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Encyclopedia > Irish initial mutations

Irish, like all modern Celtic languages, is characterized by its initial consonant mutations. These mutations affect the initial consonant of a word under specific morphological and syntactic conditions. The mutations are an important tool in understanding the relatonship between two words and can differentiate various meanings. Proto-Indo-European Indo-European studies Celtic languages are a branch of the Indo-European languages. ... Consonant mutation is the phenomenon in which a consonant in a word is changed according to its morphological and/or syntactic environment. ... Morphology is a subdiscipline of linguistics that studies word structure. ... In linguistics, syntax is the study of the rules, or patterned relations, that govern the way the words in a sentence come together. ...


Irish uses two mutations on consonants: lenition and eclipsis. (The alternative names, aspiration for lenition and nasalisation for eclipsis, are also used, but the terms are a bit misleading.) Lenition is a kind of consonant mutation that appears in many languages. ...


Originally these mutations were phonologically governed external sandhi effects: lenition was caused by a consonant between two vowels, and eclipsis by a sequence of nasal consonant + obstruent, also at the beginning of a word. Sandhi is a cover term for a wide variety of phonological processes that occur at morpheme or word boundaries. ... A nasal consonant is produced when the velum—that fleshy part of the palate near the back—is lowered, allowing air to escape freely through the nose. ... In phonetics, an obstruent is a consonant sound formed by obstructing the airway. ...


There are also two mutations, t-prothesis and h-prothesis, found on vowel-initial words.

Contents

Effects of lenition

1. A stop becomes a fricative. Voicing is retained, as is place of articulation except with the coronals. The term voicing may refer to: In phonetics, a type of phonation. ... In speech, consonants may have different places of articulation, generally with full or partial stoppage of the airstream. ... Coronal consonants are articulated with the flexible front part of the tongue. ...

  • [p] > [f]
  • [t] > [h]
  • [k] > [x]
  • [b] > [v]
  • [d] > [ɣ]
  • [g] > [ɣ]

2. [m] becomes [w] or [v] (depending on dialect and secondary articulation)


3. [s] becomes [h]; but [s] + plosive and [sm] do not mutate


4. [f] is deleted


Lenition is symbolized in the orthography by an h following the consonant in question. Introduction Note: This page contains phonetic information presented in the International Phonetic Alphabet (IPA) using Unicode. ...

Lenition in Irish
Normal Lenited Gloss
peann [p´a:n] pheann [f´a:n] 'pen'
teach [t´ax] theach [hax] 'house'
ceann [k´a:n] cheann [x´a:n] 'head'
bean [b´an] bhean [v´an] 'woman'
droim [dri:m´] dhroim [ɣri:m´] 'back'
glúin [glu:n´] 'knee' ghlúin [ɣlu:n´] 'knee'
máthair [ma:hər´] mháthair [wa:hər´] 'mother'
súil [su:l´] shúil [hu:l´] 'eye'
freagra [f´r´agrə] fhreagra [r´agrə] 'answer'

The other consonants do not change under lenition.


Effects of eclipsis

1. A voiceless stop or [f] is voiced:

  • [p] > [b]
  • [t] > [d]
  • [k] > [g]
  • [f] > [w] or [v] depending on dialect and secondary articulation

2. A voiced stop becomes a nasal:

  • [b] > [m]
  • [d] > [n]
  • [g] > [ŋ]

3. A vowel receives a preceding [n] or [n´] (broad preceding a/o/u, slender preceding e/i)


Eclipsis is symbolized in the orthography by placing the letter of the new sound in front of the original letter.

Eclipsis in Irish
Normal Eclipsed Gloss
peann [p´a:n] bpeann [b´a:n] 'pen'
teanga [t'aŋgə] dteanga [d´aŋgə] 'tongue'
ceann [k´a:n] gceann [g´a:n] 'head'
bean [b´an] mbean [m´an] 'woman'
droim [dri:m´] ndroim [nri:m´] 'back'
glúin [glu:n'] nglúin [ŋlu:n´] 'knee'
freagra [f´r´agrə] bhfreagra [v´r´agrə] 'answer'
éan [e:n] n-éan [n´e:n] 'bird'
oíche [i:hə] n-oíche [ni:hə] 'night'

The other consonants do not change under eclipsis.


