Jump to content

Page:Quiggin Dialect of Donegal 0122.png

From Wikisource
This page has been validated.

122

(d) The labial, dental and guttural stops.

Note on the stops and s (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 of fʹαr`, ‘man’, with that of ïg ‘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 are l, , n, , r, , ç, w. At the end of stressed mono­syllables with short vowel the stops and s, 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, , n, , r, at the end of stressed mono­syllables may be regarded as over-short, in other positions as short. L, , N, , R, m, , the stops and s (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 a off-glide is heard which is most notice­able before æ, ɛ, e, i. For the lenis p cp. § 438.