writes (p. 49): “The upper teeth are not used and so there is freedom for the production of broad and slender timbre. In regard to distance from teeth, rounding, or tension, the lips are by anticipation in position for the following vowel before the contact or approach for consonant production is made, and so broad and slendertimbre can be at once distinguished. The former is produced with rounded, soft, protruded lips (as when one with lips held in position for ū makes the consonant contact for p), the latter with lips drawn tight, close to the teeth and inturned (as in the ü position)”. As to the protrusion of the lips the position is between the neutral and advanced. In forming the non-palatal labials which are extremely heavy and dull sounds the lips are very loose indeed and even initially these sounds give the impression of more than ordinary duration, though they are actually no longer than the corresponding palatal labials. In addition to lip-protrusion the tongue is raised towards theu-position which causes aw-sound to be heard on releasing the lip contact. Thisw is always more or less present but is most clearly heard before the front vowels and⅄ in which cases it is written in this book. It is also very noticeable when the labial is final and the next word begins with a palatal vowel, e.g.αmwi꞉Ntαχ = am éiginteach. In English as spoken locally both sets of labials occur and it would almost seem as if the power to discard the non-palatal sounds were a mark of respectability.
§ 290. At the end of monosyllables containing a short vowel bothm andmʹ are long and thus correspond toL,N,Lʹ,Nʹ,R[A 3]. Hence in O.Ir. when they occur alone after short accented vowels they are written double, cp. Pedersen pp. 101 ff. In other positions the length is reduced but a shortm does not occur in Donegal. Initiallym corresponds to O.Ir. m before a, o, u, e.g.mαhærʹ, ‘mother’, O.Ir. máthir;mαiç, ‘good’, O.Ir. maith;mαihi꞉m, ‘I forgive’, M.Ir. mathim;mαrəwə, ‘to kill’, M.Ir. marbad;mα꞉sə, ‘thigh’, M.Ir. máss;mɔluw, ‘to praise’, O.Ir. molad;mo̤l, ‘mill-shaft’, M.Ir. mol;mwædʹə, ‘stick’, M.Ir. maite;mwædʹïnʹ, ‘morning’, O.Ir. matin (acc.);mwærigʹ, ‘woe’, O.Ir. moircc;mwærʹəm, ‘I remain’, M.Ir. maraim;mwiLʹ, ‘delay’, Keat. maill;mwilʹəN, ‘mill’, O.Ir. mulenn;mwirʹ, ‘sea’, O.Ir. muir;mw⅄̃꞉, ‘pliable’, O.Ir. móith;mw⅄꞉l, ‘bald’, O.Ir. máel;mwəidʹən, ‘Virgin’, M.Ir. maighden.
After particles which eclipse a following word we getm forb, e.g.erʹ mwelʹə, ‘our townland’;mər mα꞉d, ‘your boat’;ə mɔ꞉, ‘their cow’;gə mwin̥ʹit(ʹ) ʃə, ‘that he would reap’.
§ 291. Medially and finallym represents O.Ir. mm (mb) before an original a, o, u, whether preserved or lost, e.g.αm,‘time’, M.Ir. am, amm;α꞉məd, ‘timber’, M.Ir. admat;dʹrʹαm, ‘crowd, set’, M.Ir. dremm;kαm, ‘bent’, O.Ir. camm;ko̤mə, ‘indifferent’, O.Ir. cumme;kro̤m, ‘bent’, M.Ir. cromm;kʹïmαχ, ‘clout, lout’, Di. Macbain ciomach, cp. O.Ir. cimbid;Lo̤m, ‘bare’, O.Ir. lomm;o̤mlαn, ‘whole’, M.Ir. imlán;o̤mpər, ‘to carry’, M.Ir. immchor;to̤m, ‘bush’, M.Ir. tomm;tro̤m, ‘heavy’, M.Ir. tromm.
m also stands afterr andl inαrəm, ‘army’, O.Ir. arm;kαləmə, ‘bold, brave’, M.Ir. calma;kɔləmαn, ‘dove’.
§ 292. In the ending of the first pers. sing. of the pres. ind. the palatalisation has been given up by analogy with pronominal forms likeɔrəm, ‘upon me’,lʹïm, ‘with me’, which have themselves been followed byw⅄꞉m, ‘from me’, O.Ir. uaimm. Examples—Lʹeijəm, ‘I read’, Wi. legim, also = legaim, ‘I melt’;Lo꞉rʹəm, ‘I speak’, M.Ir. labraim;nʹi꞉m, ‘I do’. Cp. the Scotch G. ending ‑am of the first sing. of the imperative, Gillies, Gaelic Grammar² p. 85.
§ 293.m arises fromw inmər, ‘your’, O.Ir. bar, cp. G. J. 1891 p. 79. According to Zimmer (Sitzungsber. d. Berl. Akad. 6 iv 1905 p. 4) them is due to the fact that the form would frequently be nasalised by the eclipsen. It seems to me more likely that the prepositionəN in phrases of the typetα꞉ ʃɛ əN αr heivirʹ has given rise to the form withm. Cp. the forms nar for ar, ‘our’, in Antrim (G. J. 1892 p. 123), Meath (Duffy, Mionchaint na Midhe p. 4) and Manx (Rhys p. 142), and núr for bhur in Waterford. AlsokʹαNəmαn dUχɔsαχ, ‘orchid’ (?), < Di. ceannbhán.
§ 294. Sporadically Donegalm corresponds to mh in the other dialects, e.g.Nʹαmɔrt, ‘carelessness’, Di. neamháird, Derry People 2 xii ’05 p. 2 col. 5 leader has neamart;so꞉məs, ‘pleasant ease’, Di. sámhas, M.Ir. sám,so꞉məsαχ ‘drowsy’;tʹiLʹəmwi꞉ intα꞉ mʹɛ əN α hiLʹəmwi꞉, ‘I am in his power, dependent on him’,tʹiLʹəmwiαχ, ‘dependent’,Nʹα̃uhiLʹəmwiαχ, ‘independent’, seems to be connected with Di. tuilleamh, ‘wages’, M.Ir. tuillem, O’R. tuilleamhnach, ‘a hireling’;u꞉məlædʹ, ‘capacity’, Di. umhlóid (§ 78). Furtherdʹαrəməd, ‘forgetfulness’, O.Ir. dermet = Munster dearmhad, Manx jarrood, withm <mʹ with which compareo̤məd, ‘a number’, O.Ir. imbed.
§ 295. A voicelessm with strongly breathed off-glide occurs in a few words, mainly futures, e.g.ko̤m̥ə mʹə, ‘I shall compose, invent’;kro̤m̥ə mʹə, ‘I shall bend’;Lo̤m̥wi ʃə, ‘he will shear,peel’;to̤m̥ə mʹə, ‘I shall dip’.m̥ = mth occurs in the past participles of these verbs and also infʹαm̥inʹə, ‘a single stalk of anything pliable’, formed from Di. feam (‘wrack’ isfʹαmnαχ, Di. feamnach).
13.mʹ.
§ 296.mʹ like other palatal labials in Donegal is produced by drawing the lips back very tightly on to the teeth, thus giving a very sharp, clear m. The position of the tongue is immaterial, as in the majority of cases thej which accompanies the palatalised labials in other dialects is wanting (§ 192).mʹ,fʹ,v,pʹ,bʹ are very tense sounds andmʹ,pʹ,bʹ are sometimes heard from mincing speakers of English. In the English of many parts of the North of Ireland these tense labials are regular. At the end of monosyllables with short root-vowelmʹ is invariably long.
§ 297. Initiallymʹ corresponds to O.Ir. m before e, i, e.g.mʹα`, ‘to fail’, M.Ir. meth;mʹα`, ‘scale’, M.Ir. med;mʹαkænʹ, ‘carrots’, O.Ir. mecon;mʹαLuw, ‘to decoy’, M.Ir. mellad;mʹα꞉n, ‘middle’, O.Ir. medón;mʹe꞉, ‘fat’, O.Ir. méith (gen. sing.);mʹɛəg, ‘whey’, M.Ir. medg;mʹiəl, ‘louse’, M.Ir. míl;mʹirʹigʹ, ‘rust’, O.Ir. meirg, meirc;mʹi꞉, ‘month’, O.Ir. mí;mʹïlʹiʃ, ‘sweet’, M.Ir. milis.
Medially and finally before original e, i, whether preserved or lost,mʹ represents O.Ir. mm, mb (also before another palatal consonant), e.g.αmʹʃirʹ, ‘weather’, O.Ir. amser;brïmʹ, ‘crepitus ventris’, Meyer broimm;drïmʹ, ‘back’, O.Ir. druimm;dʹrʹeimʹirʹə, ‘ladder’, Di. dréimire, < M.Ir. dréimm;fuəmʹ, ‘sound’, M.Ir. fuaimm;gruəmʹ, ‘dark look’, Di. gruaim;gʹrʹimʹ, ‘morsel, mouthful’, O.Ir. greim; ïmʹαχt, ‘to depart’, O.Ir. imthecht; ïmʹ, ‘butter’, O.Ir. imb.
mʹ also represents O.Ir. m afternʹ inenʹəmʹ, ‘name’, O.Ir. ainm.
§ 298. The oldest people seem to developemʹ out ofṽ. I have never observed this in the speech of any of the younger generation but it cannot be ascribed to faulty articulation, as it seems pretty wide-spread, cp. Dinneen s. uimhir, and Larminie in his “West Irish Folktales” (p. 250) writes qiminæx for cuimhneach in a story taken down in Glencolumbkille. Molloy in his 33rd dialect-list quotes suimneach for suaimhneach for Sligo and Galway. With the older peoplev is exclusively bilabial and the breath escapes at the corners of the mouth, the middle part of thelips being closed. The expiration is very feeble and when thev is nasalised, the weak stream of breath passes through the nose. Hence we getmʹ forv. It is not clear to me why those younger people who retain the bilabialv should not substitutemʹ for this sound but it should be borne in mind that they are giving up nasalisation. Thismʹ is common inrïmʹə =rï̃və, ‘before’;kïmʹnʹə,kïmʹnʹαχ =kï̃vnʹə,kï̃vnʹαχ; ïmʹirʹ, ï̃virʹ, ‘number’, is a rare word only known to a few. Perhaps the doubletsdʹi꞉mʹαs,dʹi꞉vαs, ‘disrespect’, O.Ir. dímess are to be accounted for in this way, but the same uncertainty exists indʹi꞉wu꞉nuw,dʹi꞉munuw, ‘bad manners’.
αmʹlʹuw, ‘bad usage, abuse’ inNα to꞉rʹ αmʹlʹuw də NʹαLαχ lʹeʃ ə wαduw, ‘do not let the dog hound the cattle’, adj.αmʹlʹi꞉ is obscure. Dinneen has amhluadh, amhlat.
§ 299. A voicelessmʹ occurs in the futuresLʹeim̥ʹi ʃə, ‘he will jump’;sNỹ꞉m̥ʹə mʹə, ‘I shall fasten’, also past part.sNỹ꞉m̥ʹə.
§ 300.mə, ‘my’, becomesmʹ before an O.Ir. palatal initial or beforefʹ, e.g.erʹ mʹiNʹtʹiNʹ, ‘on my mind’;mʹαr, ‘my husband’; and evenmʹïpʹ, ‘my whip’ (fwïpʹ).
14.ŋ.
§ 301. The sound denoted by this symbol is formed much further back against the soft palate than is the case with English or Germanŋ. Initially it only occurs as the eclipsed form ofg, e.g.ə ŋrα꞉, ‘in love’;mər ŋo꞉r, ‘your goat’;erʹ ŋö̤꞉r, ‘our hound’;ə ŋlakit(ʹ) ʃə, ‘if he should take’.
§ 302.ŋ usually corresponds to O.Ir. medial and final ng, as inαŋ, ‘splice in a shirt’, cp.tα꞉ αŋ wα͠ıç tαlïv əgəd, Di. eang (with different meaning);αŋαχ, ‘fisherman’s net’, Di. eangach;bʹαŋlαn, ‘prong’, Meyer bengán, benglán;dro̤ŋ, ‘crowd’, M.Ir. drong; ïŋə, ‘nail’, O.Ir. inga;kʹαŋləm, ‘I tie’, M.Ir. cenglaim;Lo̤ŋ ‘ship’, M.Ir. long;mʹαŋuw gα꞉rʹə, ‘smile’, cp. Di. meanghail < M.Ir. meng;srαŋ, ‘band, string’, M.Ir. sreng;srɑŋədi꞉, ‘reaching over’, cp. Di. sreangaim;ʃαŋ, v. § 183, M.Ir. seng;ʃαŋαn, ‘ant’, M.Ir. sengán;tʹαŋy, ‘tongue’, O.Ir. tenge.
In one word borrowed from Teutonic and in a number of obscure forms we find the combinationŋg as in English ‘finger’, viz.Lαŋgə, ‘ling (a fish)’, Norse langa (Macbain);αŋguw, ‘a festering sore’, adj.αŋguwαχ, cp. Meyer angbaid-echt;kɔrəbʹïŋgə, ‘haunch’, Di. coragiob,bʹïŋguw, ‘stagger’, cp.wuiLʹ ʃə dɔ꞉rN mo꞉r ɔrəm αχ Nʹi꞉rʹ wiNʹ ʃə bʹïŋguw əsəm, ‘he gave me a heavy blowwith his fist but I did not flinch’,ho̤bwirʹ gə dʹitʹiNʹ əNuəs əs ə χαiçirʹ αχ bwinʹuw bʹïŋguw əsəm, ‘I almost fell down off the chair but I staggered on to my feet (and saved myself)’. These two forms look as if they represented M.Ir. bidcim but I am at a loss to account for theŋ.bʹïŋguw may have come in from outside. Forŋg cp. Chr. Bros. Aids to Irish Pron. p. 22. Latin ungere also appears withŋg, infin.o̤ŋguw, pres.o̤ŋgy꞉m, Atk. ongad.ŋk occurs inmαŋkαn, ‘a fair for selling stockings’,pαŋk, ‘a cow-market’, Di. panc, both ultimately from Engl. ‘bank’, v. Di. pancán, bancán;splαŋk, ‘lightning’, Di. splannc;spo̤ŋk, ‘tinder’, Cormac spongc < Lat. spongia. Beforek ŋ is very long.
§ 303. In parts of Ulster and in Scotch Gaelic (cp. ZCP. iv 522) ng is apt to disappear leaving behind as only trace nasalisation of the vowel in stressed syllables. Lloyd writes (G. J. 1890 p. 146 col. 2): “In Orrery when medial or final, it is equivalent to gh, i.e., it is silent and lengthens preceding vowel which is often nasal, e.g. luing = luigh, ceangal = céaghal, teanga = téagha, aingeal = aigheal &c.” In Donegalŋ (ɲ) disappears in a number of instances but only when there is another nasal in the word. Examples –dα͠ıən, ‘firm, tight’, O.Ir. daingen;i꞉Ntαχ,y꞉Ntαχ,ö̤꞉Ntαχ,⅄꞉Ntαχ, ‘wonderful, strange’, M.Ir. ingantach,i꞉Ntəs, ‘wonder’, cp. Manx yindys;pʹi꞉Nʹ, ‘penny’, M.Ir. pinginn;wĩ꞉, ‘mane’, M.Ir. moing (acc.), cp. G. J. 1896 p. 185 col. 1 an mhuigh, and muighe in Molloy’s fourth dialect-list. In some casesŋ,ɲ have becomeg,gʹ,Nʹi꞉s kũ꞉gʹə, compar. ofku꞉N, ‘narrow’, O.Ir. cumung (but also O.Ir. cumce in the compar.);kũ꞉glαχ, ‘strait of the sea’, Dinneen gives cumhanglach as the Donegal form of cumhangrach, Macleod cunglach;kũ꞉gəs, ‘remedy’, Di. coguisidhe, Macleod cungaidh-leighis under ‘medicine’, ‘remedy’, Macbain has cungaidh, cungaisich, Ir. cunghas, cungnaighim, cungnam. Intαrgirʹə, ‘prophet’,tαrgirʹαχt, ‘prophecy’, O.Ir. tairngire, there is no trace of the nasal. Note also the absence of the svarabhakti vowel betweenr andg.ŋ has further disappeared beforel inα̃꞉liʃ, ‘a mixture of milk and water’, Meyer anglas = englas, Di. eanglais, anglais.kynʹigəL, ‘condition’, Meyer coingell is a late formation and has developedi betweennʹ andgʹ.