Environments of lenition

After proclitics

After the definite article

The definite article triggers lenition of:

1. a feminine noun in the nominative singular
an bhean 'the woman'
2. a masculine noun in the genitive singular
an fhir 'of the man'
3. a noun in the dative singular, when the article follows one of the prepositions de 'from', do 'to' or i 'in'
do + an = don: don fhear 'to the man'
de + an = den: den bhean 'from the woman'
i + an = sa(n): sa chrann 'in the tree'; san fhómhar 'in the autumn'
  • [d] and [t] are not lenited after the article:
an deoch 'the drink', although deoch is feminine nominative singular
an tí 'of the house', although is masculine genitive singular
  • [s] becomes [t] (rather than [h]), written ts:
an tsúil [ən tu:l´] 'the eye' (fem. nom. sg.)
an tsaoil [ən ti:l´] 'of the world' (masc. gen. sg.)

After the vocative particle a

  • a Bhríd 'Bríd!'
  • a Sheáin 'Seán!'
  • a chairde 'my friends!'

After possessive pronouns

The possessive pronouns that trigger lenition are mo 'my', do 'your (sg.)', a 'his'

  • mo mhac 'my son'
  • do theach 'your house'
  • a pheann 'his pen'

After certain prepositions

  • de chrann 'out of a tree'
  • faoi chrann 'under a tree'
  • mar dhuine 'as a person'
  • ó Chorcaigh 'from Cork'
  • roimh mhaidin 'before morning'
  • trí shioc agus shneachta 'through frost and snow'
  • um Cháisc 'at Easter'

After the preterite/conditional of the copula

  • Ba dhuine mór é. 'He was a big person.'
  • Ba dheas uait é. 'That was nice of you.'

Irish syntax is rather different from that of most Indo-European languages, notably because of its VSO word order. ...

After the preterite preverbal particles

  • Níor mhúinteoir é. 'He was not a teacher.'
  • níor thug mé 'I didn't give'
  • Ar shagart é? 'Was he a priest?'
  • Ar tháinig sé? 'did he come?'

After certain preverbal particles

  • thuigim 'I don't understand'
  • thagann sé 'if he comes'
  • an fear a thug dom é 'the man who gave it to me'

A verb in the preterite, imperfect or conditional

These were originally preceded by the particle do.

  • bhris mé 'I broke'
  • bhrisinn 'I used to break'
  • bhrisfinn 'I would break'

In modifier + head constructions

Lenition is blocked in these constructions if two coronals are adjacent.


After certain numbers

The singular form is used after numbers and is lenited in the following cases:

  • aon bhó amháin 'one cow'
  • an chéad bhliain 'the first year'
  • dhá theach 'two houses'
  • beirt fhear 'two men'
  • trí bhád 'three boats'
  • ceithre bhó 'four cows'
  • cúig phunt 'five pounds'
  • mhí 'six months'

After preposed adjectives

Constructions of adjective + noun are written as compounds.

  • seanbhean 'old woman'
  • drochdhuine 'bad person'
  • dea-sheirbhís 'good deed'
  • nuatheanga 'modern language'
  • tréanmhuir 'stormy sea'
  • fíorchneas 'true skin'
  • ardbh 'high pressure'
  • ógfhear 'young man'

After most prefixes

  • an-bheag 'very small'
  • ró-bheag 'too small'
  • aisghabháil 'retake'
  • athbhliain 'new year'
  • dobhréagnaithe 'undeniable'
  • fochopán 'saucer'
  • forbhríste 'overalls'
  • idirchreidmheach 'interconfessional'
  • ilphósadh 'polygamy'
  • leasmháthair 'stepmother'
  • shásta 'unhappy'
  • neamhchodladh 'insomnia'
  • príomhchathair 'capital city'
  • sobhriste 'fragile'

The second part of a compound

  • ainmfhocal 'noun' (lit. "name word")
  • ghorm 'blue-black'
  • státfhiach 'national debt'

In head + modifier constructions

In these constructions coronals are lenited even following other coronals.


