Irish/Pronunciation

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General Information

Irish

  1. History
  2. Alphabet
  3. Spelling
  4. Pronunciation
  5. Grammatical Changes
  6. Basic Sentence Structure
  7. The Article
  8. Nouns
  9. Verbs
  10. Commonly Confused Words
  11. Compound Prepositions
  12. Prefixes
  13. Dictionaries
  14. Other Resources
  15. Common phrases
  16. Similar English words
  17. Vocabulary

Pronunciation - An Fuaimniú

Irish spelling often baffles the beginner. Much of this can be attributed to the complete difference between pronunciations in Irish and English.


Note: The Pronunciation of mh or bh varies regionally. In Ulster the General rule is that they are pronounced w when broad and v when narrow. In Munster (as in the Western isles of Scotland) the tendency is to pronounce as v at the beginning or the end of a word and w in the middle. I've never been able to figure out exactly how it works in Connacht. e.g. the final syllable of Gaillimh (Galway) is pronounced "ih" in Galway but "iv" in Donegal or Kerry. Within the regional variations there are also local variations I have heard in Munster both Abhainn (river) and amháin (sole, single or only) pronounced with a v sound. surnames and personal names may not always follow the "rules" either. The standard pronunciation of Siobhán (Shivaun approx) does not correspond to any modern regional pattern. The alternative pronunciation "shoe-un" (approx) exists in Munster and Ulster. To the Gaelic ear the sounds are, to a degree, interchangeable.

Examples

bó = a cow beo = alive The broad b is pronounced almost as if it were "bw" (/bˠ/) or something like the b in the English word "but" (as pronounced in Ireland), using both lips, as if you were about to kiss someone!

The slender b is pronounced sometimes as if in the Scandinavian Bjorn (/bʲ/) for example or like the b in English bet. The lips are tenser, almost as if you were tightening them in exasperation.

Stress - An Bhéim

Stress is in Irish usually on the first syllable, except in the southernmost (Munster) dialects, where non-initial syllables are usually stressed, if they include a long vowel or a short a followed by -/ch/. Thus, a word such as díreach = "direct, straight" can in Munster dialect be stressed on the second syllable.

Some borrowed words, notably tobac = "tobacco" are stressed on the second syllable. There are also quite a few of common adverbs which are so stressed, above all these:

abhaile "home" (movement)
abhus "on this side"
aduaidh "from the north" ("northward" is ó thuaidh, "in the north" is thuaidh, and "the North" is an Tuaisceart)
amach "out" (movement)
amuigh "out" (state)
amainiris "the second day after tomorrow"
amanathar "the day after tomorrow" (arú amárach is probably more common)
amárach (dialectally even amáireach) "tomorrow"
anall "from the other side, to this side"
aneas "from the south" ("southward" is ó dheas, "in the south" is theas, and "the South" is an Deisceart)
aniar "from the west" ("westward" is siar, "in the west" is thiar, and "the West" is an tIarthar)
anocht "tonight"
anoir "from the east" ("eastward" is soir, "in the east" is thoir, and "the East" is an tOirthear)
anóirthear (dialectally in Ulster even anóirtheal) "the day after tomorrow"; also "the second day after" - i.e. the second day after what happened last, in a narrative
anonn "from this side, to the other side"
anseo (in Munster, anso) "here"
ansin (in Munster, ansan) "there"
ansiúd (in Munster, ansúd) "out there, yonder"
anuraidh "last year"
aréir (in some Ulster dialects, aréireannas, aréirnas) "last night"
arú is an adverb that is added to amárach "tomorrow" and inné "yesterday" to create arú amárach = "the day after tomorrow" and arú inné = "the day before yesterday"
inné "yesterday"
inniu "today"
isteach "in" (movement)
istigh "in" (state)
laisteas "southside" (also taobh theas)
laistigh "inside" (also taobh istigh)
lasmuigh "outside" (also taobh amuigh)
lastuas "overhead" (also taobh thuas)
laistíos "below" (also taobh thíos)

This kind of adverbs are historically speaking compound words or word groups, which accounts for their unusual stress. The locative adverbs beginning with la- include the word leath, which means "half" or "direction (towards)". They are most usual in southern dialects; northern dialects prefer taobh "side", with the relevant local adverb added

Vowels - Na Gutaí

Standard Irish has the following vowels:

[a] (short or long)
[e] (short or long)
[o] (short or long)
[u] (short or long)
[i] (short or long)
[ə] (murmured vowel, auxiliary vowel, in Irish guta cúnta or the "helping" vowel)

and the diphthongs

[uə]
[iə]
[au]
[ai]

The last two diphthongs can in certain words acquire a nasal twang - basically, if there is a nasal consonant in the writing: amhras "doubt" [aurəs] or [ãurəs], but gabha "smith" will be pronounced as [gau], because there is no m. The two diphthongs might as well be written phonetically as [ou] and [oi], or [əu] and [əi].