§ 304. A voicelessŋ with strongly breathed off-glide arises from ng followed by th, e.g. ingʹɛ꞉r̥αŋ̥αχ, ‘sharp-tongued’, < géartheangthach;srαŋ̥αχə, plur. ofsrαŋ, ‘band, string’, M.Ir. sreng;tʹαŋ̥αχə, ‘tongues’, Di. teangthacha.15.ɲ.
§ 305. This symbol denotes a palatal ng formed with the back of the tongue against the place where the hard and soft palates meet and is therefore similar to the French gn in ‘signe’. Initiallyɲ can only occur as the eclipsed form ofgʹ, as inə ɲα꞉r̥ə mʹə, ‘shall I cut’;ə ɲe꞉, ‘their goose’;tα꞉ mʹɛ i ɲeivəN, ‘I am in distress’;kʹlʹiuw Nə ɲlʹïmαχ, ‘lobster-pot’;⅄꞉nαχ Nə ɲlʹαNtαχ, ‘Glenties fair’. Beforekʹ ɲ is very long.
§ 306.ɲ corresponds to O.Ir. ng before an original palatal vowel which may be preserved or lost, e.g.αχyɲə, ‘request’, M.Ir. athchuingid;æɲkʹαl, ‘irritability’, Meyer an-cél, also adj.æɲkʹαLtə, subst.æɲkʹαLtəs, cp.Nʹi꞉lʹ əN də ꬶrẽ꞉hə αχ æɲkʹαl, ‘you can do nothing but complain’;æɲəl, ‘angel’, O.Ir. angel;æɲgʹiαχ, ‘given to complaining’, cp. Meyer andgid, andgidecht;kyɲ, ‘bond, obligation’, M.Ir. cuing;kyɲirʹ, ‘team of oxen’, Di. cuingir (according to J. H. the actual yoke in Donegal is termedhαmwi꞉ < Scotch ‘hames’);kyɲkʹ, ‘verdigris’, adj.kyɲkʹαχ;kʹiɲkʹi꞉ʃ, ‘Whitsuntide’, M.Ir. cengciges;Lyɲ, dat. sing. ofLo̤ŋ ‘ship’,Lyɲiʃ, ‘ships, fleet’, Di. luingeas;ə ræɲkʹ, ‘France’, Di. Frainnc;spʹiɲkʹ, ‘precipice’, Di. spinnc < splinnc;ʃkʹi ·æɲkʹiʃ, ‘quinsy’, Di. sceith-aingcís.
§ 307. In Munster a very natural confusion ofNʹ andɲ has taken place but in Donegal the two sounds are kept rigidly apart. The only example known to me ofɲ forNʹ isgʹiɲ, ‘wedge’, M.Ir. geind, whereɲ is probably due to assimilation. The plural isgʹαNtrαχə.
§ 308.ɲ̥ does not occur as far as I am aware.
(c) The spirantsf,fʹ,v,χ,ꬶ,ç,s,ʃ
1.f.
§ 309.f denotes a bilabial f with the lips in the position described for m in § 289. The normal mode of production seems to be as follows – the lips meet in the middle and the breath escapes either on both sides of this point of contact, the corners being closed, or at the corners of the mouth. For a long time I doubted the correctness of Henebry’s statement that labio-dental sounds are non-existent in Irish (p. 49). But after repeated observations I have not been able to discover labio-dental f or v in people over forty years of age either in Irish or English butpersons under that age are rapidly substituting the labio-dental for the bilabial sound. Finck regards the Aran f, v as labio-dental (i pp. 64, 77) and it would be interesting to know if any distribution of the sounds similar to that described above exists in the west. Dottin (RC. xiv 104) givesfʹ as labio-dental but is not explicit on the subject off,v. For Munster cp. further Chr. Bros. Grammar p. 9 (probably based on Henebry). Henderson (ZCP. v 97) and Rhys (p. 87) both regard labiodental f, v as the normal sounds in Scotch and Manx Gaelic but I think that if the following facts are taken into consideration it is impossible to avoid the conclusion that bilabial f, v were everywhere the original sounds. i. Irish initial f arose from Idg. u̯. ii. At the present day intervocalic f represents bhth, mhth, i.e. an unvoicedw. It is frequently impossible to distinguish betweenw̥ and bilabial f, as they are so closely related to one another in formation, iii.χ +w frequently passes intofw (§ 313). iv. English words beginning with wh appear in Irish and Anglo-Irish withfw, cp. the spellings fwenever, fweel.
§ 310. Initialf represents O.Ir. f before a, o, u or before l, r followed by the same vowels, e.g.fαdə, ‘long’ M.Ir. fota;fαruw, ‘roost’, M.Ir. forud;fαrsiNʹ, ‘plentiful’, O.Ir. fairsing;fαlαχ, ‘hiding’, M.Ir. folach;fα꞉, ‘cause’, M.Ir. fáth, fád;fα꞉gælʹ, ‘to leave’, M.Ir. fácbáil;flαihiʃ (pl.), ‘heaven’, Di. flaitheas, O.Ir. flaith;fokəl, ‘word’, O.Ir. focul;fõ꞉wər, ‘autumn’, M.Ir. fogamur;fr⅄꞉χ, ‘heather’, O.Ir. froech;fwærʹə ‘wake of the dead’, M.Ir. faire;fwəidʹə, ‘patience’, O.Ir. foditiu;fwïLʹNʹi꞉m, ‘I suffer’, O.Ir. foloing (3rd sing.);fwïlʹ, ‘blood’, O.Ir. fuil;fwirʹαχt, ‘to tarry’, M.Ir. furecht;fwi꞉Lʹi꞉, ‘leavings’, Wi. fuidell;fwi꞉ʃuw, ‘improvement’, M.Ir. foessam;fwi꞉wər, ‘edge’, M.Ir. fáebur;fw⅄꞉grə, ‘to proclaim’, O.Ir. fócre;fw⅄꞉χɔg, ‘limpet’, M.Ir. faochóg.
f also occurs as the aspirated form of initialp, e.g.sə fαræʃtʹə, ‘in the parish’;flu꞉χ ʃə, ‘he choked’;tʹαχ ə fo̤bwilʹ, ‘Roman Catholic chapel’;ꬶα꞉ fα꞉ʃtʹə, ‘two children’.
§ 311. Medialf usually arises from O.Ir. b, m followed by th or ch. The off-glide is a kind ofw̥ and is clearly audible. Examples –gαfəN, ‘aloes’;kα꞉fri꞉, ‘sowins’, Di. cáith-bhruith;Lα꞉frəN, ‘one of the handles of a flail’, Di. lámh-chrann;mαrəfαχ, ‘slaughter’, cp. Atk. marbthach;Nỹufə, ‘sanctified’, Di. naomhtha,Nỹufər, pres. pass. M.Ir. noemthar. The ending‑fə of the prepositional pronouns in the third person plural is probably due toa confusion of the O.Ir. dative and accusative forms. The accus. ending ‑thu of O.Ir. lethu, trethu, airrthiu was added to the dative ‑b, thus producing‑fə which is now attached to all simple prepositions ending in a vowel, e.g.lʹɔ꞉fə, ‘with them’,di꞉fə, ‘from them’,dɔ꞉fə, ‘to them’,w⅄꞉fə, ‘from them’,fʹrʹi꞉fə, ‘through them’,fwi꞉fə, ‘under them’. Further in verbs with root ending in bh, mh we getf in the future tenses < bh, mh + f (=h), as inʃkʹrʹi꞉fə mʹə, ‘I shall write’. The only instances in which thef of the future has been preserved arerαfə mʹə,tʹi꞉fʹə mʹə, v. § 180. Butfʹ is more frequent thanh in the ending of the conditional passive.
§ 312. In two instances of loan-words from Englishf has been inserted for no evident reason, viz. ingʹαftə, ‘gate’;rαftαn, ‘rat’, < Engl. ‘ratten’.k⅄꞉frαn, ‘a dry clod’, seems to correspond in meaning to Di. caorán but I am unable to explain the form.
§ 313.χw sometimes producesf a change which O’Donovan only admits for N. Connaught (cp. RC. xiv 115) but which is very common in parts of Ulster, v. Dinneen s. cuafadh, faofóg, triufanna. I have frequently heardgα ·fwelʹə ꬶinʹə (alsogαχ fwelʹə ꬶinʹə), = gach uile dhuine. Infwïpʹ < Engl. ‘whip’ we have substitution offw (fw̥) with bilabialw (w̥) for Engl.w̥.
§ 314. The O.Ir. preposition fo appears to have split up intofwi꞉, ‘under’ (< 3rd sing. fói), andfα(꞉), ‘around, about’. It is easy to see from the passages quoted in Windisch how the meaning of ‘around, about’ could arise but I am inclined to think thatfα also represents O.Ir. imm. Cp. M.Ir. ba for ma = imma Diss. p. 27 and Scotch G. mu, Manx my- in mygeayrt, my-chione. In Donegal this preposition usually aspirates but we find it eclipsing infα ·di꞉widə, ‘concerning’, < fa dtaobh de;fα du꞉rʹimʹ inbwiLʹə fα d., ‘a guess’, butfαhu rʹimʹ kʹɛəd, ‘about a hundred’.
§ 315. When aspirated by a preceding wordf disappears together with thew off-glide which accompanies it. Examples –dyəi ʃi꞉, ‘she sewed’;erʹ ə Nαruw, ‘on the roost’;əNsə Nõ꞉wər, ‘in the autumn’;mʹïpʹ, ‘my whip’;də Nïlʹ, ‘to the blood’;α lʹehəd(ʹ) ʃɔ ə ꬶïlʹ, ‘such blood’. In compounds fh has no effect on a preceding mh or bh, e.g.krα̃꞉viαχ, ‘a sea-bird’, Di. cnáimh-fhiach;krα̃꞉vɔ꞉d, ‘a narrow strip of grass-covered turf between two cultivated patches’, < cnáimh-fhód. Consequentlyf is frequently wrongly prefixed to words with vocalic initial but in thisthe dialects differ from one another. This prostheticf appears already in M.Ir. Examples –fαdɔ꞉, ‘make into a blaze’, Meyer ad-súim;fαnαχt, ‘to remain’, O.Ir. anaim;fα꞉Nʹə, ‘ring’, O.Ir. ánne;fαstɔjəm, ‘I hire’, O.Ir. astaim;fαihαχ, ‘giant’, O.Ir. athach;fα꞉s, ‘grow’, O.Ir. ás;fwi꞉jəm, ‘I sew’, M.Ir. úagim;fuər,fwyər; ‘cold’, O.Ir. úar;fwiəχt, ‘cold’, O.Ir. uacht;fwyə, ‘hatred’, M.Ir. úath;fwiNʹɔg, ‘window’, <Engl.;fʹïg, ‘length’, O.Ir. ed. Peculiar to Donegal arefαurə, ‘eclipse’, Di. urdhubhadh, Finckorə (ii p. 207);fɔirʹəm, ‘I suit’, elsewhere oirim;fo̤ruw tiə, ‘furniture’, Di. iorradh, earradh, O’R. urradh, M.Ir. errad, eirred (cp. LL 268 b 11 ic errad tigi).
On the other handiʃαg, ‘lark’, never has f in Donegal (Macbain uiseag, Di. fuiseog), andα꞉NʹLʹɔg, ‘swallow’, has lost its f, O.Ir. fannall.
§ 316.w̥ givesf inbαnəfαn, ‘sucking-pig’, < *banbhthán, Di. banbhán;mʹi꞉fər, ‘ugly’, Craig miofuar, also spelt míofar G. J. Jan. ’02 p. 8, Cl. S. 27 xii ’02 p. 702 col. 2, < mío-úathmhar. Sporadically with certain speakers at the end of monosyllables, e.g.dUf fordUw̥, cp. G. J. 1895 p. 11, ZCP. v 98.
2.fʹ.
§ 317. This symbol denotes a bilabial f with the lips drawn back tightly on to the teeth for which the younger people substitute labio-dentalfʹ. The breath escapes in the same way as in the case off.
§ 318.fʹ represents O.Ir. initial f before e, i or before r, l followed by these vowels. Examples –fʹαL, ‘treachery’, M.Ir. fell;fʹαmnαχ, ‘wrack’, M.Ir. femnach;fʹαNəm, ‘skin, flay’, O.Ir. fennaim;fʹαr, ‘man’, O.Ir. fer;fʹαrsəd, ‘spindle’, Wi. fersad;fʹαrəg, O.Ir. ferc;fʹαr̥iNʹ, ‘rain’, M.Ir. ferthain;fʹα꞉r, ‘better’, O.Ir. ferr;fʹɛəsɔg, ‘beard’, M.Ir. fésóc;fʹɛ꞉r, ‘grass’, M.Ir. fér;fʹeilʹə, ‘saint’s-day’, O.Ir. féle (gen.);fʹiαχ, ‘crow’, O.Ir. fiach;fʹiə, ‘weave’, M.Ir. fige;fʹiəkilʹ, ‘tooth’, O.Ir. fiacail;fʹihə, ‘twenty’, O.Ir. fiche;fʹïlʹə, ‘poet’, O.Ir. fili;fʹïN, ‘fair’, O.Ir. find;fʹirʹəN, ‘male’, M.Ir. firend;fʹi꞉rʹiNʹə, ‘truth’, O.Ir. fírinne;fʹlʹïg, ‘chickweed’, Di. flich, Hogan fliodh, fligh;fʹlʹïχ, ‘wet’, O.Ir. fliuch;fʹrʹi꞉, ‘flesh-worm’, M.Ir. frigde;fʹrʹïgrə, ‘answer’, O.Ir. frecre;fʹrʹiʃNʹæʃαχ, ‘peevish, irritable’;fʹrʹihirʹ, ‘sore’, Di. frithir.
fʹ is further the aspirated form of initialpʹ, e.g.mə fʹαN, ‘my pen’;də fʹαtə, ‘your petʹ;α fʹi꞉pə, ‘his pipe’;ꬶα꞉ fʹi꞉Nʹ,‘two pence’;dən fʹiʃi꞉nʹ, ‘to the kitten’;fʹiLʹ ʃə, ‘hereturned (pʹiLʹuw).
§ 319. Medially combinations of th or sh with bh, mh producefʹ. (a) bh + th, mh + th, e.g.jɛfʹər, pres. pass. ofjɛvəm, ‘I get’, cp.Nerʹ ə χæLʹtʹər ə ꬶ⅄꞉ jɛfʹər ə jαs i꞉, ‘when the wind is lost, it is found in the south’;gα꞉fʹαχ, ‘spongy (of land)’, Di. gaibhtheach;ki꞉fʹαχ, ‘bed-fellow’, Meyer comthach;krα꞉fʹαχ, ‘devout’, Meyer cráibdech. (b) th + bh, th + mh, e.g.dʹefʹrʹə, ‘haste’, cp. O’Clery deithbireach;kα꞉fʹαχ, ‘spendthrift’, Di. caithmheach;klα̃ifʹαχə (klə̃ifʹαχə), ‘swords’, cp. M.Ir. claidbiu (acc. plur.);ʃifʹi꞉nʹ, ‘bulrush’, Wi. síthbe, síthfe;tuəfʹəL, ‘a whirl, the wrong way’, M.Ir. tuaithbel;uəfʹiαLtə, ‘wild-looking’, Di. uaithbhéalta (due to a confusion of Wi. óibéla with úath, ‘terror’), (c) bh + sh indʹerʹəfər, ‘sister’, O.Ir. derb + siur. (d) Intʹifʹə, comparative oftʹUw̥, ‘thick, frequent’.
§ 320.fʹ is inserted beforetʹ inskαfʹtʹə, ‘group, lot, flock’, spelt sgaifte Cl. S. 10 x ’03 p. 3 col. 5, Di. scata, cp. § 312.fʹrʹ has taken the place ofr̥ʹ infʹrʹi꞉dʹ, ‘through’, O.Ir. triit, on Aran withhr orxr (KZ. xxxv 337).
