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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 in we get rα꞉tʹ, ‘to say’, O.Ir. rád (cp. foghlaimt Sg. Fearn. p. 24). Further ərʹi꞉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 accompanying is frequent­ly not heard when another consonant immediate­ly follows. This we denote by writing t(ʹ) Examples – tæt(ʹ)nʹi꞉m, ‘I please’; skαrt(ʹ) kïlʹi꞉, ‘cock-crow’; ə ho꞉rt(ʹ) ïm, ‘to bring with me’; to꞉rt(ʹ) ko꞉rLʹə, ‘giving advice’; ho꞉rt(ʹ) suəs, ‘giving up’, also hɔrt suəs; kæNʹt(ʹ) ïm, ‘talking with me’.

An ordinary alveolar t occurs in late loan-words from English such as te꞉, ‘tea’; tre꞉n, ‘train’.

7. d.

§ 394. d corresponds in formation to t, the stop itself and the off-glide being voiced.

§ 395. Initial d 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 of t, 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’, also αχə·di꞉widə is not clear. The prepo­sition usually aspirates as in the toast fα 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 final d 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 in fαdə, ‘long’, O.Ir. fota; fʹαd,