Basically, it should work the way that if a vowel has an acute accent, i.e. the fada, it is pronounced long, and if it hasn't, then it is pronounced short. This is also the fact in most straightforward positions, i.e. when the vowel is in the stressed syllable of a word. In unstressed syllables, short vowels - i.e. those written without a fada - become murmured auxiliary vowels, but long vowels - those written with a fada - stay long, or at the very least not murmured.

Note, though, that in dialects, a short vowel can be lengthened into a long one and a long one into a diphthong. This "syllable lengthening" is especially typical of Connemara dialects.

Vowels followed by -rd and by -nn are also usually lengthened: ard "high" is [a:rd], but it can even become [aurd] thanks to syllable lengthening. In a similar way, if an one-syllable word ends in -nn, in -rr, or in -ll, the preceding vowel is usually lengthened: ceann "head, end, roof, one" [k'a:N], mall "slow" [ma:L], gearr "short" [g'a:r]. It can even be diphthongized: ceann [k'aun]. Note, though, that the lengthening phenomena are very dialect-specific, and you are advised to pick them up from native speakers.

A more important thing to notice is, that in the combination eo, the o is always long (with the exception of seo "this", anseo "here", and eochair "key" - eochair "border, edge" has a long o, as has eochraí, dialectally also eochair, "fish-roe"). This is why we don't usually write feirmeóir anymore - feirmeoir is correct.

The most difficult thing about the relationship between Irish spelling and pronunciation is, that if we have a short vowel letter followed by a lenited consonant (i.e. a consonant followed by a /h/) in a stressed syllable, this combination is pronounced either as a long vowel or as a diphthong - either [au] or [ai]. (The diphthongs [uə] and [iə] are usually written /ua/ or /uai/, and /ia/ or /iai/, respectively.) More worryingly, pronunciations are often quite different and irregular in different dialects, and to be entirely sure, you should really consult a native speaker, or at the very least the pronunciation guides in the dictionaries Foclóir Póca and Foclóir Scoile.

Note, however, the following model pronunciations. These are based on Foclóir Scoile (An Gúm, Baile Átha Cliath, copyright: Rialtas na hÉireann 1994, see respective entries). However, I have added a tilde for nasalization, where it might occur, as well as other additional information. The Foclóir Scoile pronunciation is a compromise between the three major dialects, devised by three native speakers (Dónall P. Ó Baoill from Ulster, Éamonn Ó Tuathail from Connacht, and Pádraig Ó Maoileoin from Munster), and my own experience suggests that native speakers do not find this pronunciation unnatural or contrived, provided that the person using it has studied Irish literature and folklore and can speak in a fluent and natural way.

Irish vowels are either slender (caol) or broad (leathan). This means, that they affect the quality of the adjacent consonant. A consonant that is in touch with a slender vowel (e, i, é, í) is slender, i.e. palatalized - the hard palate participates in the pronunciation, so that the consonant is softened. A consonant that is in touch with a broad vowel is broad, i.e. non-palatalized - either velarized (the velum or soft palate participates) or labialized (lips participate). Broadness is above all about not being palatalized, so it depends on the particular occasion, whether it is more natural and easier to emphasize the broadness by velarization or by labialization.

Often, we use sleamhnóga (singular: sleamhnóg) in writing Irish, i.e. extra vowel letters adjacent to a consonant, which above all show the broad or slender nature of the consonant, but are not pronounced in any other way. In the word buí "yellow", for instance, the -u- is a sleamhnóg, showing that the b- shall be pronounced broad, although it is followed by a long slender vowel .

It is not always easy to tell a mere sleamhnóg from a vowel letter which is pronounced more fully. When the sleamhnóg comes between a long vowel and a consonant, it is obvious that it is only a sleamhnóg, but when we have two short vowel letters in one syllable, it might not be quite clear, which of them is just a sleamhnóg and which is the real thing. Especially /io/ is often problematic: words such as tiomáint "driving" and tiontú "turning" can be pronounced either way ([t'oma:n't'] or [t'ima:n't], [t'ontu:] or [t'intu:]) depending on dialect.


