Áine Óir wrote:
Breandán wrote:
Think of the word aer. If the a and e were separate, then the e would make the r slender, but it is not. The r is broad.
In the word Gael itself, the l is broad.
Could you explain exactly what you mean when you say the r in 'aer' is broad. I know it's broad because there's a broad vowel (æ) before it, but is there some deeper meaning I'm missing out on? Is it just a consonant is slender or broad depending on the vowel in front of it?
In Irish, every consonant has two sounds broad and slender. The easiest to distinguish for foreigners is the broad and slender s, broad s being a normal sibilant s /s/ and slender s being a sh sound /∫/, but essentially all consonants have this distinction, except perhaps h.
The sounds themselves are different and you have to learn to distinguish them to be able to speak Irish properly. The spelling indicates whether a given consonant is broad or slender, but it is not just the spelling, the sound itself is different.
Here are some soundfiles to show the differences in pronunciation between certain broad and slender consonants:
http://www.awyr.com/ILF/saewndfaylz/Gael_Gaeil.mp3GaelG(w)EY-ull
/ge:L/
GaeilG(w)EYL
/ge:l´/
Note that the broad
l in
Gael is fuller or darker; the slender
l in
Gaeil is lighter. This sound distinction makes the difference between the singular
Gael and the plural or genitive
Gaeil.
Non-native speakers (including Urban speakers) often try to fudge this distinction by adding an i sound to the slender version (
Gaeil) but the i is really just a spelling convention. The real distinction should be made in the quality of the l sound itself.
http://www.awyr.com/ILF/saewndfaylz/Gae ... aeilge.mp3GaeltachtG(w)EY-ull-tukht
/ge:Ltəxt/
GaeilgeG(w)EYL-gih
/ge:l´g´ə/
Again, note the difference between the two l sounds.
http://www.awyr.com/ILF/saewndfaylz/aer_aeir.mp3aerAIR
/e:r/
aeirAIRH
/e:r´/
Broad r has a single hard flap or tap. Slender r is a lighter tap and sounds buzzier.
http://www.awyr.com/ILF/saewndfaylz/%C3 ... 3%B3ir.mp3órOR
/o:r/
óirORH
/o:r´/
Again, broad r has a single hard flap or tap. Slender r is a lighter tap and sounds buzzier.
This sound distinction between the broad and slender r makes the difference between the singular nominative (
aer and
ór) and the genitive (
aeir and
óir).