§ 321. On aspirationfʹ disappears, e.g.mʹαr, ‘my husband’;dʹeʃtʹi mʹə, ‘I furnished’, Di. feistighim;tα꞉ ʃïnʹ ə jeimʹ ɔrəm, ‘I need that’, Di. feidhm;ꬶα꞉ iəkilʹ, ‘two teeth’;ĩ꞉çə lʹïχ, ‘a wet night’. Consequently asf andfʹ when aspirated give the same result, confusion is liable to arise as in the case offʹjɔ꞉ləmʹ, ‘to learn’, <fɔ꞉ləmʹ, O.Ir. foglaim. We have furtherfʹαstə, ‘yet’, < M.Ir. fodesta butfɔstə,fɔstαt,fɔstαχt = O.Ir. beus.
§ 322. In monosyllables ending inv there is a tendency with some speakers to unvoice the final and make it intofʹ (J. H. always hasv), e.g. inLïfʹ, ‘weed’, =Lïv, O.Ir. luib;ə Nʹïfʹ, ‘the egg’ (§ 326);Nʹïfʹ, ‘poison’, M.Ir. neim;Lʹefʹrʹi꞉nαχ, alsoLʹevrʹi꞉nαχ, ‘half-witted’, subst.Lʹevrʹi꞉nʹ, cp. Di. leimhe.
3.v.
§ 323. The Donegalv is a voiced bilabial sound corresponding in formation tofʹ. The corners of the mouth seem to be left open and the portions of the lips on either side of the point of contact in the middle (§ 309) approach very nearly to one another and vibrate. Hence when this sound is strongly nasalised and a large part of the breath passes through the nose, it has a distinct tendency to develope intomʹ (§ 298). The younger people however are substituting a labio-dental for the bilabialv.
§ 324.v usually represents O.Ir. medial or final b or m which originally stood before e, i, e.g.α꞉veʃ, ‘ocean’, M.Ir. aibís;i꞉v, ‘appearance, countenance’, O.Ir. óiph;i꞉viNʹ, ‘pleasant’, M.Ir. óibind;Lïv, ‘weed’, O.Ir. luib;seivirʹ, ‘rich’, M.Ir. saidbir;ʃelʹəv, ‘possession’, M.Ir. seilb (dat.);tαvʃə, ‘ghost’, O.Ir. taidbse.α̃vrʹəi,ə Nα̃vrʹəi, ‘tangled’, Meyer amréid,α̃vrʹəitʹαχ, ‘contrary, cross-tempered’;dα̃꞉v, ‘affection, fondness’, from the oblique cases of M.Ir. dám;dʹẽvəs, ‘shears’, M.Ir. demess;kï̃viαχ, ‘strange, foreign’, M.Ir. comaithchech;kïvlʹiNʹ, ‘emulate, emulation’, M.Ir. comleng;kï̃vnʹαχ, ‘mindful’, O.Ir. cumnech;kïvrʹəN, ‘field for planting’;krα̃꞉v, ‘bone’, O.Ir. cnáim;Nαvdʹə, ‘enemies’, O.Ir. naimtea (acc.);Nʹï̃v, ‘poison’, M.Ir. neim;rï̃və, ‘before’, M.Ir. remi.
αvαrαχ, ‘airy, light’, is obscure. It is pronounced the same as Di. aithbhearach, ‘blaming, censorious’.
§ 325. The aspiration of initialbʹ,mʹ isv. In the case ofmʹ the vowel is usually not nasalised, unless it is followed by an n or m sound or byh,ç, (§ 172). Examples –mə vαn, ‘my wife’;α vαrαd, ‘his cap’;ɛgʹ ə vα꞉rNỹ꞉, ‘at the gap’;vαNə mʹə, ‘I greeted’;bʹiNʹ vïg, ‘a small gable’.
v is also the eclipsed form offʹ, e.g.Nỹ꞉ vi꞉dɔrʹi꞉, ‘9 weavers’;ə vɛkʹiNʹ, ‘if I were to see.’ Medially inenʹəvïs, ‘ignorance’, M.Ir. anfiss.
§ 326. In the inflected forms of several words containingo꞉,u we findv arising after the analogy ofgo꞉, ‘smith’, plur.gïvnʹə;o꞉Nʹ, ‘river’, plur.ɛvNʹαχə);dUw̥, ‘black’, gen. sing.dïv. Such arebïvrʹə, compar. ofbo꞉r, ‘deaf’, M.Ir. bodar;krïv, gen. sing. ofkrUw̥, ‘dowry’;iNʹe꞉i ə Lα꞉ əNʹï̃v, ‘after to-day’, which contains a genitive formed froməNʹUw̥; ïv, ‘egg’, is a new nominative to a stem *uw- < M.Ir. nom. plur. ugai. The word is always fem. in Donegal and the palatalisation of the gen. and dat. sing. has been introduced into the nom. as is commonly the case with feminines, cp.mwĩ꞉v, ‘to begrudge’, O.Ir. móidem, gen. sing. móidme.ərʹĩ꞉v, a by-form oferʹiuw, ‘ever’, may have been influenced byərï̃və, ‘before’, as the two are frequently used together in the phraseərʹiuw ərï̃və.
Inʃevtʹuw, ‘to shift for oneself’, Di. seibhtiughadh, thev is peculiar, as the word comes from the English.
§ 327. Post-consonantic mh, bh disappear inα꞉rʹi꞉m, ‘I reckon’, O.Ir. áirmiu, butα꞉rʹi꞉m strictly speaking is a new formation fromα꞉rʹuw, which is used of counting sprats, kale &c.in threes;ædʹi꞉m, ‘I confess’, infin.ædʹvælʹ, M.Ir. 1st sing. atmu, perhaps by analogy withkʹrʹedʹəm, ‘I believe’, infin.kʹrʹedʹvælʹ (Spir. Rose p. 6 has aidvimuid);bʹihu꞉nαχ, ‘rascal’, M.Ir. bithbinech;dʹerʹəm, ‘I say’, M.Ir. atberim;tʹiʃiNʹtʹ, ‘to shew’, M.Ir. taisbenad.
4.χ.
§ 328. This symbol denotes the voiceless guttural spirant formed with the back of the tongue against the soft palate which occurs in German but there is much less friction in the production of the Donegal sound than is the case in German, Scotch or Welsh. For this reason it sometimes interchanges with h (§ 178) and finally it is often so faint especially in the termination‑αχ that at first I did not seem to hear it at all. The feeble articulation of this spirant is perhaps characteristic of Ulster Irish generally as Lloyd states that in Monaghan “when final it is silent with compensatory lengthening; before t it is always silent” (G. J. 1896 p. 146 col. 2). Cp. the spelling morghat for mordhacht Spir. Rose pp. 31, 47. Before palatal vowelsχ as alsoꬶ,k,g, being velar sounds cause the tongue to be retracted which tends to change a followingi(꞉) intoy(꞉), see § 125.
§ 329. Initiallyχ can only occur as the aspirated form ofk, e.g.mə χydʹ ‘my share’;χæLʹ mʹə, ‘I lost’.kɔ, ‘as’, which in the other dialects always appears withχ remains unaspirated in Donegal. On the other hand (ə)χy꞉çə, ‘ever’, M.Ir. caidche, coidche is always aspirated. Other cases such ashenʹikʹ mʹə, ‘I saw’;hα, ‘not’, < nocha;χUə mʹə, ‘I went’, are merely apparent as the pretonic syllable has been lost.
§ 330. Medially and finallyχ is very frequent and represents an O.Ir. ch before an originally non-palatal vowel or non-palatal consonant, e.g.αχmwirtʹ, ‘heat in horses’, Di.eachmairc;αχmwirʹ, ‘ready, quick, smart’, achmair Cl. S. 18 vii ’03 p. 3 col. 2, cp. O’R. achmuire, ‘readiness’, formed from O.Ir. ech (?);bαχəL, ‘tress’, O.Ir. bachall;bαχtə, ‘bank of peat’, bachta Craig, Irish Composition p. 166;bɔχt, ‘poor’, O.Ir. bocht;bα꞉χrαn, ‘bog-bean’, Hogan bacharán, cp. Meyer bachar, ‘acorn’;bʹαχɔg, ‘bee’, diminutive of M.Ir. bech, which occurs inbαχ ·χαpwiLʹ, ‘a wasp’;bʹαlαχ, ‘road’, M.Ir. belach;rαχə mʹə, ‘I shall go’, O.Ir. do-reg;ʃiər fα ʃαχ, ‘and so forth’, O.Ir. sech;ʃαχnuw, ‘to avoid’, Di. seachnadh;ər ʃαχrαn, ‘astray’, M.Ir. sechrán;ʃαχt, ‘seven’, O.Ir. secht.
In futuresh < f afterχ coalesces with the spirant, e.g.k⅄꞉χə mʹə, ‘I shall wink’;plu꞉χə mʹə, ‘I shall extinguish’.
§ 331.χ arises from thgh, thch inLUχærʹ, ‘joy’, M.Ir. luthgáir;αχyɲə, ‘request’, M.Ir. athchuinge;du꞉χəs, ‘birthright’, M.Ir. duthchus.
§ 332. Donegal has developed a new comparative termination‑αχə instead ofə which is used with adjectives of more than one syllable ending in a vowel, e.g.dælʹiαχə <dælʹi꞉, ‘difficult’;dαləbwiαχə <dαləbə, ‘impudent’. The endings‑ə and‑αχə occur side by side in other connections, e.g. in the future of verbs and the plural of fem. nouns and‑αχə is evidently used as a comparative ending for the sake of distinction. We find something similar inbʹrʹɛαχə the plural form ofbʹrʹɛə, ‘fine’, Meyer bregda.
§ 333. We have already seen (§ 178) thatχ easily passes intoh, and the converse is true for Donegal in isolated cases.χ forh seems to be frequent in Scotch dialects, cp. ZCP. iv 509. See further Henebry p. 19 (ca shoin). Examples –mo̤χuw, ‘springing of cows’, pret.wo̤χ, cp. Di. moth, ‘the male of any animal’, Cormac moth .i. ball ferda, Stokes-Bezz. *muto- (p. 219),mo̤χəsαn, ‘a springing heifer’, O’R. motach, ‘fruitful’, M.Ir. mothach LL 13b 7 rendered by Hyde ‘fertile’. Theχ inLαχərNə ·wα꞉rαχ, ‘to-morrow’ (spelt lá thar na bhárach Cl. S. 22 viii ’03 p. 3 col. 2) can hardly be due to O.Ir. láthe. It is more likely that the prepositionhærʹ, O.Ir. tar, has been substituted for iar which is obsolete except inerʹ gu꞉l, ‘back, behind’;ər du꞉s, ‘in front’;erʹ fα꞉lʹ, ‘found’ &c.
gə brα꞉χ, ‘for ever’, can hardly represent co bráth, as th after long vowels disappears. bráth may have become bráthach under the influence ofəmα꞉rαχ, ‘to-morrow’. The spelling co brach occurs RC. xxiv 371, 373, cp. Manx dy bragh (Rhys’s explanation of the latter l.c. p. 129 will not hold good for Donegal).
§ 334. It should be noted thatχ and notç stands beforetʹ. Henebry pp. 55, 35 says that “the group ‑cht is unaffected and always broad. The palatalised boicht of O.Ir. and found also in Keatynge was merely a symmetrical writing”. This is incorrect. Thet may not be palatal in Waterford but O’Leary quotes a form withtʹ for Cork and Finck (i 187) givesbøçcə as the gen. sing. fem. of bocht, ‘poor’. I have noted the following forms with‑χtʹ in Donegal,bɔχtʹ, gen. sing. ofbɔχt, ‘poor’;bʹαχtʹi꞉,compar. ofbʹαχt, ‘sensible, shrewd’, M.Ir. becht;bʹjɔ꞉χtʹə, compar. ofbʹjɔ꞉, ‘alive’;bʹrʹɛαxtʹə, compar. ofbʹrʹɛə, ‘fine’;eifʹαχtʹ, gen. sing. ofeifʹαχt, ‘prodigy’;kʹɛαχtʹə, gen. sing. ofkʹɛαχt, ‘plough’;smαχtʹi꞉nʹ, ‘mallet’, also ‘a rude fellow’.
§ 335. Thatχ has a tendency to pass intof in certain parts of the north and north-west has been mentioned in § 313. We may possibly have the converse in the formUχərtʹ, ‘wallowing’, spelt uchairt Cl. S. 10 x ’03 p. 3 col. 5 for Di. ionfairt.
5.ꬶ.
§ 336.ꬶ represents a voiced velar spirant formed by the back of the tongue against the soft palate. For the off-glide see § 328. As in the case ofχ there is an absence of the rasping which accompanies this sound when it is strongly articulated. Hence it is natural that except in the initial positionꬶ should tend to disappear. Henebry and Finck do not quote a single instance ofꬶ except initially but Donegal offers several examples of the sound in medial position. The position of the tongue for a feebly articulatedꬶ is very nearly that of myö̤꞉ and this vowel-sound always has a suspicion of a spirant nature as might be expected, seeing that it arises from adh‑, agh‑. Cp. Lloyd’s statement as to the frequent retention of dh, gh in Orrery in seadh, feadh and other words G. J. 1896 p. 147. Scotch Gaelic often keeps finalꬶ in the verb ending ‑adh but in Donegal the latter may have givenə⅄ orəö̤, which with rounding becameəu,u꞉,uw.
§ 337. Initiallyꬶ only occurs as the aspirated form of d, g, e.g.ꬶritʹ ʃə, ‘he shut’;kʹi(꞉)bʹ ꬶUw̥, ‘sedge’;lʹeʃ ə ꬶɔlər, ‘with the disease’;mə ꬶlu꞉n, ‘my knee’; in compositionαdərꬶiə, ‘intercession’.ꬶα꞉, ‘two’, andꬶɔl, ‘going’, are usually aspirated butdα꞉ appears forꬶα꞉ after the article andəgəs,əs, ‘and’. When preceded byəg gɔl loses itsꬶ. In the pronominal forms of the preposition do the forms with aspirated d (ꬶ) are confined to the 2nd sing.ꬶydʹ, ‘to you.’
§ 338. Mediallyꬶ occurs in the following words:fʹiəꬶirʹə, ‘huntsman’, < M.Ir. fíad;fʹïꬶəriαχt (alsofʹə⅄riαχt), ‘countenance, face’, cp. Di. fíoghruighim; ïꬶəri꞉m, ‘I adore,’ Di. adhraim, Meyer adoraim (alsoə⅄ri꞉m);tʹïꬶəlαχ, ‘family’, O.Ir. teglach;⅄꞉ꬶirʹə, ‘herdsman’, O.Ir. augaire;dʹi꞉ꬶɔ(꞉)i, ‘the wrong way’, dí + dóigh.
In all other casesꬶ has either disappeared without leaving a trace or has served to lengthen or modify the preceding vowel. Between consonantsꬶ disappears indʹα꞉rNəd, ‘flea’, M.Ir. dergnat.
§ 339. A hiatus-fillingꬶ is inserted betweenə < do, de, when they precede an infinitive or substantive which begins or once began with a non-palatal vowel, cp. § 191. Examples –Lα꞉n gre꞉pʹ də ꬶy꞉lʹαχ, ‘a forkful of dung’;α lʹehəd(ʹ)ʃɔ də ꬶα꞉tʹ, ‘such a place as this’;Nʹi꞉ henʹi ʃə ə ꬶα̃uwərk ɔrəm, ‘he did not come to see me’;ə ꬶæNʹænʹ, ‘in spite of’;ʃαl ə ꬶαm, ‘a space of time’;ꬶlαk ʃə Nʹi꞉s Luw ꬶαm, ‘it took less time’;səihαχ ə ꬶuəχtər, ‘a vessel of cream’;Lα꞉n α ꬶïrNʹ də ꬶɔ꞉r, ‘a fistful of gold’;gʹïtə ꬶo̤Nsə, ‘a bit of a fence’, = giota de fhonnsa;hu꞉si꞉ mʹɛədən ə ꬶαt, ‘my face started to swell’.
