
An Irish-language sign in County Galway
'Connacht Irish' is the
dialect of the
Irish language spoken in the province of
Connacht.
Gaeltacht regions in Connacht are found in
Counties Mayo (notably on
Achill Island and
Erris) and
Galway (notably in
Connemara and on the
Aran Islands). The Mayo and Galway varieties differ from each other in a variety of ways, as Mayo Irish has a number of features in common with
Ulster Irish.
Lexicon
Some differences between Mayo and Galway are seen in the lexicon:
| Mayo | Galway | Gloss |
|---|
| cluinim | cloisim | "I hear" |
| eallach | beithígh | "cattle" |
| gamhain | lao | "calf" |
| tinn | breoite | "sick" |
Phonology
The
phonemic inventory of Connacht Irish (based on the accent of
Tourmakeady in
Mayo[1]) is as shown in the following chart (see
International Phonetic Alphabet for an explanation of the symbols). Symbols appearing in the upper half of each row are
velarized (traditionally called "broad" consonants) while those in the bottom half are
palatalized ("slender"). The consonant is neither broad or slender.
The
vowels of Connacht Irish are as shown on the following chart. These positions are only approximate, as vowels are strongly influenced by the palatalization and velarization of surrounding consonants.
In addition, Connacht has the
diphthongs .
Some characteristics of Connacht that distinguish it from the other dialects are:
★ In some varieties,
vowel lengthening before word-internal clusters of
voiced stop +
liquid (e.g. ''eaglais'' "church"
★ In some varieties, a four-way distinction among
coronal nasals and
laterals: , often without lengthening of orthographic short vowels before them.
★ In the variety spoken in Cois Fhairrge (the area along the north shore of
Galway Bay between
Barna and
Casla), underlying short is realized as a long
front while underlying long is realized as a
back .
★ is realized as (or is replaced by ) after consonants other than . This happens in Ulster as well.
Morphology
Nouns
In some dialects of Connacht the plural endings ''-anna'' and ''-acha'' are always replaced by ''-annaí'' and ''-achaí''. It is also common in Connacht that the
dative singular form of all
2nd declension nouns has been generally adopted as the
nominative, giving these nouns the typical ending in
palatalized consonants in the
nominative singular. This is indicated in the
spelling by the letter ''i'' before the final consonant.
| Connacht form | Standard form | Gloss |
|---|
| -achaí, -annaí | -acha, -anna | Plural ending |
| bróig | bróg | "shoe" |
| ceird | ceard | "craft" |
| cluais | cluas | "ear" |
| cois | cos | "foot, leg" |
| láimh | lámh | "hand" |
Verbs
Irish verbs are characterized by having a mixture of ''analytic'' forms (where information about
person is provided by a
pronoun) and ''synthetic'' forms (where information about number is provided in an ending on the verb) in their conjugation. In Mayo, as in Ulster, the analytic forms are used in a variety of forms where the standard language has synthetic forms, e.g. ''molann muid'' "we praise" (standard ''molaimid'') or ''mholfadh siad'' "they would praise" (standard ''mholfaidís'').
References
1. The Irish of Tourmakeady, Co. Mayo, , Seán, de Búrca, Dublin Institute for Advanced Studies, 1958, ISBN 0-901282-49-9
External links
★ '' (a phonological description of the
Irish dialect of the Aran Islands, from 1899) at Wikisource