In such words as scéalaíocht "story-telling" the pronunciation suggested by the spelling is [s'k'e:li:xt], but in Ulster dialect, the real pronunciation is more like [s'k'e:lajaxt] and would suit the old spelling scéalaidheacht better.

The /ao/ of writing is basically a long [i:] preceded and followed by a broad consonant: saol "life, world" [si:l]. However, the two broad consonants tend to strongly influence the vowel between them, and it can sound like a Russian ы. When names including this sound were borrowed into English, the /ao/ was in many instances interpreted in very different ways: thus, the name Ó Maolagáin could become Mulligan or Milligan.

A long [e:] sound both followed and preceded by a broad consonant is written /ae/. Thus, the consonant N in the word traenach "of a train, a train's" (genitive form of traein, "a train") is broad, although it touches an e: [tre:nax]. Thus, we need a sleamhnóg after the -e- in the nominative form to signal that the -n is slender there: traein [tre:n'].

To recap:

Pronunciation* IPA Vowel(s)
ah, as in the Scottish 'lad' /a/ a
ai
ea
eai
ahh, as in the Australian 'father' /aː/ á
ái
eái
eh, as in the American 'bed' /ɛ/ e
ei
oi
ehh, as in the Italian 'bene' /eː/ é
éi
éa
ae
aei
ih, as in 'fin' /ɪ/ i
io
ei
oi
ui
ee, as in 'see' /iː/ í
ío
aío
oío
uío
ao
aoi
aw, as in the Scottish 'law' /ɔ/ o
oi
io
ohh, as in the American 'oh' or (approximately) British 'caught' /oː/ ó
ói
eo
eoi
omh(a(i))
uh, as in 'put' /ʊ/ u
iu
oo, as in 'soon' /uː/ ú
úi
iúi

*In stressed positions only; in unstressed, vowels are reduced to an uh sound (/ə/).

Diphthongs

Pronunciation* IPA Vowel
uh-oo, like a neutral uh-sound followed by a ú /əu/ abh(a(i)), amh(a(i))
eabh(a(i)), eamh(a(i))
obh(a(i)), odh(a(i)), ogh(a(i))
uh-ee, similar to the ay in 'spray' /əi/ adh(a(i)), agh(a(i))
eadh(a(i))
aidh, aigh
eidh(ea/i), eigh(ea/i)
oidh(ea/i), oigh(ea/i)
ee-uh, like the ea in 'Korea' /iə/ ia(i)
oo-uh, like the u in 'sure' /uə/ ua(i)

*In stressed positions only; in unstressed, vowels are reduced to an uh sound (/ə/).

Consonants - Na Consain

To start with, let's look at the non-lenited consonants in Irish, thus, the way how consonant letters are pronounced when they are not followed by the letter h. In order to pronounce such a consonant correctly, you must pay attention to the vowel letters around it. If it is surrounded by broad vowels (a, o, u, á, ó, ú), then you must pronounce it broad, and if it is surrounded by slender vowels (e, i, é, í), then you must pronounce it slender.

Broad (Irish: leathan) means velarized or labialized. Velum is the soft palate, and when a consonant is velarized, the velum or the soft palate takes part in the way it is pronounced. Labia are the lips, and when a consonant is labialized, the lips take part in how it is pronounced. Broad consonants are velarized or labialized according to how it feels natural. Thus, the [k] sound in the word carr (which, of course, means "car") is velarized, because that is the natural way to broaden the [k] in such a word. On the other hand, the [k] sound in the word cuid (which means "part, share") is labialized, becoming like the English "qu" (and the word sounds almost like "quidge").

Slender (Irish: caol) means palatalized. Palatum means specifically the hard palate, and it tends to soften the consonant - give it a taste of the [j] or English "y" sound. The Spanish ñ, for instance, is a slender n, and the Spanish ll used to be a slender L sound, but these days it is of course the same as the Spanish y for most speakers of that language. The English ll in the word "million" is an excellent example of a slender L, which is appropriately enough also found in its Irish equivalent, milliún.

As we already saw, mute short vowels (sleamhnóga) are often inserted in writing just to signal that the consonant is, say, slender although it stands next to a long broad vowel, or the other way round. So, in the word móin "peat, turf" the long ó is indeed pronounced as a vowel, while the -i- signals that the final -n is slender.

As explained above, the terms slender and broad refer to two categories of vowels.