6.ç
§ 340. This symbol represents a voiceless spirant formed by the middle of the tongue against the hard palate near to the edge of the soft palate, cp. Jespersen p. 49. There is much less friction than in the case of Germanç in ‘ich’, on which account it interchanges withh. It is sometimes very difficult to decide whether one hearsç orh after a closei ore.
§ 341. Initiallyç usually represents an aspiratedkʹ, e.g.gɔl çɔ꞉lʹ, ‘singing’;ə çαrk, ‘the hen’;çαNy mʹə, ‘I bought’;çrʹαχ mʹə, ‘I ruined’;sə çlʹiuw, ‘in the basket’.çiəNə, ‘same’, andçïd, ‘first’, never appear in the unaspirated form.
§ 342. In a few casesç appears as the aspirated form of initialʃ cp. Molloy p. 7, Henebry p. 76,Finck i 83. Examples –erʹ çu꞉l, ‘away’, alsoər su꞉l,çu꞉lʹ mʹə, ‘I walked’, Di. siubhal;çα꞉nʹ, gen. sing. ofʃα꞉n, ‘John’;çɔ꞉l mʹə, ‘I sailed’;α çɔ꞉rsə, vocative ofʃɔ꞉rsə, ‘George’. But notemə ho꞉k, ‘my hawk’;mə hαmrə, ‘my chamber’. This would seem to bear out the explanation given by Pedersen pp. 17–18.
According to Rhys pp. 74, 104 f. initialtʹ when aspirated givesç in Manx. This does not occur in Donegal except in two mauled forms oftʹiərNə, ‘Lord’, as used in asseverations. These areçiərNə mαnəmwidʹ, ‘good gracious’, see § 63; andα çiəkæʃ inwïlʹ ærʹəgʹïd əgəd?çiəkæʃ heinʹ ətα꞉, ‘have you any money? I should just think I have’, Craig Iasg. spells chiacais. It is sometimes written tiarcais.
§ 343. Medially and finallyç represents O.Ir. ch when originally followed by e, i, e.g.brαiç, ‘malt’, Di. braich < O.Ir. mraich;dʹeç, ‘ten’, O.Ir. deich;dʹiçəL, ‘one’s best’, Di. dícheall;fαiç, ‘green’, M.Ir. faithche, faidche;fαiçiLʹ, ‘care’, Di. faithchill;ĩ꞉çə, ‘night’, O.Ir. aidche;kliçə (kləiçə), ‘game’, M.Ir. cluche;ə χy꞉çə, ‘ever’, M.Ir. caidche;ʃeiçə, ‘hide’, M.Ir. seche. Frequently in the inflected forms of words ending inχ, asblα꞉içə, gen. sing. ofblα꞉χ, ‘buttermilk’,kʹi꞉çə, gen. sing. ofkʹiəχ, ‘breast’. thgh givesç inαiçərə, ‘short cut’, Di. aithghearra;du꞉çə, ‘landed property’, cp. O.Ir. duthoig.dɔ(꞉)içə, ‘likely, probable’, = dóiche Craig Iasg., is a new formation from O.Ir. dochu compar. of dóig, dóich after the model of the majority of comparatives with palatalisation.
§ 344.ç tends to becomeh in some words for which see § 179. Finally it disappears after a long vowel or diphthong exceptαi`, e.g.kʹαrk ri꞉, ‘moor-hen’, = cearc fhraoich;ꬶα꞉ χrui, ‘two stacks’;bʹαlαχ fʹəi, ‘Ballybofey’, = Bealach Feich. Similarly inĩ꞉çə when the final vowel is elided, e.g.ĩ꞉ əgəs Lα꞉, ‘night and day’;ĩ꞉ hα̃uwnə, ‘Halloween’. Medially also inkï̃viαχ, ‘strange, foreign’, M.Ir. comaithchech.
§ 345. By far the most frequent source ofç is th after a palatal vowel particularly at the end of monosyllables with short root-vowel. In such casesç is often very faint which may be denoted by writing a smallç over the line. Examples:erʹ bʹiç, ‘at all’, ar bith;kα̃iç, imper. ‘throw, spend, smoke’;kʹrʹiç, ‘trembling’, M.Ir. crith;ər Lʹeç, ‘apart’;mαiç, ‘good’, O.Ir. maith;skαiç, ‘the best of anything’, from the oblique cases of M.Ir. scoth, ‘flower’ (the old meaning is preserved infʹïNskαiç, ‘cornflower’);ʃkʹeç, ‘vomit’, M.Ir. sceith;wα(꞉)iç, pret. ofbα꞉huw, ‘to drown’. Note furtherə sαu(w)ruw ʃɔiçαrt, ‘this last summer’, = an samhradh seo thart. Thisç commonly disappears before another word beginning with a consonant in the same stress-group, e.g.dʹɛ mαh, ‘ten cows’, cp. the spelling deth in Molloy’s 33rd dialect-list;χα mʹə, ‘I spent’,χæ ʃə, ‘he spent’;dʹi mʹə, ‘I ate’, imper.iç.
əmwiç, ‘outside’, andəstiç (əsti꞉ç), ‘inside’, are peculiar, as in M.Ir. we have immaig, istaig. True we also findĩ꞉wαiç, ‘image’, Wi. imaig, andtriç, ‘foot’, O.Ir. traig. But the latter has been influenced by the plural M.Ir. traigthe and dissyllables in ‑áigh usually have‑αi` which is equivalent to‑αiç (§ 141).əstiç is all the more surprising as the dative formti꞉ < M.Ir. taig isfrequent.əmwiç,əstiç are possibly extended froməmwi`,əsti`, i.e. they are proclitic forms.
§ 346.ç also frequently represents a medial th flanked by palatal vowels, e.g.içə, ‘eating’, O.Ir. ithe, pret. pass.hihuw,kαiçirʹ, ‘chair’, M.Ir. catháir (§ 139);kʹlʹeiçə, gen. sing. ofkʹlʹiə, ‘harrow’, M.Ir. cliath;Luiçə, compar. ofLuə, ‘early’;Lʹeiçə, gen. sing. fem. ofLʹiə, ‘grey’;lʹeiçə (lʹeihə), ‘with her’, similarlyfu꞉çə, ‘under her’;mʹeiçe, compar. ofmʹe꞉, ‘fat’, M.Ir. meth;rα꞉içə, ‘quarter of a year’, M.Ir. ráithe;sNα꞉içə, ‘thread’, O.Ir. snáthe;suiçə, ‘soot’, M.Ir. suithe, O.Ir. suidi. Verbs containingh < th in the infinitive frequently haveç in the present and preterite, e.g.suəhuw, ‘mix together’, pres.suiçəm, pret.huiç mʹə but past part.suitʹə;skαiçə mʹə, ‘I shall wean’, besideskαihə mʹə <skαhuw), M.Ir. scothaim.
Similarlyç is frequent in the future of several simple verb-stems ending in a long vowel or diphthong. Theseç futures usually correspond to a present containingj for which see § 190. Examples –bα꞉çə mʹə, ‘I shall drown’;dɔ꞉içə mʹə, ‘I shall burn’;krα꞉çə mʹə, ‘I shall torment’;spʹrʹeiçə mʹə, ‘I shall spread’;tα꞉çə mʹə, ‘I shall weld’;tʹrʹo꞉çə mʹə, ‘I shall plough’ but pres. pass.tʹrʹo꞉hər. Alsobru꞉çə mʹə, ‘I shall press down’, pret.wrui ʃə, M.Ir. brúim;su꞉çi ʃə, ‘it will soak up’, <suw, M.Ir. súgim.
7.s.
§ 347. Henderson’s description of Scotch Gaelics applies equally to the Donegal sound. “The tongue-blade, along the central line of which the breath is directed, approaches the gums behind the upper teeth and the breath becomes sibilant owing to the friction it undergoes in passing between the upper and lower front teeth. The tip of the tongue may rest against the lower front teeth. It is usually more forcible than Engl.s, the tongue-articulation being closer” (ZCP. iv 515). A large number of speakers tend to widen the nick in the tongue through which the breath passes, thus producing a lisped s. The curious effect produced on initials by a followingr has been described in § 273. The voiced sound corresponding tos does not occur in Irish but is regular in the local English and produces a very peculiar effect. As is the case with the voiceless stopss is commonly aspirated, cp. Sweet, Primer of Phonetics² p. 60. Hence theh of the future terminations coalesces with a finals and is not heard as a separate element, e.g.pɔ꞉sə mʹə, ‘I shallmarry’;krɔsə tuw, ‘you will forbid’. On this account a number of verb-stems ending in s prefer the ending of the second conjugation, e.g.dʹrʹαsαχə mʹə, ‘I shall drive away’, pres.dʹrʹαsəm. For the length of the sound see § 357.
§ 348.s represents O.Ir. initial s before other than palatal vowels, e.g.sα꞉l, ‘heel’, O.Ir. sál;siNʹtʹ, ‘covetousness’, O.Ir. sant;sɔləN, ‘salt’, O.Ir. saland;su꞉lʹ, ‘eye’, O.Ir. súil;su꞉ʃtʹə, ‘flail’, M.Ir. sust, suiste < Lat. fustis;s⅄꞉l, ‘life’, O.Ir. saigul. Fors beforeL,N see §§ 208,239.s further stands before O.Ir. m, p, c followed by the vowels a, o, u and in a few loan-words before t under the same conditions, e.g.smwi꞉tʹuw, ‘to think’, M.Ir. smuained;spɔχuw, ‘to geld’, M.Ir. spochad;skα̃uwænʹ, ‘lungs’, M.Ir. scaman;sky꞉lʹuw, ‘to let loose’, M.Ir. scáilim;stαd, ‘to stop’, formed on Lat. status;stɔ꞉l, ‘chair’, < O.E. stól.
§ 349. Beforemʹ andpʹ s has taken the place ofʃ at the beginning of a word, e.g.smʹerʹ, ‘marrow’, M.Ir. smir;smʹɛ꞉r, ‘blackberry’, M.Ir. smér;spʹαl, ‘scythe’, M.Ir. spel;spʹïrəd, ‘spirit’, O.Ir. spirut. Note also (ə)smʹe꞉, ‘it is I’, by the side ofʃe꞉, ‘it is he’. For the hesitation betweens andʃ before certain consonants cp. Chr. Bros. Aids to the Pron. of Irish p. 17 and O’Donovan, Grammar p. 38. Fors beforer <rʹ see § 273.
§ 350. Medially and finallys corresponds to O.Ir. ss, s originally followed by a, o, u and which usually arose from the assimilation of two consonants, except in the groupsk, wheres = Idg. s. Examples –αs, ‘out of’, O.Ir. ass;bo̤s, ‘flat of the hand’, M.Ir. bass, boss;bʹɛəs, ‘custom’, O.Ir. bés;dʹẽvəs, ‘shears’, M.Ir. demess;fα꞉s, ‘growing’, O.Ir. ás;iəsk, ‘fish’, O.Ir. íasc;kɔs, ‘leg’, O.Ir. coss.
In other cases medial and finals appears in loan-words from Latin, e.g.αsəl, ‘donkey’, M.Ir. assal < Lat. asellus;kɔrəgəs, ‘Lent’, M.Ir. corgus < Lat. quadragesima.
8.ʃ.
§ 351. The position of the tongue forʃ resembles that fors. The tip of the tongue seems to hang down behind the lower front teeth and may rest against them. The lips are neutral as in English but the middle part of the tongue is raised towards the hard palate, thus considerably lengthening the narrowing necessary for the production ofʃ. The acoustic effect of the Donegal sound is very different from that of English, French or Germanʃ. It suggests to mes +j and it is interesting to note that Hendersoncompares N. Invernessʃ with Danish sj ZCP. iv 516. I am not familiar with the latter sound but from Jespersen’s description (Fonetik p. 244) it appears to be formed in somewhat similar manner to Donegalʃ.
§ 352.ʃ represents O.Ir. initial s before palatal vowels and before O.Ir. c, l, n, t followed by the same vowels, e.g.ʃαχtinʹ, ‘week’, O.Ir. sechtman;ʃαn, ‘old’, O.Ir. sen;ʃiNʹimʹ, ‘to play a musical instrument’, M.Ir. senim;ʃo꞉k, ‘hawk’, M.Ir. sebac;ʃu꞉l, ‘to walk’, M.Ir. siubal;ʃkʹαχ, ‘hawthorn-bush’, M.Ir. scé;ʃtʹiəL, ‘strip, stripe’, M.Ir. stíall. For examples ofʃLʹ,ʃNʹ see §§ 226,255.
§ 353. Medially and finallyʃ arises from O.Ir. ss, s followed by e or i. This ss, s generally arose from the assimilation of two consonants. Examples –αmʹʃirʹ, ‘weather’, O.Ir. amser;bʹrʹiʃuw, ‘to break’, M.Ir. brissiud;iNʹiʃ imper. ‘tell’, M.Ir. innissim;klæʃ ‘furrow’, M.Ir. claiss (dat.).ʃ also stands medially beforeLʹ,Nʹ,rʹ,mʹ,tʹ,kʹ, e.g.pʹiʃrʹɔg, ‘charm’, Di. pisreóg;ʃeʃrʹαχ ‘plough’, M.Ir. sesrech;kæʃmʹərtʹ, ‘squabble’, Meyer caismert;kʹlʹiʃmʹərNy꞉, ‘starting up in sleep’, Di. clisim;tæʃmʹə, ‘accident’, Di. taisme;gæʃtʹə, ‘trap’, O.Ir. goiste;iʃkʹə, ‘water’, O.Ir. usce;kæʃkʹïmʹ, ‘step’, Meyer coss-céimm. Examples ofʃ beforepʹ do not occur to my knowledge.
§ 354. As the aspirated form of boths andʃ ish, confusion is apt to arise. Hence we getʃ fors inʃɔ꞉rt, ‘kind, sort’, spelt seórt Cl. S. 10 x ’03 p. 3 col. 5, Craig Iasg. < Engl. ‘sort’;ʃïlʹəstrαχ, ‘yellow iris’, Di. soileastar, M.Ir. soileastar;ʃïlαg, ‘spit’, Di. seil, O.Ir. saile; cp. further Macbain seileach with Di. saileóg;ʃi꞉lʹəm, ‘I think’, M.Ir. sáilim. Converselysu꞉Ntə, ‘seam in quarry’, stands forʃu꞉Ntə = Di. siúnta < Engl. ‘joint’.ʃerʹ, ‘eastwards’, has been influenced byʃiər, ‘westwards’, cp. Rhys p. 53.
§ 355. In loan-words from Englishʃ represents Engl. s before e and i sounds and also Engl. j, e.g.ʃɛ꞉ʃu꞉r, ‘season’;ʃɛ꞉məs, ‘James’;ʃα꞉n, ‘John’;ʃu꞉krə, ‘sugar’.
§ 356. The past participle of verbs of the second declension ends in‑i꞉ < uighthe or‑i(꞉)ʃtʹə. The latter probably arose in some word likeiNʹiʃ. The two conjugations have been hopelessly confused and we may safely assume thatiNʹiʃtʹə andiNʹʃi꞉ existed side by side, whence the moderniNʹʃi(꞉)ʃtʹə.(d) The labial, dental and guttural stops.
Note on the stops ands (ʃ).