Genitive nouns in certain circumstances

  • aimsir bháistí 'rainy weather' (lenition after a feminine singular noun)
  • buidéil shú 'bottles of juice' (lenition after a plural ending in a slender consonant)
  • teach Sheáin 'Seán's house' (lenition of a definite noun in the genitive)

Postposed adjectives in certain circumstances

  • bean mhaith 'a good woman' (lenition after a feminine singular noun)
  • na fir mhóra 'the big men' (lenition after a plural noun ending in a slender consonant)
  • ainm an fhir bhig 'the name of the small man' (lenition after a masculine singular noun in the genitive)

Environments of eclipsis

After plural possessive pronouns

The possessive pronouns that trigger eclipsis are ár 'our', bhur 'your (pl.)', a 'their'

  • ár gcairde 'our friends'
  • bhur bpáistí 'your (pl.) children'
  • a mbád 'their boat'

After certain numbers

The numbers that trigger eclipsis (the noun being in the singular) are:

  • seacht gcapall 'seven horses'
  • ocht n-asal 'eight donkeys'
  • naoi gcat 'nine cats'
  • deich bpeann 'ten pens'

After the preposition i 'in'

Before a vowel in is written instead of i n-.

  • i dteach 'in a house'
  • in Éirinn 'in Ireland'

Dative singular nouns after the definite article

Nouns beginning with a noncoronal consonant are eclipsed after combinations of preposition + article in the singular (except den, don, and sa(n), which trigger lenition)

  • ag an bhfear 'by the man'
  • ar an gcrann 'on the tree'

After certain preverbal particles

  • an poll a dtagann na coiníní as 'the hole that the rabbits come out of'
  • An dtagann sé gach lá? 'Does he come every day?'
  • bhfuil mo spéaclaí? 'Where are my glasses?'
  • Dúirt sé go dtiocfadh sé. 'He said that he would come.'
  • mbeadh a fhios sin agam 'if I had known that'

Changes to vowel-initial words

A vowel-initial word does not change where lenition is expected:

  • an oíche 'the night' (feminine singular nominative noun after definite article)
  • an uisce 'of the water' (masculine singular genitive noun after definite article)

But where neither eclipsis nor lenition is expected, an initial vowel may acquire an prothetic onset consonant. For example, a vowel-initial masculine singular nominative noun requires a t- after the definite article:

  • an t-uisce 'the water' (masculine singular nominative)

Otherwise, there is the prothetic onset h, which comes only when both the following conditions are met:

  1. a proclitic causes neither lenition nor eclipsis of consonants
  2. a proclitic itself ends in a vowel

Examples of h-prothesis

  • a haois 'her age' (after possessive pronoun a 'her')
  • go hÉirinn 'to Ireland (after preposition go 'to, towards')
  • le hAntaine 'with Antaine' (after preposition le 'with')
  • na hoíche 'of the night' (on feminine singular genitive noun after definite article)
  • na héin 'the birds' (on plural nominative/dative noun after definite article)
  • chomh hard le caisleán 'as high as a castle' (after chomh [xo] 'as')
  • go hálainn 'beautifully' (after adverb-forming particle go)
  • himigh uaim 'Don't leave me!' (after negative imperative particle 'don't')
  • an dara háit 'the second place' (after an ordinal numeral)

See also


  Results from FactBites:
 
Kids.Net.Au - Encyclopedia > Irish language (3784 words)
Irish has recently received a degree of formal recognition in Northern Ireland, under the Good Friday Agreement alongside a small minority language called Ulster Scots (though some critics have questioned whether Ulster Scots is a language or merely a dialect of Lowland Scots).
Munster Irish is spoken in the Gaeltachtaí of Kerry (Ciarraí), Coolea (Cúil Aodha) in the western part of County Cork (Contae Chorcaí), and the tiny pocket of Irish-speakers near Dungarvan (Dún Garbháin) in County Waterford (Contae Phort Láirge).
Initial mutations are found in other Celtic languages (as well as in some Italian dialects, as an independent development); and the two verbs for "to be" are to some extent analogous to those found in Spanish.
Online Encyclopedia and Dictionary - Irish language (3865 words)
Irish (Gaeilge in Irish) is a Goidelic language spoken in Ireland and in small communities in Canada and Argentina.
Irish is constitutionally recognised as the first official language of the Republic of Ireland, and has recently received a degree of formal recognition in Northern Ireland, under the Good Friday Agreement alongside the varieties of Lowland Scots spoken in Northern Ireland.
Munster Irish is spoken in the Gaeltachtaí of Kerry (Contae Chiarraí), Muskerry (Múscraí), Cape Clear (Oileán Cléire) in the western part of County Cork (Contae Chorcaí), and the tiny pocket of Irish-speakers in An Rinn near Dungarvan (Dún Garbháin) in County Waterford (Contae Phort Láirge).
  More results at FactBites »


 

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