Quote:
I thought some Munster dialects did that (Ring, perhaps?) …
Then again, it’s quite possible that half of what I lump in under the ‘Munster’ (i.e., ‘all the rest’) heading is really Urban or something else entirely.
I don't know any dialect that diphthongises -ó at the end of a word.
In the south, they diphthongise a, o and sometimes i
before tense sonorants (ll, nn, m), but they don't diphthongise ó otherwise... Mó is pronounced either mó or mú according to the dialect...
I listened to the recordings, yeah that sound typical non-native ; however the guy looks to often pronounce the broad ch's properly (unlike most non-native speakers).
He makes diphthongs where you would have diphthongs in English, but when you have diphthongs in Irish (uaireanta, iad) he doesn't make them (he says "oo-ruhn-tuh" and "eed"). He pronounces the r's as in English. Etc.