Page:Quiggin Dialect of Donegal 0039.png
39
the vowel is palatal but the initial consonant is not, the palatalisation in the majority of cases has affected the vowel which usually appears as ï, for exceptions see § 24. We find ï notably in the inflected forms of monosyllables containing a, o, u, e.g.
- a—glαs, ‘green’, compar. glïʃə; kαm, ‘bent’, compar. kïmʹə; klαN, ‘children’, dat. klïNʹ.
- o—bo꞉r, ‘deaf’, compar. bïvrʹə; ko̤m, ‘waist’, gen. sing. kïmʹ; tro̤m, ‘heavy’, compar. trïmʹə; sɔk, ‘snout’, gen. sing. sïkʹ.
- u—dUw̥, ‘black’, compar. dïvə; klï̃vrʹαχ, ‘feathers’, Lαʹbwi꞉ χlï̃vrʹi꞉, ‘feather bed’, Di. cluimhreach < M.Ir. clúm.
In the same way ï is occasionally the result of the palatalisation of O.Ir. e, e.g. Nʹï̃v, Nʹïfʹ, ‘poison’, O.Ir. neim, cp. § 111.
Further examples—dïvαn, ‘cormorant’, Di. duibhéan; ɛədï̃vnʹə, ‘shallowness’, Di. éadoimhin; gïvnʹə, plur. of go꞉, ‘smith’; kïfʹəlαn, ‘knot of people’, O.Ir. comthinól; kï̃vαd, ‘watch’, O.Ir. comét; kï̃vnʹαχ, ‘mindful’, O.Ir. cuimnech; kïvrʹəN, ‘plot of ground for crops’, M.Ir. comraind; krïn̥ʹαχtə), ‘wheat’, M.Ir. cruithnecht; krïpʹə, ‘button’, Di. cnaipe; rïlʹigʹ, ‘churchyard’, M.Ir. relicc; rïNʹ, ‘share, deal’, Di. roinn; rïtʹə, ‘steep’, Di. ruidhte; rï̃və, rïpʹi꞉, ‘before him, her’, cp. Wi. remi, roime, rempi p. 733; rïχt, ‘state’, O.Ir. richt; sïmʹ, ‘consideration’, Di. suim, Nʹα̃uhïmʹu꞉lʹ, ‘careless’; sLïNʹuw, ‘family name’, M.Ir. slondiud; tïgʹəm, ‘I understand’, O.Ir. tuccim.
This ï also occurs initially, e.g. ïbʹrʹi꞉, ‘workman’, cp. M.Ir. oibriugad; ïlʹə, ‘the wall round a stack of peat’, Meyer aile; ïv, ïfʹ, ‘egg’, uibh (Craig), O.Ir. og. In a few words in which ï comes from o or u, a slight rounding is to be observed, e.g. in glïnʹə, ‘glass’, M.Ir. glaine, gloine but not in glïnʹə, ‘purity’, M.Ir. glaine (so according to J. H. but doubtful); klïnʹəm, ‘I hear’, O.Ir. ro-cluin-ethar; ïlʹkʹ, O.Ir. uilcc, gen. sing. of ɔlk, ‘bad’; ïLʹə (mʹi꞉ Nə hïLʹə), ‘July’; ïNʹə, ‘June’; ïLʹiəm, ‘William’.
§ 99. Strange to say there seems to be an increasing tendency to employ ï (= O.Ir. e, i) at the expense of i between two palatal consonants. J. H. inclines more to i but the younger people prefer ï in a large number of words, e.g. bʹrʹïLʹʃkʹirʹαχt, ‘lightheadedness’, Di. breillsce; dʹïlʹ, ‘lathe’, M.Ir. deil; fʹïlʹə, ‘poet’, O.Ir. fili; gʹïbʹə, gen. sing. of gʹïb, ‘bit’, Di. giob; kʹïnʹαl, ‘kind’, (also kʹïnαl) O.Ir. cenél (but generally ꬶα꞉ çinʹαl); kʹïʃ, ‘piece of repaired path, spot to be mended’, Di. ceis; mʹïnʹ, ‘meal’, O.Ir. men; mʹïlʹ, ‘honey’, O.Ir. mil; mʹïlʹiʃ, ‘sweet’, O.Ir.