A consonant that is is flanked by broad vowels is broad. A consonant that is flanked by slender vowels is slender. Don't let the fact that every consonant has two pronunciations panic you. In most cases, the difference between the broad and slender pronunciation is subtle, and you really don't need to worry about all the subtleties at first. The most dramatic differences are:

Consonant Pronunciation IPA
broad d /d/ as in "door" d
slender d /dj/, like the "dg" in "edge" d͡ʒ
broad s /s/ as in "say" s
slender s /sh/ as in "sheep" ʃ
broad t /t/ as in "talk" t
slender t /tch/ as in "tchah!" or "hatch" t͡ʃ

Aside from that, broad consonants have a slight "w" sound associated with them, and slender consonants have a slight "y" sound. This is usually not noticeable except when you change from slender to broad within a word, or vice versa. To make it clear when this occurs, we'll write the "w" or "y" in a tiny font like this: w, y. But we'll only do that if it helps to clarify the pronunciation, so don't worry about figuring out why we include it in some words and leave it out in others.

Putting It All Together

Example:

Let's work through some examples in detail. We'll start with some words you probably know, but we'll look at them with fresh eyes, and pretend we don't already know how to pronounce them.

bád


We can tell that the "b" and "d" are broad, because they are next to a broad vowel, "a". Broad consonants are generally pronounced pretty much the way they are in English, so this word shouldn't be too difficult. The fada over the "a" tells us it has a long sound, AW (or AA in Ulster) We have: broad b + á + broad d. So bád would be pronounced BAWD.

Bríd


This word has a consonant cluster "br" at the beginning, but you treat it as a unit when deciding whether they're broad or slender. In this case, "br" is slender, as is "d". Remember that slender "d" has a special sound. We have: slender br + í + slender d. So Bríd would be pronounced BREEJ. (If you want to be precise, slender "r" has a sort of "d" quality to it, so you could write the pronunciation as BRdEEJ... but maybe that's too confusing.)

bábóg


The only vowels in this word are broad, so all the consonants are broad too. We have: broad b + á + broad b + ó + broad g. So bábóg would be pronounced BAH-BOHG. (Don't worry about which syllable is accented/emphasised for now. We'll talk about that later.)

feadóg


In this word, we have both broad and slender vowels. The "f" is next to a slender vowel, so it's slender. The "d" and "g" are next to broad vowels, so they are broad. Since we'll be sliding from a slender sound into a broad sound, you'll hear a bit of that "y" sound mentioned above -- but don't overdo it. That "y" shouldn't really be audible, it's more of a hint to get your lips and mouth into the right shape. We have: slender f + ea + broad d + ó + broad g. So feadóg would be pronounced FyAA-DOHG.

Caoimhín


Oh no! There are three vowels in a row; how do we handle this? For the purpose of deciding whether a consonant is broad or slender, you only look at the adjacent vowels. So the "C" is broad, the "mh" is slender, and the "n" is slender. We have: broad c + aoi + slender mh + í + slender n. As indicated in the previous section, aoi is pronounced ee. Now we can tell that Caoimhín is pronounced KwEE-VEEN. (The tiny "w" is there because we're going from an initial broad consonant into a medial slender consonant.)

súil and siúil


We put these two together because they really illustrate the difference one little vowel can make. Here's a tip: When you see a vowel combination where one of the vowels has a fada, the vowel with the fada is how it's pronounced. In other words, the vowel with the fada is the "real" vowel, and its companions are just there to tell you how to pronounce the consonants on either side. So both these words have the same vowel sound, OO. And both have a slender "l" on the end. But one has a broad "s" and the other a slender "s", and that makes all the difference. For súil we have: broad s + ú + slender l, and for siúil we have: slender s + ú + slender l. The only difference in pronunciation is the quality of the initial "s". So súil is pronounced SOOL, and siúil is pronounced SHOOL.

Exercises

Here's a list of words to practice with. Say the word out loud, then hover your mouse over the word to check your pronunciation. If you want, you can try writing the pronunciation phonetically -- but don't worry if you didn't write the pronunciation exactly the way we did, as long as you had the right sound in mind. For now, don't worry about which syllable has the emphasis; we'll cover that in another section.

sos

cas

cais

cláróg

leas

léas

rois

ros

géin

scar

scair

fram

casla

íle

scil

scál

doirt

leá

sall

séid

fras

fadú

siolp

sábh

seabhac

osar

féidín

séirse

sár

sáir

ósais

Lenition - An Séimhiú

Lenition (séimhiú) is a modification of pronunciation of the first letter of the word - a kind of initial mutation (claochlú tosaigh). Lenition means different things for different consonants, but it is always expressed by adding a -h- after the consonant:

Note that instead of being lenited, a "lenitable" S can turn into a T sound, which is then written ts or tS (when the S is written in upper case). This exception will be mentioned in the lessons.