§ 357. In the case of l, m and n sounds and partly in the case of the r sounds in Donegal we have found that under certain conditions long consonants appear where double consonants are now or were formerly written. We further know that in the majority of cases modern Gaelic labial, dental and guttural stops together with s go back to originally double consonants which are commonly so written in O.Irish after short accented vowels, see Pedersen pp. 84 ff. The question therefore naturally arises: Are there no traces of these original double stops in the manner of articulation of the present day? I venture to think that this question may be answered in the affirmative. What strikes an English ear most in the speech of the north of Ireland is the way in which final stops are articulated. As was the case with the liquids and nasals it is chiefly at the end of monosyllables that differences of length in consonants are most clearly heard. Now if we compare the pronunciation offʹαr`, ‘man’, with that offʹïg ‘length’, we cannot fail to be struck by the difference in duration of the finals. It may be stated once and for all that the only short or clipped consonants which Donegal Irish knows arel,lʹ,n,nʹ,r,rʹ,ç,w. At the end of stressed monosyllables with short vowel the stops ands,ʃ are held for a longer time than is the case with voiced consonants in standard English after a short vowel, though parallels occur in northern dialects, e.g. in the Swaledale pronunciation of ‘had’, ‘bad’. At the same time the contact is loosened very gradually, so that an off-glide is clearly heard.l,lʹ,n,nʹ,r,rʹ at the end of stressed monosyllables may be regarded as over-short, in other positions as short.L,Lʹ,N,Nʹ,R,m,mʹ, the stops ands (ʃ) at the end of stressed monosyllables after short vowels are long. In other positions they are either long or half-long. Even initially they are dwelt upon and often seem to be half-long. In all cases the articulation of a final consonant is finished and the off-glide is invariably heard.
1.p.
§ 358.p is formed with the lips slightly protruded in the w position and is strongly aspirated. On releasing the contact aw̥ off-glide is heard which is most noticeable beforeæ,ɛ,e,i. For the lenisp cp. § 438.
§ 359.p occurs initially before a, o, u in loan-words from Latin and English, e.g.pwædʹrʹi꞉nʹ, ‘the rosary’, Lat. pater noster;pɔ꞉g, ‘kiss’, Lat. pacem;pɔ꞉suw, ‘marry’, Lat. sponsus;po̤bəl, ‘congregation’, Lat. populus;plα꞉i, ‘plague’, Lat. plaga;plα꞉n̥ædʹ, ‘climate’, Lat. planeta;spɔhuw, ‘to geld’, M.Ir. spochad < Lat. spado.pα꞉ʃtʹə, ‘child’, < Engl. page;pα꞉rʹkʹ, ‘meadow’, < Engl. ‘park’;pɔtə, ‘pot’;pɔ꞉kə, ‘pocket’, < Engl. ‘poke, pocket’;po̤Ntə, ‘pound’;po̤tɔg, ‘pudding’,plu꞉r, ‘flour’, hasp forf due to mistaken de-aspiration.
Although originally no genuine Irish words began with p, this sound is now-a-days a very favourite one in coining new words the origin of which is frequently obscure, cp.prαkər, ‘leavings of potatoes’,prα꞉kαs, ‘a small, deformed person’, Di. prácás;spuikʹ, ‘blister’, Di. spuaic.
§ 360. In several loan-wordsp occurs initially where the language from which they are borrowed has b, e.g.po̤NəN, ‘sheaf’, < Norse bundin, Engl. bundle;pɔ꞉nirʹə, ‘beans’, Norse baun,Ohg. pôna;pαŋk, ‘fair for selling stockings’, < Engl. ‘bank’;plo̤k, ‘cheek’, < ‘block’ (?). Cp. further Di. praiseach; Macbain prais, priobaid, pronnasg. Donegalp also corresponds to b of the other dialects inprα꞉ʃkʹi꞉nʹ, ‘apron’, Di. práiscín, Duffy, Mion-chaint na Midhe has práiscín and bráiscín;pro̤Nəm, ‘I present’, M.Ir. bronnaim,pro̤Ntənəs, ‘present’, Meyer bronntanas, cp. Spir. Rose p. 30 pronn. po̤s, ‘lip’, more commonlypwiʃi꞉nʹ, is M.Ir. bus. Medially we findp forb inαpwi꞉, ‘ripe’, Di. abaidh, Meyer abbuig.
§ 361. Medially and finallyp arises from older pp = O. and M.Ir. pp, p, e.g.krαp, ‘lump’, M.Ir. cnapp, < Norse knappr;kʹαpəm, ‘I stop, head off’, Meyer ceppaim fromkʹαp, ‘shoemaker’s last’, Meyer cepp < Lat. cippus, cp.kʹαp Nə viəkəl, ‘gum’;sαp, ‘wisp’, M.Ir. sopp;tαpuw ɔrt, ‘God speed you’, M.Ir. tapad. The relation ofkαpəL, ‘mare’, M.Ir. capull, Welsh ceffyl and Lat. caballus is obscure.
p also occurs afterl,r,m ands in loan-words, e.g.skαlpuw, ‘to snarl’, Di. scealpadh (with different meaning), < Engl. skelp (?);kɔrp, ‘corpse’, O.Ir. corp, < Lat. corpus;αspək, ‘bishop’, O.Ir. espoc;αspəl, ‘apostle’, O.Ir. apstal;tα(꞉)mpəL, ‘Protestant chapel’, O.Ir. tempol. Similarlyklo̤pwidʹə, ‘wrinkle in cloth, dip in land’, = M.Ir. clupait < culpait.
In the latest loan-words from English we findp = Engl. p, e.g.kɔpαn, ‘cup’;pʹi꞉pə, ‘pipe’;rɔ꞉pə, ‘rope’;ʃïpə, ‘shop’;ʃLʹïpərNỹ꞉, ‘tottering’, < Engl. ‘slip’. From Lat. papa, ‘pope’, we expect *pα꞉bə and notpα꞉pə.
§ 362. b + th givesp inLʹαpə, gen. sing. ofLʹαbwi꞉, ‘bed’, nom. plur.Lʹαpαχə, M.Ir. lepad;Lʹɛəpαχə, plur. ofLʹɛəb, ‘strip’, Di. leadhb. Similarly in futures, e.g.Lu꞉pwi ʃə, ‘he will bend’;ʃiəpwi ʃə, ‘it will blow’.p further arises from bh + th in the adverbsti꞉puəs, ‘above’,ti꞉pαL, ‘beyond’,ti꞉pʹiər, ‘to the west of’ = taobh-thuas, taobh-thiar, taobh-thall, cp. § 470 and Pedersen p. 161.
o̤mpər, ‘to carry’, occurs by the side ofo̤mχər, M.Ir. immchor;kɔləpə, ‘calf of the leg’ (not common) = Meyer colptha;kɔləpαχ, ‘stirk’, = Meyer colpthach. Both the latter seem to go back to the Teutonic word for ‘calf’.
§ 363. In the future forms of stems ending inp theh < f can cause no change as thep is already aspirated. Hence the present and future are often the same in form, e.g.kʹαpwi꞉ ʃə, ‘he stops’ or ‘will stop’;kro̤pwi꞉ ʃə, ‘it shrinks’ or ‘will shrink’.
2.pʹ.
§ 364.pʹ is formed with the lips tightly drawn back on to the teeth and may be aspirated. Forpʹ as a lenis cp. § 438.
§ 365. Initialpʹ represents O. and M.Ir. p before e, i. The words in question are mostly borrowed from Latin or English, some are late formations modelled on English words, whilst one or two others such asspʹαl, ‘scythe’, M.Ir. spel, are obscure. Examples –pʹαkuw, ‘sin’, O.Ir. peccad < Lat. peccatum;pʹαN, ‘pen’, M.Ir. penn < Lat. pinna;pʹαtə, ‘pet’, M.Ir. petta;pʹïlʹəpʹi꞉nʹ, ‘peewit’, Di. pilibín, < Philip (?);pʹïnu꞉s, ‘penance’, Di. píonús, píonós < Lat. poena, with possibly a leaning on Engl. ‘punish’ (Macbain);pʹïkɔdʹ, ‘pick’ andpʹïkuw, ‘to pick’, < Engl.;pʹigʹi꞉nʹ, ‘a piggin’;pʹiʃi꞉nʹ, ‘kitten’;pʹitʹ, ‘cunnus’, Di. pit < Engl. ‘pit’ or O.E. pyt;pʹiNʹ, ‘penny’, M.Ir. pinginn;pʹi꞉sə, ‘piece’;pʹlʹɛəskuw, ‘to burst, crack’, founded on Engl. ‘flash’ (?);pʹlʹeiʃu꞉r, ‘pleasure’;pʹrʹɛətə, ‘potato’;pʹrʹïs, ‘cupboard’, <Engl. ‘press’;spʹeirʹ, ‘sky’, < Lat. sphaera;spʹiənuw, ‘to tease wool’, < Lat. spina;spʹïrəd, ‘spirit’, O.Ir. spirut.
Inpʹeiʃtʹ (χαpwiLʹ), ‘a black and yellow caterpillar’, we havepʹ forbʹ, cp. § 360 and Scotch G. preathal for breitheal.
pʹiəχαn, ‘hoarseness’, seems to be onomatopœic and exhibitsa variety of forms. Macbain has pìochan, Fournier ceochan, O’R. spiochan.
§ 366. Medial and finalpʹ occurs only in inflected or derivative forms of words containingp, e.g.kʹipʹi꞉nʹ, ‘small stick’, dimin. ofkʹαp;krɛpʹə, ‘button’, < M.Ir. cnapp. Also infwïpʹ < Engl. ‘whip’.
pʹ arises aftermʹ intʹimʹpʹiəL, ‘about’, O.Ir. timmchell, cp.o̤mpər § 362.
§ 367. Aspʹ andfʹ interchange in aspiration,pʹ is sometimes wrongly substituted forfʹ, e.g. inpʹiLʹuw, ‘to return’, M.Ir. filliud;pʹrʹiælʹ, ‘to fry’, < Engl.
3.b
§ 368.b is the voiced sound corresponding top. The off-glide isw which we write in this book before palatal vowels.
§ 369.b occurs initially in a large number of words corresponding to O. and M.Ir. b before a, o, u or l and r followed by these vowels, e.g.bαkαχ, ‘lame’, M.Ir. baccach;bαL, ‘spot’, O.Ir. ball;bα꞉huw, ‘to drown’, M.Ir. bádud;blα꞉, ‘flower’, M.Ir. bláth;blα꞉χ, ‘buttermilk’, M.Ir. bláthach;brα꞉dʹ, ‘throat’, O.Ir. bráge;brïNʹ, ‘womb’, M.Ir. broind (dat.);bɔ꞉, ‘cow’, O.Ir. bó;bo̤g, ‘soft’, M.Ir. bocc;bwæNʹə, ‘milk’, O.Ir. banne;bwæʃtʹəm, ‘I baptize’, O.Ir. baitsim;bwelʹə, ‘townland’, M.Ir. baile;bwiə, ‘yellow’, O.Ir. bude;bwiLʹə, ‘blow’, O.Ir. buille;bw⅄꞉, ‘foolish’, O.Ir. báith.
b corresponds to O.Ir. m inbrαiç, ‘malt’, O.Ir. mraich;blαs, ‘taste’, O.Ir. mlas;brαihəm, ‘I betray’, cp. M.Ir. mrath.
The eclipsed form ofp isb, e.g.α bɔ꞉sit(ʹ)ʃə, ‘if he were to marry’;vi꞉ ʃi α bɔ꞉guw, ‘she was kissing them’;mər bα꞉ʃʹtʹə, ‘your child’;Nỹ꞉ bo̤NəNαχə, ‘nine sheaves’.
§ 370. Medially and finallyb represents an earlier bb which generally arose by assimilation and which in O. and M.Ir. is written pp, p, e.g.αbwirʹ (imper.), ‘say’, M.Ir. apair with a from atbeir;αbər, ‘mud’, M.Ir. ebor;go̤b, ‘beak, mouth’, M.Ir. gop;gʹïbɔg, ‘bit, morsel’, cp. O.Ir. gibbne;kαb, ‘mouth’,kαbwirʹə, ‘prater’, < M.Engl. gabben;Lʹαbwi꞉, ‘bed’, M.Ir. lepaid, lepad;skαbuw, ‘to scatter’, Di. scabaim, scapaim, scaipim;to̤bər, ‘well’, O.Ir. topur;to̤bəN, ‘sudden’, M.Ir. oponn.b corresponds to M.Ir. b after d inLʹɛəb, ‘strip’, M.Ir. ledb. In this case the group db is not the same as db in M.Ir. Medb, Sadb which arenow pronouncedmʹɛəwə,sα꞉wə. Similarly afterl andr inαləbə, ‘Scotland’, M.Ir. Alba;kαrəbəd, ‘chariot’, O.Ir. carpat, Gaulish carbantia.
§ 371. In earlier loan-words a medial p was received into Irish as a lenis which gave the same result as bb, e.g.kα꞉bə, ‘cape’, Meyer cápa, < O.Fr. cape;o̤bwirʹ, ‘work’, Lat. opera, O.Ir. only oipred;po̤bəl, ‘congregation’, Lat. populus;pʹiəb, ‘throat, pipe’, Lat. pipa, from which are formedpʹïbərNỹ꞉, ‘wheezing’,pʹïbruw, ‘rousing to fight’;skrɔ꞉bαn, ‘crop of birds’, formed on Engl. ‘crop’ and ‘scrape’ (?);skuəb, ‘besom’, M.Ir. scuap < Lat. scopa;ʃkʹïbɔl, ‘barn’, O.Welsh scipaur, Cornish scibor, < Lat. *scoparium.
Late loan-words from English haveb = Engl. b, e.g.bαbɔg, ‘doll’, < Engl. ‘babe’;bɔbwirʹαχt, ‘trickery’, < Engl. ‘bob’;to̤bαn, ‘tub’. In a few instances we find Engl. w, v appearing asb on the analogy ofbα꞉d, ‘boat’,α wα꞉d, ‘his boat’, e.g.bαLə, ‘wall’;bo̤Ntæʃtʹə, ‘advantage’. Similarly b for m occurs inbo̤mwitʹə, ‘minute’, < Lat. momentum.
tʹrʹïblɔdʹ, ‘trouble’, M.Ir. tréblait, seems to have been borrowed during the M.Ir. period from Lat. tribulatio.
§ 372. In several cases Donegalb corresponds to bh in the other dialects, e.g.kru꞉b, ‘paw, hand’, Di. crúb, crobh, Macbain crubh, Meyer crob, crúb;ʃkʹrʹi꞉b, ‘scratch, furrow’, M.Ir. scríb, scrípad, Lat. scribo butʃkʹrʹiuw, ‘to write’;ʃo̤bərNỹ꞉ (ʃïbərNỹ꞉), ‘neglect’,gɔl əNʹ ʃ.,ʃïbərNαχ Cl. S. 30 v ’03 p. 1 col. 1 (used of cattle getting mixed up and going astray), this seems to be the same word as Di. siabrán, ‑acht, cp. further Di. seabhais, seabhóideacht, seabhóidim;ʃiəbuw, ‘to blow’, Di. siabhadh, Macbain siab, siabh, Manx sheebey.
mər bwiLʹ ʃə, ‘unless he is’, scarcely belongs here. Theb doubtless represents the copula inserted fromαχ mərbʹə꞉, ‘if it had not been for him’, in the same way as a meaninglessəs (agus) is introduced ingədʹe꞉ mər əs tα꞉ tuw, ‘how are you?’ from phrases likeNi꞉Lʹ ʃə kɔ mαiç əs vi꞉ ʃə, ‘he is not as good as he was’.
4.bʹ.
§ 373.bʹ is formed in the same way aspʹ but is voiced.
§ 374.bʹ corresponds to O.Ir. initial b before e and i or preceding l and r followed by these vowels, e.g.bʹαn, ‘woman’, O.Ir. ben;bʹαNαχt, ‘blessing’, O.Ir. bendacht;bʹinʹidʹ, ‘rennet’, O.Ir. binid;bʹi꞉wi꞉, ‘slyly mischievous’, Meyer bibdaide;bʹlʹiïnʹ,‘year’, O.Ir. bliadain;bʹrʹi꞉, ‘vigour, force’, O.Ir. bríg;bʹrʹi꞉hər, ‘speech’, O.Ir. bríathar.
The eclipsed form of initialpʹ isbʹ, e.g.α bʹαtə, ‘their pet’;pʹi꞉sə he꞉ bʹi꞉Nʹ, ‘a sixpenny bit’.