In Kerry Irish, SM- might be lenited, too. This is however seldom shown in writing, as it is a local dialectal trait. In fact, it is so local that a person who isn't familiar with the dialect (or is only familiar with it from more or less standardized texts, such as Peig Sayers's notorious autobiography) will perceive it as a learner's error.

Lenited Consonants inside the word - Na Consain Shéimhithe laistigh den Fhocal

When you see lenited consonants inside a word, note that they usually interact with the previous vowel, so that long vowels or diphthongs arise:

Final, unaccented -dh or -gh can often be left unpronounced, especially in Connemara. Note, though, that a final -idh/-igh is a short, but clear [i] sound in Ulster, and an audible [ig'] in Munster; and final -adh is a short, but clear [u] sound in Ulster.

RABHADH - WARNING

Vowels CANNOT BE LENITED. Among learners, many seem to think that the h- that is sometimes added to the first vowel of the word, equals to lenition. THIS IS WRONG. It would be more appropriate to say, that this h- is added to the vowel in positions where a consonant would NEITHER be lenited NOR eclipsed.

Eclipsis - An tUrú

Eclipsis is called in Irish urú, an older form is urdhubhadh, from the intensifying prefix ur- "very" and dubhadh "blackening". So, it is really eclipse, as in solar eclipse (urú na gréine) or in lunar eclipse (urú na gealaí). As with lenition, eclipsis is triggered by the preceding word - the "eclipsing" word so to speak, which kind of "casts its shadow" over the word.

Eclipsis means, basically, that unvoiced stops become voiced, and voiced stops become nasal. Thus, c, p, and t become g, b, and d respectively, and b, d, and g become m, n, and ng respectively. Although f is a fricative sound, it is eclipsed too - it becomes voiced, i.e. either a w or a v sound - in Irish, these are perceived as variants of one sound that is written as bh, as we saw.

The disquieting thing is, that the actual pronunciation is written in addition to the original pronunciation of the first consonant letter. Thus, we see words beginning with gc-, bp-, dt-, mb-, nd-, and even bhf-, and people start panicking about, how such a monster should be pronounced. In reality, it is much more easy than it looks like:


Note that if the word is to be written in upper case, it's the letter showing the original pronunciation that is capitalized, not the letters showing the actual pronunciation:

While it was said earlier that a vowel can't be lenited, it definitely can be eclipsed. In that case, a n- is added to it. It is hyphenated before a lower-case letter, but not before an upper-case one:

Note, though, that when the eclipsis is caused by the preposition i, "in", the recommendation is to perceive this n- as part of the preposition. Thus, we write in Éirinn, not i nÉirinn. In sloppily edited books, you can of course see even i nÉirinn and i n-Éirinn. The different ways to write it of course don't affect the pronunciation.

Prefixed h- - An Réamhlitir h-

The prefixed h-, the hiatus consonant, is often grammatically required in positions where neither lenition nor eclipsis occurs. See the following example:

mo ghluaisteán "my automobile" - m'aiste "my essay"

do ghluaisteán "your automobile" - d'aiste "your essay"

a ghluaisteán "his automobile" - a aiste "his essay"

a gluaisteán "her automobile" - a haiste "her essay"

ár ngluaisteán "our automobile" - ár n-aiste "our essay"

bhur ngluaisteán "your automobile" - bhur n-aiste "your essay"

a ngluaisteán "their automobile" - a n-aiste "their essay"

This rule is not without its exception, however. The little word , which is used for creating "wh-" questions especially in Ulster Irish, prefixes a h- to a following vowel (cá haois é? "what age is he", i.e. "how old is he?") but lenites a following noun expressing the grade of a quality: cá fhad é ó tháinig sé go Conamara? "how long is it since he came to Connemara?", i.e. "how long has he been in Connemara?" - Note that is in other dialects more often used in the sense "where?", and in this sense it usually eclipses the following verb: cá bhfuil sé? "where is he?"

Prefixed t- - An Réamhlitir t-

In Irish, there are two kinds of prefixed t-:

The t- that is prefixed to vowels

This t- is, of course, added to the word, both in writing and pronunciation. Most typically, it comes after the singular form of the definite article in the nominative singular of masculine nouns:

The t- that is prefixed to words beginning with a lenitable initial s-

- i.e. s + vowel, sl-, sn-, sr-. This t- is somewhat similar to the eclipsing consonant, because while it is added to the written form of the word, it ousts the initial s- in pronouncing. We see this instead of lenition after the definite article in the nominative singular of feminine nouns:

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