§ 375. Medial and finalbʹ arises from the same sources asb in §§ 371,372 before originally palatal vowels.bʹ is far from being as frequent asb and a number of words in which it occurs are somewhat obscure. Examples –kʹi꞉bʹ, ‘sedge’, Di. cíb;kʹlʹibʹi꞉nʹ, ‘lump of dirt on the legs of a beast, matted hair on a person’, Di. clib, Macbain cliob, cp.ʃïnʹ ɛən çlʹibʹi꞉nʹ əwα̃꞉nʹ, ‘that is all one kettle of fish’;rïbʹə, ‘hair’, Di. ribe, ruibe, Macbain rib, ribeag < Engl. riban. In foreign words < p inebʹrʹαn, ‘April’, Lat. aprilis (see ZCP. i 358); ïbʹrʹuw, ‘to work’, ïbʹrʹi꞉, ‘workman’, cp. O.Ir. oipred;pʹïbʹər, ‘pepper’, Lat. piper.
§ 376.bʹ has been analogically substituted forv inbʹigʹilʹ, ‘abstinence, vigil’, < Lat. vigilia;bʹi꞉ʃ ‘vice’, < Engl. ‘vice’.dʹirʹibʹ, ‘the name of a creeping thing that lives at the bottom of pools and is liable to be swallowed by cattle’, = Di. doirbh.
§ 377.sïbʹəLtə, ‘impudent’, seems to correspond to O’R. sodalta, Macbain saidealta, cp. Di. sotal.
5.t.
§ 378.t is formed by firmly pressing the front rim of the tongue against the upper teeth as in the case ofL andN. The compression is very great and as contact is loosened very gradually aθ glide is distinctly heard. Fort as a lenis see § 438.
§ 379. Initialt represents O.Ir. t before a, o, u or preceding r, l followed by these vowels, e.g.tαluw, ‘land’, O.Ir. talam;tαrgirʹə, ‘prophet’, cp. O.Ir. tairrngire;tαruw, ‘bull’, O.Ir. tarb;tïgʹəm, ‘I understand’, O.Ir. tuiccim;tɔlʹ, ‘will’, O.Ir. tol;tɔruw, ‘fruit’, M.Ir. torad;to꞉gælʹ ‘to raise’, M.Ir. tócbáil;tui (çαhə), ‘rainbow’, O.Ir. tuag;tyuw, ‘side’, O.Ir. tóib;tlUw̥, ‘tongs’, Di. tlúgh;trα꞉, ‘meal’, M.Ir. tráth;trα꞉i, ‘shore’, M.Ir. trág, tráig.
t is prefixed in the nominative case to masculine substantives which began with a, o, u in O.Ir. when preceded by the article, e.g.ə tαhærʹ, ‘the father’. In the case of O.Ir. áis, óis, ‘people’, thet has become part and parcel of the word, e.g.dəN ti꞉s ɔ꞉g, ‘to the young people’.t is further prefixed to a feminine substantive with initials followed in O.Ir. by one of the vowelsa, o, u or by l or r, before the same vowels, when preceded by the article an, e.g.ə tro꞉n, ‘the nose’;erʹ ə trα꞉dʹ, ‘in the street’. Also to a masculine substantive under like conditions when preceded by a preposition and the definite article, e.g.dəN tïgərt, ‘to the priest’.
§ 380.t afterr,l,χ in words of native origin goes back to Idg.t, e.g.αLt, ‘joint’, M.Ir. alt, < *paltos;mɔLt, ‘wether’, cp. Lat. multo;tαrt, ‘thirst’, cp. Engl. thirst;ʃαχt, ‘seven’, Lat. septem;tʹαχt ‘coming’, O.Ir. techt, <*tiktā;bɔχt, ‘poor’, O.Ir. bocht, < *bog-to‑;o̤χt, ‘breast’, O.Ir. ucht, cp. Lat. pectus;əNo̤χt, ‘to-night’, O.Ir. innocht, cp. Lat. noct-is;kαrtαn, ‘sheep-louse’, M.Ir. cart;bʹα꞉Ltinʹə, ‘May’, M.Ir. beltene, belltaine;gα꞉Ltə, ‘Protestant’, Di. gallta, for the ending cp.gαstə, ‘quick, smart’, M.Ir. gasta. Similarly in loan-words from Latin, e.g.kʹαrt, ‘right’, O.Ir. cert < Lat. certus;sïgərt, ‘priest’, O.Ir. sacart, sacardd (whyt and notd? the form is peculiar in other respects, cp. § 103);bʹαNαχt, ‘blessing, greeting’, O.Ir. bendacht < Lat. benedictio.
§ 381. Otherwise medial and finalt usually represents an older tt before original a, o, u (O. and M.Ir. tt, t), e.g.αt, ‘swelling’, O.Ir. att;bαtə, ‘stick’, M.Engl. batte;brαt, ‘flag’ (brαt mαruw, ‘shroud’), O.Ir. bratt;bʹiətαχ, ‘hospitaller’, M.Ir. bíattach;tʹi꞉r Nə mʹrʹαtən, ‘Wales’, M.Ir. Brettan (gen. plur.), the word for ‘Welshman’ isbʹrʹαn̥αχ;kαt, ‘cat’, M.Ir. catt;pʹαtə, ‘pet’, M.Ir. petta (evidently an early borrowing but its precise origin is not clear);sLαt, ‘rod’, M.Ir. slat.
In late loan-words from English Donegal t = Engl. t, e.g.hαtə, ‘hat’;kɔ꞉tə, ‘coat’;ru꞉tə, ‘root’.bαtæLʹtʹə, ‘an armful’,b. fʹeirʹ, ‘a wap of hay’, < Engl. bottle (?), may have come in in the middle period or quite recently, cp. Sg. Fearn. botán p. 100 = O’R. boiteán.
§ 382.t andtʹ not infrequently interchange as the initial of substantives, a natural confusion seeing that the aspirated form of both ish, e.g.tαstælʹ, ‘to want’, Di. teastuighim, cp. O.Ir. tesstá. The alternation intʹαχ, ‘house’, gen. sing.tiə, occurs already in O.Ir. and is due to vowel-gradation.
§ 383.t has in a few cases been prefixed to words beginning with a vowel or f, cp.ə ti꞉s ɔ꞉g § 379. Examples –to̤bəN, ‘sudden’, M.Ir. opond;tuəmʹ tα̃꞉uw, ‘an idle rumour’, v. Di. tuaim = fuaim. Cp.tʹiLʹuw by the side offʹiLʹuw, ‘to return’, v. Di. tilleadh.
§ 384. d followed by fh, th or ch givest, e.g.dʹɛətiNʹ, ‘I might’, = d’fheudfainn;statə mʹə, ‘I shall stop’;kətiə, ‘why’, < cad chuige.
§ 385. In the present and imperfect passive the tendency is to substitute t for th in the ending in order to distinguish these tenses from the future and conditional in such cases askʹαptər,çαpti꞉,bʹrʹαktər,ꬶlαkti꞉,iərtər. Fromdʹerʹəm, ‘I say’, the usual form isdʹɛrtər, thoughdʹɛr̥ər may be heard. Fordʹɛrtər cp. Chr. Bros. Aids to Pron. of Irish p. 18 ꞉ “In Munster the t in the termination of the autonomous present is usually broad – e.g. innstear is pronounced ínnstar”. In the second conjugation the termination of the imperfect passive is‑i꞉sti, never‑i꞉ʃtʹi꞉, e.g.dʹiNʹʃi꞉sti꞉, ‘used to be related’. For the ending cp. the new past participle termination‑i꞉ʃtʹə.
§ 386. A parasitict is frequently added afterχ,L,N,s,t, e.g.i꞉Nʹtʹαχt, ‘a certain’, Di. éiginteach s. éigin (cp. G. J. June ’03 p. 337);tαməLt, ‘a while’, Di. tamall;tα̃uw̥əNt, ‘barking’, M.Ir. toffund;fo̤rəst, ‘easy’, M.Ir. urussa;grα꞉st (alsogrα꞉stə), ‘grace’, Di. grás;bʹrʹïst huw, ‘a plague on you’ =bʹirʹ əs huw. Alsofɔstαχt,fɔstαt, ‘besides’, <fɔstə,fɔ꞉st, Di. fós influenced byfʹαstə, ‘yet’.
6.tʹ.
§ 387. In producing this sound the front rim of the tongue is pressed against the top teeth or the edge of the lower teeth whilst the front of the tongue is brought against the front part of the hard palate. A similar sound is frequent in English in words like ‘ritual’ when not pronounced withtʃ. I have not noticed any tendency in Donegal fortʹ to pass intotʃ as in parts of Connaught, Manx and Scotch Gaelic. The contact fortʹ is however broken very gradually and a glide resemblingʃ is heard. Fortʹ as a lenis see § 438.
§ 388.tʹ corresponds to O.Ir. initial t before e, i or preceding r followed by those vowels, e.g.tαχ ‘house’, O.Ir. tech;tʹαN, ‘tight’, O.Ir. tend;tʹαŋy꞉, ‘tongue’, O.Ir. tenge;tʹe`, ‘hot’, M.Ir. teith beside tee, té;tʹiəχɔg, ‘chest for meal’, M.Ir. tíach;tʹinʹi, ‘fireʹ, O.Ir. tene;tʹiNʹəs, ‘sickness’, M.Ir. tinnes;tʹïNtα, ‘to turn’, cp. O.Ir. tintúuth;tʹrʹɛən, ‘strong’, M.Ir. trén;tʹrʹiən, ‘third’, M.Ir. trian;tʹrʹeigʹəm, ‘I abandon’, M.Ir. trécim.tʹ precedeslʹ intʹlʹigʹən but this is due to a late metathesis (§ 440).
tʹ is prefixed to a feminine substantive beginning withʃ followed by a vowel orLʹ,Nʹ, when the article an precedes, and also to masculine and feminine substantives under similar conditions when preceded by a preposition and the definite article, e.g.ə tʹαnvαn, ‘the old woman’;ə tʹlʹiʃ, ‘the chip’;erʹ ə tʹrʹαχtə, ‘on the snow’. Masculine substantives which in O.Ir. began with e, i taketʹ after the article in the nominative singular, e.g.ə tʹαLαχ, ‘the cattle’, butlʹeʃ ə NʹαLαχ, ‘with the cattle’. However the younger generation is beginning to introducetʹ in the latter case also.
§ 389. Medially and finallytʹ arises from an earlier tt which originally stood before e or i. In O. and M.Ir. tt, t is written. Examples –α꞉tʹ, ‘place’, M.Ir. áit;ætʹənαχ, ‘furze’, M.Ir. aittenn;etʹɔg, ‘wing’, O.Ir. ette. Similarly in the loan-wordLʹitʹirʹ, ‘letter’, O.Ir. liter, Welsh llythyr.tʹ (< t) also occurs afterLʹ,Nʹ,r,ʃ in native and borrowed words, e.g.ku꞉rtʹ, ‘visit’, O.Ir. cúairt:kʹeʃtʹ, ‘question’, M.Ir. ceist, < Lat. quaestio;kyNʹtʹiNʹ, ‘dispute’, < Lat. contentio;dʹα mα꞉rtʹ, ‘Tuesday’, Lat. Martis;sLα꞉Nʹtʹə, ‘health’, M.Ir. sláinte.
§ 390.t andtʹ frequently interchange initially, see § 383.tʹ regularly appears intʹïtʹəmʹ, ‘to fall’, M.Ir. tuitim;tʹiLʹuw, ‘to deserve, additional amount’, M.Ir. tuilled. The Donegal form of Di. aistear isαstər (χlïNʹə), ‘labour’.
§ 391.tʹ results from i.dʹ +h (< fh, th) ingytʹə mʹə, ‘I shall steal’, pres. pass.gytʹər, past part.gytʹə;trïtʹə mʹə, ‘I shall fight’, imperf. pass.r̥ïtʹi꞉;brïtʹə mʹə, ‘I shall nudge’, Di. broidighim;ʃeitʹi ʃə, ‘it will blow’, Di. séidim. ii. th + sh inLʹetʹeçə, ‘a half-hide’, = leath-sheithche (also calledLʹα`ʃeçə), but·Lʹα·hα꞉stə, ‘half-satisfied’. iii. d + ch intʹi꞉m, ‘I see’, M.Ir. atchímm. iv. the third singular termination ‑adh becomes ‑ït(ʹ),ət(ʹ),‑itʹ when followed by one of the pronounse꞉ʃi꞉ ʃiəd, e.g.gə wi꞉tʹ ʃə, ‘that he would get’. Pedersen maintains that the syllable is‑əd and not‑itʹ (p. 161). What I believe I hear ist(ʹ) or a lenist(ʹ) (see infra § 393).
Inαχmwirtʹ, ‘heat in horses’,tʹ has taken the place ofkʹ, cp. Di. eachmairc.
§ 392. A parasitictʹ is frequently added to words ending inlʹ,nʹ,ʃ, e.g.sα͠uwiLʹtʹ inNʹi꞉ αkə mʹə ə sα͠uwiLʹtʹ də wrĩ꞉, ‘I never saw such a woman’, Di. samhail;kyNʹæLʹtʹ, ‘to keep’, Di. congbháil;fα꞉gæLʹtʹ, ‘to leave’, M.Ir. fácbáil and so with other infinitives in‑ælʹ,kʹrʹedʹvæLʹtʹ,ædʹvæLʹtʹ;bwiNʹtʹ, ‘to pull,pluck, reap’, O.Ir. buain;kαnu꞉Nʹtʹ, ‘speech’, Di. canamhain;Lʹαnu꞉Nʹtʹ, ‘to follow’, M.Ir. lenmain;fwïlʹiNʹtʹ, ‘to suffer’, Di. fuiling;tαrNʹtʹ, ‘to pull’, Di. tarraing. On the analogy of these and other infinitives intʹ we getrα꞉tʹ, ‘to say’, O.Ir. rád (cp. foghlaimt Sg. Fearn. p. 24). Furtherərʹi꞉ʃtʹ, ‘again’, Di. arís;erʹeʃtʹ, ‘back’, < ar ais;-mwiʃtʹ in the 1st plur. of the imperfect (J. C. Ward denies the existence of this ending in Donegal and it is not admitted by Craig either, but J. H. uses it regularly), cp. Spir. Rose p. 8 smuadhuamuist.
§ 393. The off-glide mentioned above as accompanyingtʹ is frequently not heard when another consonant immediately follows. This we denote by writingt(ʹ) Examples –tæt(ʹ)nʹi꞉m, ‘I please’;skαrt(ʹ)kïlʹi꞉, ‘cock-crow’;ə ho꞉rt(ʹ)lʹïm, ‘to bring with me’;to꞉rt(ʹ)ko꞉rLʹə, ‘giving advice’;ho꞉rt(ʹ)suəs, ‘giving up’, alsohɔrt suəs;kæNʹt(ʹ)lʹïm, ‘talking with me’.
An ordinary alveolart occurs in late loan-words from English such aste꞉, ‘tea’;tre꞉n, ‘train’.
7.d.
§ 394.d corresponds in formation tot, the stop itself and the off-glide being voiced.
§ 395. Initiald corresponds to O.Ir. d before a, o, u or preceding l, r followed by the same vowels, e.g.dα̃iən, ‘firm’, O.Ir. daingen;dαL, ‘blind’, M.Ir. dall;dælʹi꞉, ‘difficult’, M.Ir. doilig;devrʹəs, ‘poverty’ (not common), cp. M.Ir. daidbre;dinʹə, ‘man’, O.Ir. dune;dɔ꞉rN, ‘fist’, M.Ir. dorn;dUw̥, ‘black’, M.Ir. dub;du꞉r̥αχt, ‘zeal’, O.Ir. dúthracht;dli꞉, ‘lock of hair, handful of straw, hay, potatoes &c.’,dli꞉ ə wo̤Ly꞉, ‘top-stopple in thatching’, Di. dlaoi;dreçəd, ‘bridge’, M.Ir. drochet.
d also occurs initially as the eclipsed form oft, e.g.ə dαruw, ‘their bull’;gə dαrNʹi mʹə, ‘till I pull’;ə dæʃkʹi꞉, ‘put by, in a place of safety’, cp. M.Ir. taiscim.
fα di꞉widə, ‘about it, about’, alsoαχə·di꞉widə is not clear. The prepositionfα usually aspirates as in the toastfα hu꞉rʹəmʹ huw ə və sLα꞉n. Perhaps we may compare Manx mygeayrt, ‘about’, = O.Ir. imacúairt with stereotyped 3rd plur. form.
§ 396. Medial and finald in native words goes back to an older dd which arose from various sources. In O. and M.Ir. tt, t is written. i. For d < Prim. Keltic dd I have no examples, ii. Prim. Keltic zd occurs infαdə, ‘long’, O.Ir. fota;fʹαd,‘a whistle’, M.Ir. fetán, Welsh chwythu;gαd, ‘withe’, M.Ir. gat, Gothic gazds, Lat. hasta;kʹαd, ‘permission’, O.Ir. cet;Nʹαd, ‘nest’, M.Ir. net, Ohg. nest. iii. nt gave dd with compensatory lengthening, e.g.dʹɛəd, ‘row of teeth’, O.Ir. dét, Welsh dant, Lat. dentem;ɛəd, ‘jealousy’, O.Ir. ét, Gaulish Iantu-marus;fʹɛədəm, ‘I may’, M.Ir. fétaim;kʹɛəd, ‘hundred’, O.Ir. cét, Welsh cant, Lat. centum.
After r Prim. Keltic d remains but not after l, n, e.g.ɔ꞉rd, ‘sledge-hammer’, O.Ir. ordd, Welsh ordd;kʹɛrdʹ = ceird for ceard, ‘trade, profession’, M.Ir. cerd, Welsh cerdd, Gk.κέρδος. Similarly in Lat. loan-words, e.g.ɔ꞉rd, ‘order’, O.Ir. ord, Lat. ordo.
§ 397. In earlier loan-words medial and finald corresponds to a Romance or Engl. t which was received as a lenis and later becamed. In the earliest borrowings we find th = Lat t, v. Pedersen p. 170. Examples –bα꞉d, ‘boat’, M.Ir. bát, O.E. bát, Norse bátr;bʹαrαd, ‘cap’, Di. bairéad, < Low Lat. birretum;klo̤gəd, ‘helmet’, M.Ir. cloc-att, Norse hattr, Engl. hat;pα꞉drikʹ, ‘Patrick’, O.Ir. Patricc, Lat. Patricius;pʹαdər, ‘Peter’, Lat. Petrus;sö̤꞉d, ‘flint’, O.Ir. saiget, < Lat. sagitta;spʹïrəd, ‘spirit’, O.Ir. spirut, Lat. spiritus;stαd, ‘stop’, founded on Lat. status;tʹïdəl, ‘title’, Lat. titulus;u꞉dər, ‘author’, O.Ir. auctor.t probably became a lenis in pretonic syllables (Pedersen p. 153), whence thed ofdə, ‘your’,də, ‘to’;dirʹ fʹiə, ‘by my faith’, Di. dar, O.Ir. tar. The pronominal suffix of the second pers. sing. used after prepositions in Donegal is alwaysd, e.g.fʹrʹi꞉d, ‘through you’;fu꞉d, ‘below you’;rõ꞉d, ‘before you’;əgəd, ‘with you’.
§ 398. In other loan-words medial or finald corresponds to Engl. d, e.g.bɔ꞉rdi꞉ erʹ, ‘approximately’, < Engl. border;mʹi꞉du꞉n, ‘meadow’;pα꞉rdu꞉n, ‘pardon’;skαdαn, ‘herring’, M.Ir. scatan, < O.E. sceadda, Engl. shad;spαdαNtə, ‘seedy, exhausted’, Lat. spado;spα꞉d, ‘spade’.
§ 399.kruədαlαχ, ‘hardy’, Di. cruadhalach, cruadálach, probably owes itsd tofαdαlαχ, ‘slow’, = fad-dálach.ə Nʹo̤məd, ‘great number’,o̤mədu꞉lʹ, ‘numerous’,ə Nʹo̤mətə =ə Nʹo̤məd, go back to O.Ir. imbed which should give *ïmʹuw. Judging from the spellings immat, iumat, imat in Atk., imat (Laws), the modern form withd already occurred in M.Ir. Can thed be due to form-association with O.Ir. méit, mét, which is closely allied in meaning?dægʹαn, ‘depths’, M.Ir. oician has got itsd fromdo꞉nʹ, ‘deep’.
8.dʹ
§ 400.dʹ corresponds in formation totʹ but is voiced. A somewhat similar sound occurs in such English words as ‘individual’ when not pronounced withdʒ.
§ 401. Initiallydʹ represents O.Ir. d before e, i, or preceding r, l, followed by these vowels, e.g.dʹαləg, ‘thorn’, O.Ir. delg;dʹαrəməd, ‘forgetfulness’, O.Ir. dermet;dʹerʹuw, ‘end’, O.Ir. dered;dʹiə, ‘God’, O.Ir. día;dʹĩ꞉wi꞉nʹ, ‘single’, M.Ir. dímáin;dʹlʹiuw, ‘law’, O.Ir. dliged;dʹɔ꞉r, ‘tear’, M.Ir. dér;dʹrʹeimʹirʹə, ‘ladder’, cp. M.Ir. dréimm;dʹrʹiʃɔg, ‘briar’, O.Ir. driss;dʹu꞉Ltuw, ‘refuse’, O.Ir. díltud.
The eclipsed form oftʹ is alsodʹ, e.g.to̤guw ə dʹi꞉rʹ ə, ‘he was brought round’ (of a sick person);ꬶα꞉ dʹrʹiən, ‘two thirds’;χUə mwidʹ ər dʹrʹu꞉r, ‘the three of us went’.
§ 402. Medial and finaldʹ in native words arose from an earlier dd standing before e or i which in O. and M.Ir. was written tt, t. This dd represents i. Prim. Keltic dd inkʹrʹedʹəm, ‘I believe’, O.Ir. cretim, Welsh credu, Sanskrit šrad-dhā‑. ii. Prim. Keltic nt inmʹeidʹ, ‘size’, O.Ir. méit, Welsh maint;fwəidʹ, ‘patience’, O.Ir. foditiu from fo-damim;bʹrʹeidʹi꞉nʹ, ‘rag’, M.Ir. bréit. iii. Prim. Keltic zd inkydʹ, ‘piece, share’, O.Ir. cuit;mwædʹə, ‘stick’, cp. M.Ir. maite, matan, Engl. mast;ʃeidʹuw, ‘to blow’, M.Ir. sétim.
§ 403. In earlier loan-words medial and finaldʹ corresponds to a Romance or English t which was received as a lenis and later becamedʹ, e.g.bwidʹαl, ‘bottle’;inʹidʹ, inmα꞉rtʹ inʹidʹə, ‘Shrove Tuesday’, M.Ir. init, Lat. initium;Lædʹïn, ‘Latin’, < Latina;mwædʹïnʹ, ‘morning’, O.Ir. matin (acc.), Lat. matutina;pwædʹrʹi꞉nʹ, ‘rosary’, < Lat. pater;srα꞉dʹ, ‘street’, M.Ir. sráit, Norsesráit. Latin words ending in ‑atio appear with‑ɔdʹ,‑ædʹ, e.g.po̤rəgɔdʹ, ‘purgative’, Di. purgóid;tʹrʹïblɔdʹ, ‘trouble’, M.Ir. treblait, < tribulatio;ɔ꞉rædʹ, ‘speech’, < Lat. orate, oratio. This ending was also wrongly abstracted from one or two native words such asNʹαskɔdʹ, ‘boil’, M.Ir. nescoit;o̤rəχɔdʹ, ‘harm’, O.Ir. erchoit and was transferred to English loan-words such asbαskɔdʹ, ‘basket’;bo̤kɔdʹ, ‘bucket’;pʹïkɔdʹ, ‘pick’.bʹrʹïŋlɔdʹ, ‘dream’, Meyer bringlóit, perhaps also belongs here.
§ 404. Occasionally there is confusion betweend anddʹ. M.Ir. drúcht generally appears asdʹrʹu꞉χtə;ædʹvælʹ, ‘to confess’, M.Ir. atmail, has been influenced bykʹrʹedʹvælʹ;o̤lꬶα꞉rdəs, ‘rejoicing’, is the Donegal for Di. iolgháirdeas;dʹαr·di꞉nʹ, ‘Thursday’, O.Ir. dardóen, hasdʹ by analogy withdʹα Lu꞉nʹ, ‘Monday’ &c.
do, ‘tuus’, and the verbal particle do before an O.Ir. palatal initial usually appear asdʹ, e.g.dʹαr, ‘your husband’;dʹɛədən, ‘your face’; but generallytα꞉ Lʹeʃkʹ ɔrəm detʹuw, ‘I am loath to refuse you’;dʹiNiʃ mʹə, ‘I related’.
§ 405. The relation ofmʹihidʹ, ‘due time’, to Wi. mithich, mithig is not clear. Donegal also has a substantivemʹihəs. It is perhaps worthy of note thatmʹihidʹ is commonly accompanied by the prepositiondə, ‘to’, and both *mʹihih andmʹihidʹ would appear asmʹihi beforedə.bwi꞉dʹαχ, ‘tiny’, is perhaps the same as Scotch G. bóidheach, ‘pretty’, < M.Ir. buadech, ‘victorious’.bwi꞉dʹαχ is generally used along withbʹïg, as ingʹïtə bʹïg bwi꞉dʹαχ, ‘a tiny, little bit’. Thedʹ is due to such adjectives asmʹieidʹαχ, ‘impatient’. For the meaning cp. German klein with Engl. clean.
§ 406.dʹ disappears after the negativeNʹi꞉ in the parts ofdʹerʹəm, ‘I say’, e.g.Nʹi꞉ ɛrsə, ‘he does not say’;Nʹi꞉ ɛ꞉r̥ə mʹə, ‘I shall not say’;Nʹi꞉ u꞉rtʹ mʹə, ‘I did not say’ (more commonlyNʹi꞉rʹ u꞉rtʹ mʹə); butmα dʹɛrsə, ‘if he says’.
§ 407. The off-glide which accompaniesdʹ is frequently not heard before a following consonant. This we denote by writingd(ʹ), e.g.vi꞉ bαskɔd(ʹ)lʹeihə,ə mʹɛd(ʹ)klɔχ,du꞉rt(ʹ)mʹə.
§ 408. Indʹαləgαn, ‘the white of an egg’,dʹ arises by dissimilation fromgʹ cp. Di. gealacán, Macleod gealagán.
9.k.
§ 409. The Irishk is formed much further back against the soft palate than is the case in English or German. This marked velar quality is not without influence on neighbouring vowels, thusi(꞉) commonly becomes retracted toy(꞉) afterk andg. Before palatal vowels an off-glide resembling aw-sound is clearly heard. Likep andt k is strongly aspirated and therefore a verb with stem ending ink may be identical in the present and future, e.g.dʹαrky(꞉)ʃə, ‘he looks’ or ‘will look’. Fork as a lenis see § 438.
§ 410. Initiallyk corresponds to O.Ir. c before other vowels than e or i, or preceding l and r[4] followed by these vowels, e.g.kαm, ‘bent’, O.Ir. camm;kαridʹ, ‘friend’, O.Ir. cara;kïlʹαn, ‘pup’, M.Ir. cuilen;kɔləg, ‘awn’, M.Ir. colg;kɔsu꞉lʹ, ‘similar’,O.Ir. cosmail;kõ꞉rLʹə, ‘advice’, O.Ir. comairle;ko̤Luw, ‘sleep’, O.Ir. cotlud;ko̤Lαχ, ‘boar’, O.Ir. cullach;ku꞉rtʹ, ‘visit’, O.Ir. cuairt;ku꞉l, ‘back’, O.Ir. cúul;kyLʹ ‘wood’, M.Ir. caill;klα꞉r, ‘board’, O.Ir. claar;klæʃ, ‘furrow’, M.Ir. class;krækʹəN, ‘skin’, O.Ir. croccenn;krα̃꞉v, ‘bone’, O.Ir. cnáim.
§ 411. Medial and finalk in native words represents an older kk which in O.Ir. is written cc, e.g.αku꞉Nʹ ‘strength, endurance’, Di. acfuinn, M.Ir. accmaing;bαkαχ ‘lame’, M.Ir. baccach;bαkαn, ‘hook, peg, armful’, O.Ir. bacc (ə mo̤n ə wαkænʹ, ‘staying at home to keep house’);bɔk, ‘he-goat’, O.Ir. bocc, Welsh bwch, Sanskrit bukka;bʹrʹαk, ‘variegated, a trout’, M.Ir. brecc;glαkuw, ‘to take’, M.Ir. glaccad;kαk, ‘excrement’, M.Ir. cacc, Gk.κάκκη;kro̤k, ‘hill’, O.Ir. cnocc;Lʹαkinʹ, ‘cheek’, M.Ir. lecco;mαk, ‘son’, O.Ir. macc;mʹαkænʹ, ‘turnips’, O.Ir. mecon;ɔkrəs, ‘hunger’, M.Ir. accorus;trɔ꞉kirʹə, ‘mercy’, should haveg but has probably been influenced by O.Ir. carimm, see Pedersen p. 148.
Latin loan-words with cc also appear withk, e.g.pʹαkuw, ‘sin’, O.Ir. peccad, Lat. peccatum;sαk, ‘bag, sack’, M.Ir. sacc, O.E. sacc, Lat. saccus;ʃïk, ‘frost’, M.Ir. sicc, < Lat. siccum.
§ 412. Afterl,r ands Ir.k represents Prim. Keltic k which in O.Ir. is written cc, c, e.g.ɔlk, ‘bad’, O.Ir. olcc;αrk ʃLʹeivə, ‘lizard’, M.Ir. erc;dʹαrkəm, ‘I look’, M.Ir. dercaim;ö̤꞉rk, ‘horn’, O.Ir. adarc.
§ 413. In late loan-words from Englishk represents Engl.k, e.g.pɔ꞉kə, ‘pocket’, < Engl. poke, pocket;stα꞉kə, ‘stake’;stɔkə, ‘stocking’;sLo꞉k, ‘sloke’. Probably alsoplo̤k, ‘cheek’, < Engl. block;pu꞉kə, ‘a sprite’, Norse puki (?);ʃu꞉krə, ‘sugar’, French sucre.
§ 414.k sometimes arises fromg followed by h < th, e.g.Lʹïkə, ‘overthrown’, infin.Lʹïgən;pɔ꞉kə mʹə, ‘I shall kiss’, frompɔ꞉guw. InʃLʹi꞉kuw, ‘to smooth down’, thek of the past part. and future seems to have been carried through, cp. Di. slíogadh.ko̤ki꞉ʃ, ‘fortnight’, hask forkʹ, M.Ir. cóicthiges.
§ 415. In a number of words the various Gaelic dialects hesitate betweeng andk. Donegal usually hask in these cases, e.g.klα꞉bər, ‘mire’, Di. Macbain clábar and gláib;krɔ꞉gʹuw, ‘footing peat’,krɔ꞉gʹαn, ‘a foot of peat, a diminutive person’, Di. cruiceadh, gruaigeadh, grógán, O’R. gróigein, Macbain gròigean;klα͠uwərtʹ, ‘picking where there is no grass’ (of cows),cp. Di. glámaim;kruəgy꞉, ‘liver’, O’R. grubhan, Macbain grùthan, grùan (for the ending cp.skα͠uwɔg);koihαn, ‘torch’, O’R. gaithean, ‘a straight branch’ (?);kαb, ‘the part of the face between the upper lip and the nose, mouth’,kαbαχ, ‘with gusto’, Di. cab, which Macbain derives from Engl. gap and gab.αspUk, ‘bishop’, stands forαskəb,αskUb by metathesis.
§ 416.truəkαNtə, ‘wretched’, Di. truaghánta, owes its ending to words likemαkαNtə. A parasitick occurs inʃαnəχəsk, ‘gossiping, story-telling’, M.Ir. senchus. Ingɔrti꞉wə lʹɛ, ‘depending on’, = i gcortaobh le, we probably have the older form of Di. tortaobh: “P. O’C. says tortaobh = cortaobh”.
k appears instead ofkʹ inko̤Nỹ꞉, ‘tame’, M.Ir. cendaid.
10.kʹ.
§ 417. By this symbol we denote a palatalk formed with the middle of the tongue against the hard palate. When final aj-off-glide is visually heard. Likek kʹ is aspirated and a following th, fh is therefore not heard as a separate sound, e.g.fα꞉ʃkʹər = fáiscthear. Forkʹ as lenis see § 438.
§ 418. Initialkʹ represents O.Ir. c before e, i, or preceding l, r followed by these vowels, e.g.kʹαd, ‘leave’, O.Ir. cet;kʹαχtər, ‘either’, O.Ir. cechtar;kʹαNsuw, ‘to pacify’, O.Ir. cense;kʹαp, ‘last’, M.Ir. cep;kʹαrt, ‘right’, M.Ir. cert;kʹɛəsLαχ, ‘fine wool on the legs of a sheep, stick for propelling a coracle’, Di. céaslach;kʹelʹəm, ‘I hide’, O.Ir. celimm;kʹïn, ‘regard’, Meyer cin;kʹiəL, ‘sense’, O.Ir. cíall;kʹinʹuw, ‘surname’, M.Ir. ciniud;kʹɔ꞉, ‘mist’, M.Ir. ceó;kʹɔ꞉l, ‘music’, M.Ir. ceól;kʹu꞉nʹ, ‘still’, M.Ir. ciúin;kʹũ꞉ʃ ‘edge’, Meyer cimas;kʹlʹiuw, ‘basket’, M.Ir. clíab;kʹlʹαuwni꞉, ‘son-in-law’, Meyer clíamain;kʹrʹαχ, ‘damage, ruin’, M.Ir. crech;kʹrʹiç, ‘trembling’, M.Ir. crith.
§ 419. Medial and finalkʹ in native words goes back to an older kk before original e, i whether preserved or lost. In O.Ir. cc, c is written, e.g.mʹinʹikʹ, ‘frequent’, O.Ir. menicc, Welsh mynych. In inflected forms of words ending ink askro̤k, gen. sing.krikʹ,sαk, gen. sing.sikʹ.
In earlier loan-wordskʹ =kk inʃteikʹαχə, ‘bowels’, M.Ir. stæc, Norse stakka (RC. xii 460).
In late borrowings from Englishkʹ = Engl. k, e.g.strα꞉kʹ, ‘swath’, < strake.
§ 420. Prim. Keltic (Idg.) k is retained after l, r, s, e.g.,dʹeirʹkʹə, ‘alms’, O.Ir. deirce; ïmʹirʹkʹə, ‘removing’, M.Ir. immirce, immirge;kɔrʹkʹə, ‘oats’, Meyer coirce;iʃkʹə, ‘water’, O.Ir. uisce.
§ 421.kʹ appears forgʹ inLα꞉rʹikʹ, ‘thigh’, Macbain làirig, M.Ir. laarg, O.Ir. loarcc. Herekʹ may be due to the plural formLα꞉rʹikʹαχə, but this explanation will not hold good in other cases where Donegal seems to prefer finalkʹ togʹ. The words in question arege꞉lʹikʹ, ‘Irish’, M.Ir. goedeilg (in this word the voiceless sound is wide-spread, e.g. in the Isle of Man and Waterford, cp. Henebry p. 64);No̤Likʹ, ‘Christmas’, Di. nodlaig (Finck haskʹ);kαrikʹ, ‘rock’, Di. Macbain carraig (Finck hasgʹ);pα꞉drikʹ, ‘Patrick’, Pádruig (Finck hasgʹ);henʹikʹ, ‘came’, Di. tháinig, partly influenced byhenʹikʹ, ‘saw’.kɔʃrʹikʹi꞉m, ‘I consecrate’, Di. coisreacaim, withkʹ from the participlekɔʃrʹəkə which is the commonest form of the verb used.
§ 422.kʹ arises in futures and past participles fromgʹ +h (< fh, th), e.g.Lʹikʹə mʹə, ‘I shall let’;tʹrʹeikʹə, ‘abandoned’.
§ 423.kʹ appears instead ofk inkʹlʹuw, ‘fame’, O.Ir. clú,kʹlʹu꞉tʹαχ, ‘famous’, Scotch G. cliù;kʹi꞉mwælʹ, ‘to worry, contend’, Di. ciomaim < Engl. comb.
11.g.
§ 424. This symbol denotes the voiced sound corresponding tok for which see § 409.
§ 425. Initiallyg corresponds to O.Ir. g before the vowels a, o, u or preceding l, r, n, followed by these vowels, e.g.gαd, ‘switch’, M.Ir. gat;gα꞉rʹə, ‘a laugh’, M.Ir. gáire;gα꞉wuw, ‘jeopardy’, M.Ir. gábud;gerʹidʹ, ‘short’, O.Ir. garit;ge꞉lʹikʹ, ‘Irish’, M.Ir. goedeilg;gɔlər, ‘disease’, O.Ir. galar;go꞉, ‘smith’, O.Ir. goba;g⅄꞉, ‘wind’, O.Ir. gáith;gö̤꞉r, ‘hound’, M.Ir. gagar, gadar;gyrʹimʹ, ‘call’, M.Ir. gairm;gy꞉, ‘beseech’, O.Ir. gude, guide;glαn, ‘clean’, O.Ir. glan;grui, ‘cheek’, M.Ir. gruad;grα꞉χ, ‘usual’, = gnáthach < O.Ir. gnáth.
The eclipsed form ofk isg, e.g.mər gydʹ, ‘your share’;ə gαhærʹ, ‘in a city’;erʹ gu꞉l, ‘back, behind’, cp.jiərəgu꞉l, ‘remote spot’, Di. iargcúil. The prefix con- further causes this change in old compounds with initial c, e.g.ko̤gər, ‘whisper’, M.Ir. cocur = con-cur;kαgnuw, ‘to chew’, M.Ir. cocnam = con-cnám;ko̤gu꞉s, ‘conscience’, O.Ir. cocubus. See also next paragraph.
§ 426. Medially and finallyg arises from older gg which in O. and M.Ir. is written cc, c. This gg arises from i. Prim. Keltic gg by assimilation inαgəs, ‘and’, O.Ir. ocus, alsoə wo̤gəs, ‘near’, O.Ir. ocus;bo̤g, ‘soft’, O.Ir. bocc;bαgər, ‘threaten’, M.Ir. bacur;Lo̤g, ‘weak’, M.Ir. lac;sLo̤gəm, ‘I swallow’, M.Ir. slucim, slocim;smo̤g, ‘snot’, Di. smug. ii. nk with compensatory lengthening, e.g.ɛəg, ‘death’, M.Ir. éc, O.Welsh ancou;gʹɛəg, ‘branch’, M.Ir. géc, Welsh cainc;ɛəgsα͠uwəLtə, ‘prodigious’, cp. O.Ir. écsamail < *n̥ + consm̥malis. iii. Prim. Keltic zg, e.g.mʹɛəg, ‘whey’, M.Ir. medg, Gaulish Lat. mesga;tö̤꞉g, ‘Thady’, O.Ir. Tadg, Gaulish Moritascus;mo̤gəl, ‘mesh’, O.Ir. mocol <*mozgu-, but why is there no lengthening of the vowel as in the two previous cases? The same question arises if we connectbʹïg, ‘small’, O.Ir. becc, with Lat. vescus. iv. O.Ir. assimilation of th + g, th + c infʹrʹïgrə, ‘answer’, O.Ir. frecre;tʹïgəsk, ‘teaching’, M.Ir. tecosc < to-aith-cosc.
Prim. Keltic g is preserved after l, r, e.g.dʹαləg, ‘thorn’, O.Ir. delg;dʹαrəg, ‘red’, O.Ir. derg;fʹαrəg, ‘anger’, O.Ir. ferg;ʃɛlʹigʹ <ʃαləg, ‘hunting’, O.Ir. selg. Similarly in the loan-wordpo̤rəgɔdʹ, ‘purgative’. Donegal also haskɔrəgəs, ‘Lent’, M.Ir. corgus < Lat. quadragesima, but as the other dialects have gh (Di. corghas, Macbain carghus) the form is to be compared with the cases mentioned below in § 429.
§ 427. In earlier loan-words Lat. and Norse medial (final) c entered Irish as a lenis and ultimately gaveg. The earliest borrowings undergo aspiration, e.g. bachall < baculus, laoch < laicus, for other instances see Pedersen p. 170. Examples – ïgliʃ, ‘the clergy’, O.Ir. eclais, Lat. ecclesia;brɔ꞉g, ‘shoe’, Meyer bróc, Norse brók;gʹrʹɛəgαχ, ‘Greek’;mαrəguw, ‘market’, M.Ir. margad, Norse markaðr (RC. xi 494);pɔ꞉g, ‘kiss’, O.Ir. póc, Lat. pacem;sïgərt, ‘priest’, O.Ir. sacard, Lat. sacerdos;ʃïgəl, ‘rye’, M.Ir. secul, Lat. secale;dʹïgənαχ, ‘dean’, Lat. decanus.
§ 428.g arises from O.Ir. c in pretonic syllables. Forgαχ, O.Ir. cach, cech;gən, ‘without’, O.Ir. cen;gə, O.Ir. co;gə·dʹe꞉, O.Ir. cate, cote see Diss. pp. 12, 14, 33, 36.kʹɛ inkʹɛ gə, ‘though’,kʹe꞉, ‘who’, andkα,kʹα, ‘where’, never haveg,gʹ. This also occurs before the stress ingæ·ʃαrəwan, ‘dandelion’, Di. caisearbhán;gæ·ʃα꞉, ‘pant’, cp. casachtach (?). Theg ofgɔʃtʹə, ‘jury’, Di. coiste, cannot be explained in this way. The form is to be compared with the cases of hesitation betweenk andg mentioned in § 415.
§ 429. In a number of instances we find O.Ir. d (i.e. dh) occurring in Donegal asg. Monosyllables ending in ‑eadh, ‑eagh, ‑iogh, regularly appear with ‑ïg, e.g.fʹïg, ‘length’, O.Ir. ed (commonly written feag by Donegal writers, cp. D. P. 21 xi ’03 p. 3 col. 3, Craig Iasg.);fʹlʹïg, ‘chickweed’, Manx flig or flee, Hogan, O’R. fliodh, fligh, Di. flich;ʃLʹïg, ‘spear’, M.Ir. sleg;fʹïg, ‘rush’, according to J. H. has the alternative pronunciationfʹə⅄ and may therefore represent M.Ir. *fed but Hogan has fiag, Di. feog. The adjective termination ‑dha tends to become‑gə <‑ꬶə, cp. Henebry p. 60, G. J. 1891 p. 79 col. 2, e.g.dɔrəgə, ‘stern, cross-looking’, Keat. dorrdha, Macbain durga, alsodɔrəgə, ‘fishing-line’, Di. dorugha, doruighe;krɔ꞉gə, ‘valiant’, M.Ir. cróda; furtherdʹiəgαNtə, ‘pious’,dʹiəgirʹə, ‘a pious person’ <*diəgə, Henebry diaga p. 60, O.Ir. díade. Similarlyto̤gə, ‘strap on flail’ (?).g represents gh injiərəgnuw, ‘annoyance’, Di. iarghnó;kɔrəgəs, ‘Lent’, Di. corghas, M.Ir. corgus.rïgræʃtʹə besiderə⅄ræʃtʹə, ‘arrears’, Di. riaraiste, seems based on Engl. ‘arrears’ but I cannot explain the form.
12.gʹ.
§ 430. This symbol represents a palatal g similar in formation tokʹ but voiced.
§ 431.gʹ corresponds to O.Ir. initialg followed by e, i or preceding r, l, n followed by these vowels, e.g.gʹαL, ‘promise’, O.Ir. gell;gʹɛvrʹuw, ‘winter’, M.Ir. gemred;gʹɛ꞉r, ‘sharp’, M.Ir. gér;gʹïLə, ‘servant’, M.Ir. gilla;gʹu꞉s, ‘fir’, M.Ir. gíus;gʹlʹαN, ‘valley’, M.Ir. glend;gʹlʹɛəs, ‘means, instrument’, M.Ir. glés;gʹrʹɛəsαn, ‘web’, M.Ir. gréss;gʹrʹiən, ‘sun’, O.Ir. grían.
gʹ also occurs initially as the eclipsed form ofkʹ, e.g.ə gʹαrt, ‘alright’, i gceart;bo̤nuw Nə gʹαL, ‘the people of Killybegs’, bunadh na gCeall. Medially ineigʹiəL, ‘lack of sense’, cp. Di. éigcialluidhe.
§ 432. Medially and finallygʹ goes back to an older gg before a palatal vowel (O.Ir. written cc, c), e.g.smʹigʹ, ‘chin’, M.Ir. smeice;ʃLʹigʹαn, ‘shell’, O.Ir. slice. This gg frequently represents Prim. Kelt. nk, e.g.eigʹən, ‘necessity’, O.Ir. écen, W. angen;ku꞉gʹ, ‘five’, O.Ir. cóic < *qonqe;Lʹigʹəm, ‘I let’, O.Ir. léiccim, cp. Lat. linquo;tʹigʹəm, ‘I come’, O.Ir. ticc;tʹrʹeigʹəm, ‘I abandon’, M.Ir. trécim, W. trancu.
gʹ goes back to a lenis in the loan-worddægʹαn, ‘depths’, M.Ir. oician, Lat. oceanus; also inklægʹəN, ‘skull’, Di. cloigeann, Meyer cloccenn < *cloch-chenn, cp. Pedersen p. 146.
§ 433. After r, lgʹ goes back to Idg. g, e.g.mʹirʹigʹ, ‘rust’, O.Ir. meirg;fαrəgʹə, ‘sea’, O.Ir. fairggæ, foirrce;ærʹəgʹïd, ‘money’, O.Ir. arget, W. ariant.
§ 434.gʹ appears fordʹ in two words. This substitution seems to take place not infrequently in Sc. Gaelic dialects, cp. ZCP. iv 507. The words in question aregʹrʹi꞉dαn, ‘dregs’, = Di. Macbain dríodar;gʹɔ꞉kαn to̤·bαkə, ‘a small lump of tobacco’, Di. geocán and diúcán, deocán. The form withdʹ also occurs indʹïkαn mʹïnʹə, ‘a small quantity of meal’. Forkʹ andgʹ inkrɔ꞉gʹuw see § 415.
gʹ represents Engl. j ingʹïtə, Di. giota, ‘bit’, < Engl. ‘jot’.
§ 435. Occasionallygʹ is hardened from O.Ir. d, g (=gh), thus regularly in the imperative second plur. of all verbs, though it must have arisen in verbs of the second conjugation. The ending was ‑ighidh, i.e.iji꞉ which gave‑igʹi꞉, e.g. ïmʹigʹi꞉, ‘depart’;bʹigʹi꞉, ‘be’;dʹα꞉nigʹi꞉, ‘do’. Craig (Grammar² p. 123) quotes a form with d (=dʹ) which I have never heard. This is evidently the same as Manx ‑jee (Rhys p. 154 where a wrong explanation is given). We further findgʹ for gh inũigʹ, ‘cave’ (alsoũi) < uaigh, M.Ir. uag (the words for ‘cave’ and ‘grave’ have been confused), cp. Di. uaig;inʹigʹiLʹtʹ, ‘grazing’, Di. ingheilt;igʹiNʹ, ‘ring to put round the neck of cattle’ (not in dictionaries), formed from M.Ir. id (?).
§ 436. Intervocalic g seems to have a tendency to become a spirant and to disappear in Donegal. The only instance I find in Finck is the case of the preposition ag with the pronominal suffixes (l.c.i p. 127,əs <əgəs does not belong here), cp. § 170. But in the peninsula of Glencolumbkille this treatment of intervocalic g seems to be regular in the word for ‘priest’ and the pronominal forms of ag, see G. J. 1891 p. 79 col. 2. In Meenawanniagʹ is treated in this way inkə·tiə, ‘why’, < cad chuige;i꞉Nʹtʹαχ, ‘a certain’, < éiginteach, íginteach (i꞉nʹαχ also occurs <eigʹinʹαχ), cp. Di. s. éigin.